7-2 | JAIR Special Track on Cross-language Algorithms and Applications (UPDATE)
JAIR Special Track on Cross-language Algorithms and Applications
Track EditorLluís Màrquez, Qatar Computing Research InstituteAssociate Track EditorsMarta R. Costa-jussà, Instituto Politécnico NacionalSrinivas Bangalore, AT&T Labs-ResearchPatrik Lambert, Universitat Pompeu FabraElena Montiel-Ponsoda, Universidad Politécnica de MadridThe Journal of Artificial Intelligence Research (JAIR) is pleased to announce the launch of the Special Track on Cross-language Algorithms and Applications. The core Artificial Intelligence technologies of speech and natural language processing need to address the challenges of processing multiple languages. While the first challenge of multilingualism is to bridge the nomenclature gap for the same concepts, the next significant challenge is to develop algorithms and applications that not only scale to multiple languages but also leverage cross-lingual similarities for improved natural language processing.The goal of this special track is to serve as a home for the publication of leading research on Cross-language Algorithms and Applications, focusing on developing unified themes leading to the development of the science of multi- and cross-lingualism. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to: efforts in the direction of multilingual transliteration; multilingual document summarization; rapid prototyping of cross language tools for low resource languages; and machine translation.Articles published in the Cross-language Algorithms and Applications track must meet the highest quality standards as measured by originality and significance of the contribution and clarity of presentation. Papers will be coordinated by the track editor and associate editors, and reviewed by peer reviewers drawn from the JAIR Editorial Board and the larger community. All articles should be submitted using the normal JAIR submission process. Please indicate that the submission is intended for the Special Track in the section 'Special Information for editors'. For more information and submission instructions, please see:http://www.jair.org/specialtrack-claa.html Timetable
24th March 2015 *EXTENDED* Deadline for Submissions24th June 2015 Notification of Acceptance/Revision/Rejection5th August 2015 Deadline for Re-submission of papers requiring revision5th October 2015 Notification of Final Acceptance24th November 2015 Final manuscript dueContact: martaruizcostajussa@gmail.comSubmission Instructions: Use JAIR conventional submissions instructions available at http://www.jair.org/submission_info.html
|
7-3 | Tipa. Travaux interdisciplinaires sur la parole et le langage
Tipa. Travaux interdisciplinairessur la parole et le langage
http://tipa.revues.org/
The impact of language contact: from structural interferences to typological convergences
Guest editor: Cyril Aslanov
The 31st issue of TIPA will be dedicated to the study of the impact of language contact on the hard core of grammatical systems. In order to counterbalance the strictly internalist approaches to diachronic evolution, we will adopt the theoretical perspective provided by the studies on contact-induced linguistic changes.
The contributors are requested to cast a new light on the results of language contact, either as an occasional interference at the level of social or individual speech or as a structural convergence deeply rooted in the grammatical structure. The contact-induced linguistic changes may be considered in the dynamic perspective of the diachrony of language contact or through the study of a given state of language examined synchronically as the present result of a previous contact.
Besides the impact of language contact on the inner system of languages, it is important to involve also a sociolinguistic dimension in order to grasp the continuity or the reccursivity that unite the empirical modalities of language contacts (code-switching; code-mixing; hybridization) with considerations more centered on the study of the linguistic systems themselves, especially as far as fusion languages like Yiddish, Romani or Swahili are concerned. Indeed, the very existence of such languages is due to language contact and multilingualism.
Lastly, the scientific debate on the impact of language contact on the systems should also take into account the individual dimension. Psycholinguists interested in interference, convergence and mimetism, specialists of individual bilingualism and didacticians dealing with Interlingua are invited to enrich this issue on the results of language contact.
The language of publication will be either English or French. Each article should contain a detailed two-page abstract in the other language, in order to make papers in French more accessible to English-speaking readers, and vice versa, thus insuring a larger audience for all the articles.
Important dates July 25, 2015 (Extension): deadline for submission of articles September 15: notification of acceptance October 30: receipt of final version December: publication.
Submission guidelines Please send your proposal in 3 files to: tipa@lpl-aix.fr - one in .doc containing the title, name and affiliation of the author(s). - the other anonymous in .doc and .pdf Instructions for authors can be found at http://www.lpl-aix.fr/index.php?id=27
|
7-4 | IEEE Transactions on Multi-Scale Computing Systems: Special Issue on Design and Applications of Neuromorphic Computing System
IEEE Transactions on Multi-Scale Computing Systems Special Issue on Design and Applications of Neuromorphic Computing System
GUEST EDITORS: Hai (Helen) Li, hal66@pitt.edu, University of Pittsburgh Qinru Qiu, qiqiu@syr.edu, Syracuse University Yu Wang, yu-wang@mail.tsinghua.edu.cn, Tsinghua University
TOPIC SUMMARY: As artificial intelligence technology becomes pervasive in society and ubiquitous in our lives, the desire for embedded-everywhere and human-centric computational intelligence systems calls for an intelligent computation paradigm. However, the applications of machine learning and neural networks involve large, noisy, incomplete, natural data sets that do not lend themselves to convenient solutions from current systems. Neuromorphic systems that are inspired by the working mechanism of human brains possess a massively parallel architecture with closely coupled memory and computing. This special issue aims at the computing methodology and systems across multiple technology scales to accelerate the development the neuromorphic hardware systems and the adoption for machine learning applications. The topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Neuromorphic circuit, architectures, and systems - Hardware-software co-design and optimization - Computing system for neural network applications (machine vision, machine learning, sensor network, big data, signal processing & coding, pattern recognition, nature language processing, etc.) - Software and hardware architecture for deep learning - Bio-inspired computing model and/or hardware design
IMPORTANT DATES: Open for submissions in ScholarOne Manuscripts: November 1, 2015 Closed for submissions: January 15, 2016 Results of first round of reviews: April 30, 2016 Submission of revised manuscripts: May 31, 2016 Results of second round of reviews: July 31, 2016 Publication materials due: August 31, 2016
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES: Prospective authors are invited to submit their manuscripts electronically after the ?open for submissions? date, adhering to the IEEE Transactions on Multi-Scale Computing Systems guidelines (http://www.computer.org/portal/web/tmscs/author). Please submit your papers through the online system (https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/tmscs-cs) and be sure to select the special issue name. Manuscripts should not be published or currently submitted for publication elsewhere. Please submit only full papers intended for review, not abstracts, to the ScholarOne portal. If requested, abstracts should be sent by e-mail to the Guest Editors directly.
|
7-5 | Special Issue CSL on Language and Interaction Technologies for Children
Special Issue on Language and Interaction Technologies for Children The link: goo.gl/CFSjTR
Description: The purpose of this special edition of CSL is to publish the results of new research in the area of speech, text and language technology applied specifically to children?s voices, texts and applications. Children are different to adults both at the acoustic and linguistic level as well as in the way that they interact with people and technology. To address these issues appropriately, it is necessary to work across many disciplines, including cognitive science, robotics, speech processing, phonetics and linguistics, health and education.
Linguistic characteristics of children's speech are widely different from those of adults. This is manifested in their interactions, their writings and their speech. The processing of queries, texts and spoken interactions therefore opens challenging research issues on how to develop effective interaction, language, pronunciation and acoustic models for reliable processing of children?s input. The behavior of children interacting with a computer or a mobile device is also different from that of adults. When using a conversational interface for example, children have a different language strategy for initiating and guiding conversational exchanges, and may adopt different linguistic registers than adults. The aim of the special edition is to provide a platform for collecting mature research in this area.
Technical Scope: The special issue will focus on how children use text and speech in all aspects of communication, including human-human and human-computer interaction. We invite the submission of original, unpublished papers on topics including but not limited to:
- Speech Interfaces: acoustic and linguistic analysis of children's speech, discourse analysis of spoken language in child-machine interaction, age-dependent characteristics of spoken language, automatic speech recognition for children and spoken dialogue systems - Text Analysis: Analysis of complexity and accuracy in children?s text productions, understanding progression and development in orthography and syntax skills, use of vocabulary and registers or handwriting skills. - Multi-modality, Robotics and Avatars: multi-modal child-machine interaction, multi-modal input and output interfaces, including robotic interfaces, intrusive, non-intrusive devices for environmental data processing, pen or gesture/visual interfaces - User Modeling: user modeling and adaptation, usability studies accounting for age preferences in child-machine interaction - Cognitive Models: internal learning models, personality types, user-centered and participatory design - Application Areas: training systems, educational software, gaming interfaces, medical conditions, such as autism or speech disorders, diagnostic tools and (speech) therapy
Important Dates: Paper submission deadline: March 1, 2016 Target publication date: January 1, 2017
Guest Editors: Berkling Kay, Cooperative State University, Berkling@dhbw-karlsruhe.de Russell Martin, University of Birmingham, m.j.russell@bham.ac.uk Evanini Keelan, ETS, kevanini@ets.org
|