ISCA - International Speech
Communication Association


ISCApad Archive  »  2016  »  ISCApad #214  »  Events  »  Other Events

ISCApad #214

Monday, April 11, 2016 by Chris Wellekens

3-3 Other Events
3-3-1(2016-04-18) 4th CHiME Speech Separation and Recognition Challenge and Workshop

 4th CHiME Speech Separation and Recognition
                 Challenge and Workshop

                 Launch: April 18, 2016
                Deadline: August 19, 2016

           Workshop: Google, CA, Sep 13, 2016

      http://spandh.dcs.shef.ac.uk/chime_challenge/
      ----------------------------------------------


Dear colleague,

Following the success of the CHiME-3 challenge which attracted 25 international teams, it
gives us great pleasure to announce the CHiME-4 Challenge and Workshop.

CHiME-4 will revisit the CHiME-3 data, i.e., Wall Street Journal sentences spoken by
talkers in challenging noisy environments recorded using a 6-microphone tablet device. It
will increase the difficulty by reducing the number of microphones and introducing
mismatches between training and testing microphone configurations.

Participants will be able to rely on updated baselines for speech enhancement and ASR,
which would now score among the best techniques in CHiME-3.

The results will be presented at a dedicated workshop to be held on September 13th at
Google's offices in conjunction with Interspeech 2016.


STATEMENT OF INTEREST

If you are considering participating, please email chimechallenge@gmail.com with the
subject CHiME-4 and you will be added to the email list for receiving further updates.


IMPORTANT DATES

18th April, 2016  ?  Launch - Training/dev data + baselines released
27th June, 2016   ?  Test data released
19th Aug, 2016    ?  Challenge abstract/paper submission deadline
24th Aug, 2016    ?  Paper notification & registration open
13th Sept, 2016   ?  CHiME-4 Workshop
14th Oct, 2016    ?  Final paper (2 to 6 pages)


CHALLENGE ORGANISERS

Emmanuel Vincent, Inria
Shinji Watanabe, MERL
Jon Barker & Ricard Marxer, University of Sheffield


LOCAL ORGANISER

Kean Chin, Google


SPONSORS

Google
Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs

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3-3-2(2016-04-21) La Perception en langue et en discours (2e éd.) Université d’Opole (Poland)

 

Universités d’Opole, de Silésie, de Varsovie et de Wrocław (POL)

Universités de Haute-Alsace et de Strasbourg (FRA)

Université P.J. Šafárik de Košice (SVK)

Université Libre de Bruxelles (BEL)

Université du Kentucky (USA)

La Perception

en langue et en discours

(2e éd.)

Colloque international de Sciences du langage

Université d’Opole, 21-23 avril 2016 La Perception en langue et en discours (2e éd.) Université d’Opole, 21-23 avril 2016 2

Suite au succès rencontré par la première édition du colloque international de Sciences du langage « La Perception en langue et en discours », lequel s’est tenu à l’Université de Varsovie en avril 2014, la Chaire de Culture et Langue Françaises de l’Université d’Opole, l’Institut des Langues Romanes et de Traduction de l’Université de Silésie, l’Institut d’Études Romanes de l’Université de Varsovie, l’Institut d’Études Romanes de l’Université de Wrocław, l’Institut de Recherche en Langues et Littératures Européennes de l’Université de Haute-Alsace, l’Institut de Phonétique et l’Équipe de recherche Parole et Cognition de l’Université de Strasbourg, la Faculté des Lettres de l’Université P.J. Šafárik de Košice, le Département des Sciences de l’Information et de la Communication et le Département de Langues et Littératures de l’Université Libre de Bruxelles ainsi que le Département de Langues Modernes et Classiques de l’Université du Kentucky collaborent à l’organisation de sa deuxième édition, qui se tiendra cette fois-ci les 21, 22 et 23 avril 2016 au Département des Philologies de l’Université d’Opole.

Argumentaire

La rencontre sera centrée sur la perception en langue, en discours et en parole, thème qu’il s’agira avant tout d’aborder sous ses diverses coutures linguistiques, soient-elles grammaticales, morphologiques, syntaxiques, sémantiques, pragmatiques, discursives, logiques, cognitives, phonétiques, sociolinguistiques, psycholinguistiques, etc.

L’objectif général du colloque sera ainsi de s’interroger sur la question de savoir comment notre langage prend en charge nos perceptions, tant en termes de construction, de profilage, de transmission que de réception, pour tenter de rendre plus nets les contours encore flous de l’expression linguistique de la perception, d’en approfondir l’étude des propriétés et/ou spécificités connues voire d’en mettre au jour de nouvelles. De manière plus spécifique, il s’agira entre autres, à partir de l’observation de la façon dont elles s’inscrivent dans le langage, de faire ressortir la dualité des ontologies de la perception (sensorielle vs. intellectuelle).

En pratique, à partir de la langue, du discours et de la parole, on interrogera le moule et la matrice linguistiques de la perception à travers, notamment, les axes suivants : descriptif (quels outils et/ou mécanismes instruisent nos perceptions, les décrivent, les véhiculent ou en rendent compte ?) ; lexicologique (comment les dictionnaires traitent-ils des vocables et des structures de la perception ?) ; prospectif (les grammaires, ouvrages grammaticaux, manuels scolaires ou autres référentiels pédagogiques de demain devront-ils intégrer la perception comme un contenu à part entière, et si oui, comment ?) ; didactique (faut-il enseigner la perception comme un contenu indépendant, et si oui, comment ?) ; épistémologique (qu’est-ce qu’une perception, quels en sont les fondements, les modes et les dynamiques de production, d’évolution, d’organisation, de réception et/ou de validation ?) ; contrastif (qu’est-ce qui distingue la perception d’un évènement de celle d’un objet, d’un fait ou d’une action ? ; qu’est-ce qui distingue un compte rendu de perception en français d’un compte rendu de perception dans d’autres langues données ?) ; traductologique (quelles difficultés concrètes représente la traduction des comptes rendus de perception du français vers une langue cible donnée, et comment pallier ces problèmes ?) ; historique (quand les notions de perception, de contenu et compte rendu de perception sont-elles apparues en linguistique, et comment ont-elles évolué ?).

À cet effet, si la priorité sera donnée aux études résolument linguistiques portant sur le langage naturel, toutes les langues pourront cependant être prises comme base empirique et d’autres approches que les précitées, nous pensons par exemple aux approches littéraires, sociologiques, psychologiques, philosophiques et anthropologiques, seront également les bienvenues pourvu qu’elles s’intéressent La Perception en langue et en discours (2e éd.) Université d’Opole, 21-23 avril 2016 3

expressément à la perception. En outre, quelle que soit l’approche envisagée, les démarches expérimentales et/ou cliniques seront très appréciées. Théoriques ou appliquées, systématiques ou expérimentales, contextuelles ou indépendantes, synchroniques ou diachroniques, prescriptives, descriptives ou programmatiques, intra ou interdisciplinaires, les propositions de communication ainsi sollicitées s’inscriront donc nécessairement dans au moins l’un des domaines fondamentaux des Sciences du langage.

Propositions de communication

Les propositions de communication, établies à partir du fichier « PropCom » attaché en pièce jointe, devront être envoyées simultanément à Elżbieta Biardzka : ebiardzka@wp.pl, Laura Calabrese : lcalabre@ulb.ac.be et Fabrice Marsac : fmarsac@uni.opole.pl avant le 31 octobre 2015 (indiquer « PLD 2016 » comme objet du message). Les notifications d’acceptation seront transmises au plus tard le 15 janvier 2016, et le programme du colloque suivra à partir du 15 février.

Les communications ne devront pas dépasser 20 minutes de temps de parole (questions non comprises) et la langue de présentation sera préférablement le français (même si l’anglais est également possible). Les critères d’approche, de démarche ou d’axe de réflexion sont laissés au libre choix des intervenants, pourvu qu’ils s’inscrivent dans les cadres envisagés ci-dessus ou, au plus large, dans celui des Sciences du langage en général.

Ultérieurement, les contributions écrites retenues par le Comité scientifique du colloque feront l’objet d’une publication dans le courant de l’année académique 2017-2018, normalement comme volume(s) thématique(s) ou varia de revue(s) internationale(s).

Renseignements pratiques

Les frais d’inscription (de 400 PLN ou 100 €) comprennent le dîner de gala du premier jour (jeudi 21), la sortie culturelle nocturne du deuxième jour (vendredi 22) et la publication des contributions. Les frais de logement et autres frais de restauration sont exclusivement à la charge des participants.

Le colloque se tiendra au Département des Philologies de l’Université d’Opole (situé au 11a de la Place Kopernika : http://www.uni.opole.pl/en). Le Comité d’organisation prévoit, entre autres activités gratuites, une visite guidée de la ville et de ses principaux attraits culturels et touristiques.

Dans l’espoir de vous compter parmi nous à l’occasion de cette nouvelle édition,

Les organisateurs,

Elżbieta Biardzka, Laura Calabrese, Greta Komur-Thilloy, Katarzyna Kwapisz-Osadnik,

Fabrice Marsac, Mária Paľová, Ewa Pilecka, Rudolph Sock,

Dan Van Raemdonck et Sadia Zoubir-Shaw La Perception en langue et en discours (2e éd.) Université d’Opole, 21-23 avril 2016 4

Dates clefs

Envoi des propositions de communication : 31 octobre 2015

Envoi des notifications d’acceptation : 15 janvier 2016

Publication du programme : 15 février 2016

Tenue du colloque : 21-23 avril 2016

Publication des contributions : 2017-2018

Comité scientifique

Elżbieta BIARDZKA (Université de Wrocław, Pologne) – Krzysztof BOGACKI (Université de Varsovie, Pologne) – Laura CALABRESE (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgique) – Bernard COMBETTES (Université Nancy 2, France) – Éric CORRE (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, France) – Jean-Pierre DESCLÉS (Université Paris-Sorbonne) – María Luisa DONAIRE FERNANDEZ (Université d’Oviedo, Espagne) – Geneviève GIRARD-GILLET (Université Paris 3, France) – Christopher GLEDHILL (Université Paris 7, France) – Aude GREZKA (CNRS, France) – Bernard HARMEGNIES (Université Mons-Hainaut, Belgique) – Alicja KACPRZAK (Université de Łodź, Pologne) – Greta KOMUR-THILLOY (Université de Haute-Alsace, France) – Katarzyna KWAPISZ-OSADNIK (Université de Silésie, Pologne) – Brian LOWREY (Université de Picardie, France) – Sébastien MARENGO (Université de Sherbrooke & Université de Montréal, Canada) – Fabrice MARSAC (Université d’Opole, Pologne) – Ewa MICZKA (Université de Silésie, Pologne) – Philip MILLER (Université Paris 7, France) – Claude MULLER (Université Bordeaux 3, France) – Sylvester OSU (Université de Tours, France) – Elżbieta PACHOCIŃSKA (Université de Varsovie, Pologne) – Jean-Christophe PELLAT (Université de Strasbourg, France) – Mária PAĽOVÁ (Université P.J. Šafárik de Košice, Slovaquie) – Ewa PILECKA (Université de Varsovie, Pologne) – Laura PINO SERRANO (Université de Saint-Jacques de Compostelle, Espagne) – Elżbieta SKIBIŃSKA (Université de Wrocław, Pologne) – Rudolph SOCK (Université de Strasbourg, France) – Danièle VAN DE VELDE (Université Lille 3, France) – Marleen VAN PETEGHEM (Université de Gand, Belgique) – Dan VAN RAEMDONCK (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgique) – Béatrice VAXELAIRE (Université de Strasbourg, France) – Sadia ZOUBIR-SHAW (Université du Kentucky, États-Unis d’Amérique)

Comité d’organisation

Elżbieta BIARDZKA (Université de Wrocław, Pologne)

Laura CALABRESE (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgique)

Greta KOMUR-THILLOY (Université de Haute-Alsace, France)

Katarzyna KWAPISZ-OSADNIK (Université de Silésie, Pologne)

Fabrice MARSAC (Université d’Opole, Pologne)

Mária PAĽOVÁ (Université P.J. Šafárik de Košice, Slovaquie)

Ewa PILECKA (Université de Varsovie, Pologne)

Rudolph SOCK (Université de Strasbourg, France)

Dan VAN RAEMDONCK (Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgique)

Sadia ZOUBIR-SHAW (Université du Kentucky, États-Unis d’Amérique)

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3-3-3(2016-05-02) 4th International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR 2016), San Juan, Puerto Rico,

4th International Conference on Learning Representations (ICLR 2016)
====================================================================

Website: http://www.iclr.cc/
Submission deadline for title and abstract: 5:00 pm EST, November 12th, 2015
Submission deadline for arXiv paper ID: 5:00 pm EST, November 19th, 2015
Location: Caribe Hilton, San Juan, Puerto Rico, May 2-4, 2016

Overview
--------
It is well understood that the performance of machine learning methods
is heavily dependent on the choice of data representation (or
features) on which they are applied. The rapidly developing field of
representation learning is concerned with questions surrounding how we
can best learn meaningful and useful representations of data. We take
a broad view of the field, and include in it topics such as deep
learning and feature learning, metric learning, kernel learning,
compositional models, non-linear structured prediction, and issues
regarding non-convex optimization.

Despite the importance of representation learning to machine learning
and to application areas such as vision, speech, audio and NLP, there
was no venue for researchers who share a common interest in this
topic. The goal of ICLR has been to help fill this void.

A non-exhaustive list of relevant topics:
 - unsupervised, semisupervised, and supervised representation
   learning
 - metric learning and kernel learning
 - dimensionality expansion
 - sparse modeling
 - hierarchical models
 - optimization for representation learning
 - learning representations of outputs or states
 - implementation issues, parallelization, software platforms,
   hardware
 - applications in vision, audio, speech, natural language processing,
   robotics, neuroscience, or any other field

The program will include keynote presentations from invited speakers,
oral presentations, and posters.

ICLR's Two Tracks
-----------------
As usual, ICLR will feature two tracks: a Conference Track and a
Workshop Track. However, this year, conference and workshop
submissions will be reviewed separately, in two different
periods. This call for paper is thus only for conference
contributions. Workshop submissions will be received a few months
before the conference and be subject to a lighter review. A future
call for papers will be sent with more details on the Workshop Track.

Also, the reviewing period for conference submissions will be
separated into two short rounds (normally 2 reviews in the first
round, 1 review in the second round). The first round will run as
usual. The second round reviews, however, in addition to evaluating
the submissions, will be required to include comments on the content
of the first round reviews. By asking for such comments, we hope to
ensure a minimum of discussion for every paper, and favour
interactions that might either identify factual errors early or reveal
a clearer consensus. Note that some of the submitted conference track
papers that are not accepted to the conference proceedings will be
invited to be presented under the Workshop Track.

ICLR Submission Instructions
----------------------------
By November 12th, authors are asked to enter in openreview.net the
title, abstract and author list for their paper, along with
conflict information.  Then, as soon as possible, authors must
post on arXiv their submission: http://arxiv.org.  Finally, by
November 19th, authors must update their submission in
openreview.net with the arXiv ID of their paper.

Note that there can be up to 3 days of delay between sending a
manuscript on arXiv and receiving your arXiv ID. It is thus important
to post your submission on arXiv early. Note also that you can always
update your submission on arXiv later on, anytime during the review
process. Submissions without an arXiv ID after November 19th will be
automatically removed from openreview.net.

Remember to download the style files and paper template and use within
LaTeX to format your paper. Use of the ICLR 2016 style is mandatory.

When you make your arXiv submission, please be sure to correctly
classify your submission into CoRR categories. Typically, you should
consider the following categories:

  CS.LG: machine learning
  CS.NE: neural networks
  CS.CV: computer vision
  CS.CL: computational linguistics

Virtually all of the ICLR papers should have both CS.LG and CS.NE as
categories and then additional categories depending on the nature of
the problem.

Submission deadline: 11:59 pm PST, November 12th for title and
abstract, 11:59 pm PST, November 19th for arXiv ID.

Notes
-----
Regarding the conference submission's 6-9 page limits, these are
really meant as guidelines and will not be strictly enforced. For
example, figures should not be shrunk to illegible size to fit
within the page limit. However, in order to ensure a reasonable
workload for our reviewers, papers that go beyond the 9 pages
should be formatted to include a 9 page submission, with
supplementary material appended at the end of the manuscript and
clearly marked as an appendix, which will be optionally reviewed.

Paper revisions will be permitted, and in fact are encouraged, in
response to comments from and discussions with the reviewers (see
An Open Reviewing Paradigm below).

An Open Reviewing Paradigm
--------------------------
1.  Submissions to ICLR are posted on arXiv prior to being submitted
    to the conference.
2.  Authors submit their paper to either the ICLR conference track or
    workshop track via the openreview.net ICLR 2016 website.
3.  After the authors have submitted their papers via openreview.net,
    the ICLR program committee designates anonymous reviewers as
    usual.
4.  The submitted reviews are published without the name of the
    reviewer, but with an indication that they are the designated
    reviews.
5.  Anyone can openly (non-anonymously) write and publish comments on
    the paper. Anyone can ask the program chairs for permission to
    become an anonymous designated reviewer (open bidding). The
    program chairs have ultimate control over the publication of each
    anonymous review. Open commenters will have to use their real
    names, linked with their Google Scholar profiles.
6.  Authors can post comments in response to reviews and
    comments. They can revise the paper as many times as they want,
    possibly citing some of the reviews. Reviewers are expected to
    revise their reviews in light of paper revisions.
7.  The review calendar includes a generous amount of time for
    discussion between the authors, anonymous reviewers, and open
    commentators. The goal is to improve the quality of the final
    submissions.
8.  The ICLR program and area chairs will consider all submitted
    papers, comments, and reviews and will decide which papers are to
    be presented in the conference track, which will be invited to be
    presented in the workshop track, and which will not appear at
    ICLR.
9.  Papers that are presented in the workshop track or are not
    accepted will be considered non-archival, and may be submitted
    elsewhere (modified or not), although the ICLR site will maintain
    the reviews, the comments, and the links to the arXiv versions.

General Chairs
--------------
Yoshua Bengio, Université de Montreal
Yann LeCun, New York University and Facebook

Senior Program Chair
--------------------
Hugo Larochelle, Twitter and Université de Sherbrooke

Program Chairs
--------------
Brian Kingsbury, IBM
Samy Bengio, Google

Contact
-------
The organizers can be contacted at iclr2016.programchairs@gmail.com

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3-3-4(2016-05-07) CHI 2016 Workshop on Designing Speech and Multimodal Interactions for Mobile, Wearable, & Pervasive Applications (Final CFP and deadline extension)

CHI 2016 Workshop on Designing Speech and Multimodal Interactions for
Mobile, Wearable, & Pervasive Applications (Final CFP and deadline
extension)

Important Dates:
* January 18th, 2016: Submission of position papers
* January 25th, 2016: Notification of acceptance
* February 10th, 2016: Submission of camera-ready accepted papers
* May 7-8, 2016: Workshop
http://www.dgp.toronto.edu/dsli2016
CHI 2016, San Jose, CA, USA

This workshop aims to develop speech and multimodal interaction as a more
established area of study within HCI, leveraging current engineering
advances in ASR, NLP, TTS, multimodal/gesture recognition, and
brain-computer interfaces. Advances in HCI can reciprocate to the design
of NLP and ASR algorithms that are better informed by the usability
challenges of speech and multimodal interfaces. We also aim to increase
the cohesion between research currently dispersed across multiple areas
(e.g., HCI, wearable design, ASR, NLP, BCI, speech, EMG interaction and
eye-gaze input). Our hope is that by focusing and challenging the research
community on multi-input modalities for wearables, we will energize the
CHI and engineering communities to push the boundaries of what is possible
with wearable, mobile, and pervasive computing, and also make advances in
each of these respective communities.

Through interdisciplinary dialogue, our goal is to create momentum in:
* Formally framing the challenges to the widespread adoption of speech and
natural language interaction,
* Taking concrete steps toward developing a framework of user-centric
design guidelines for speech- and language-based interactive systems,
grounded in good usability practices,
* Establishing directions towards identifying further research
opportunities in designing natural interactions that make use of speech
and natural language, and
* Identifying key challenges and opportunities for enabling and designing
multi-input modalities for a wide range of wearable device classes.

We invite the submission of position papers demonstrating research,
design, practice, or interest in areas related to speech, language, and
multimodal interaction that address one or more of the workshop goals,
with an emphasis, but not limited to, applications such as mobile,
wearable, or pervasive computing.

Position papers should be 4 to 6 pages long, in the ACM SIGCHI extended
abstract format and include a brief statement justifying the fit with the
workshop's topic. Summaries of previous research are welcome if they
contribute to the workshop's multidisciplinary goals (e.g. a speech
processing research in clear need of HCI expertise). Submissions will be
reviewed according to:
* Fit with the workshop topic
* Potential to contribute to the workshop goals
* A demonstrated track of research in the topic of the workshop (HCI or
speech/multimodal processing, with an interest in both areas).

To submit a paper please follow:
http://www.dgp.toronto.edu/dsli2016/submissions



--

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3-3-5(2016-05-23) LREC 2016 - 10th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation, PORTORO, SLOVENIA, Extended deadline
LREC 2016 - 10th Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation
Grand Hotel Bernardin,  PORTORO?, SLOVENIA
23-28 May 2016


MAIN CONFERENCE: 25-26-27 MAY 2016
WORKSHOPS and TUTORIALS: 23-24-28 MAY 2016
Conference web site: http://lrec2016.lrec-conf.org/
Twitter: @LREC2016

FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS


ELRA is glad to announce the 10th edition of LREC, organised with the support of a wide range of international organisations.

CONFERENCE AIMS
LREC is the major event on Language Resources (LRs) and Evaluation for Human Language Technologies (HLT). LREC aims to provide an overview of the state-of-the-art, explore new R&D directions and emerging trends, exchange information regarding LRs and their applications, evaluation methodologies and tools, on-going and planned activities, industrial uses and needs, requirements coming from e-science and e-society, with respect both to policy issues and to scientific/technological and organisational ones.

LREC provides a unique forum for researchers, industrials and funding agencies from across a wide spectrum of areas to discuss problems and opportunities, find new synergies and promote initiatives for international cooperation, in support of investigations in language sciences, progress in language technologies (LT) and development of corresponding products, services and applications, and standards.

CONFERENCE TOPICS
Issues in the design, construction and use of LRs: text, speech, multimodality
?    Guidelines, standards, best practices and models for LRs interoperability
?    Methodologies and tools for LRs construction and annotation
?    Methodologies and tools for extraction and acquisition of knowledge
?    Ontologies, terminology and knowledge representation
?    LRs and Semantic Web
?    LRs and Crowdsourcing
?    Metadata for LRs and semantic/content mark-up
?    Best practices in the use of LR citations

Exploitation of LRs in systems and applications
?    Multimedia information and multimodal communication, including Sign Languages
?    LRs in systems and applications such as: information extraction, information retrieval, audio-visual and multimedia search, speech dictation, audio-visual transcriptions and annotations, computer aided language learning, training and education, mobile communication, machine translation, speech translation, summarisation, semantic search, text mining and analytics, inferencing, reasoning, sentiment analysis, etc.
?    Interfaces: (speech-based) dialogue systems, natural language and multimodal/multisensorial multi-sensory interactions, voice-activated services, etc.
?    Use of (multilingual) LRs in various fields of application like e-commerce, e-government, e-culture, e-health, e-participation, mobile applications, digital humanities, Digital Service Infrastructures, etc.
?    Industrial LRs requirements, user needs

Issues in LT evaluation
?    LT evaluation methodologies, protocols and measures
?    Validation and quality assurance of LRs
?    Benchmarking of systems and products
?    Usability evaluation of HLT-based user interfaces and dialogue systems
?    User satisfaction evaluation

General issues regarding LRs & Evaluation
?    International and national activities, projects and collaboration
?    Priorities, perspectives, strategies in national and international policies for LRs
?    Multilingual issues, language coverage and diversity, less-resourced languages
?    Open, linked and shared data and tools, open and collaborative architectures
?    Organisational, economical, ethical and legal issues.


LREC 2016 HOT TOPICS

LRs for Actionable Knowledge
Important information to support a range of applications is hidden in Big Data. Automated content analytics is needed for the interpretation of the data and their context, so that it is accurately understood and can be integrated and used in applications. Content analytics makes use of various technologies, like semantic search, keyword suggestions, clustering, classification, etc. What is the role of LRs in such correlation of digital content and context? Can for example relations between LRs and Knowledge Graphs for entity linking, disambiguation, reasoning, etc. support the generation of actionable knowledge in Big Data analytics?
More generally we would like to bring to discussion all issues related to LRs and evaluation means for semantic processing in the Big Data environment.

LRs for Interaction with Devices
There is a growing interest in adapting and improving Natural Language Processing for providing intelligent language interfaces to all kind of devices that are connected to the Internet (of Things), and also to robots, sensors and the like. We encourage investigating how to relate LRs in this communication set-up with data that are in principle of a non-linguistic nature. How to improve multilingual and multimodal generation of information from sensors, robots and in general from structured data in the Internet of Things? How can LRs optimally be designed and used in this (bi-directional) interaction? How to combine language and sensor streams in multilingual and multimodal virtual worlds?
Are there new or past approaches to Human-Machine dialogue offering easily adaptable solutions, so that we need ?only? to upgrade them to the enormously increased quantity of data and number of interconnected devices?

LREC 2016 HIGHLIGHT
Identify, Describe and Share your LRs!
Describing your LRs in the LRE Map is now a normal practice in the submission procedure of LREC (introduced in 2010 and adopted by other conferences).
To continue the efforts initiated at LREC 2014 about ?Sharing LRs? (data, tools, web-services, etc.), authors will have the possibility,  when submitting a paper, to upload LRs in a special LREC repository.  This effort of sharing LRs, linked to the LRE Map for their description, may become a new ?regular? feature for conferences in our field, thus contributing to creating a common repository where everyone can deposit and share data.
As scientific work requires accurate citations of referenced work so as to allow the community to understand the whole context and also replicate the experiments conducted by other researchers, LREC 2016 endorses the need to uniquely Identify LRs through the use of the International Standard Language Resource Number (ISLRN, www.islrn.org), a Persistent Unique Identifier to be assigned to each Language Resource. The assignment of ISLRNs to LRs cited in LREC papers  will be offered at submission time.

PROGRAMME
The Scientific Programme will include invited talks, oral presentations, poster and demo presentations, and panels, in addition to a keynote address by the winner of the Antonio Zampolli Prize.

SUBMISSIONS AND DATES

 LREC 2016 SUBMISSION IS NOW OPEN!

LREC 2016 Final Submission  and Early-Bird Registration have been moved to March 17, 2016 at 23:59 GMT+1

SUBMIT AN ABSTRACT FOR ORAL AND POSTER PRESENTATION
To submit your abstract, please go to:
https://www.softconf.com/lrec2016/main

  • Your abstract must consist of 1500 to 2000 words (about 3-4 pages; can contain references, tables, figures)  and must be formatted in PDF.
  • There is no template for the pdf abstract. The template will be made available online for the final papers. Submissions are NOT anonymous.

IMPORTANT NOTE:
We suggest that you submit your abstract along with the corresponding LRE Map information and ISLRN identifier as soon as possible.
Note that you will be able to revise and re-submit an improved version of the abstract (and  the Map forms) at any time (before the call closure).

Please do not wait until the last moment!

SUBMIT A PROPOSAL FOR WORKSHOP AND/OR TUTORIAL

Submission of workshop and tutorial proposals should be made via the LREC2016 conference website.
Click Submission (
http://lrec2016.lrec-conf.org/en/submission/) from the conference site Homepage.

IMPORTANT DATES:
Submission of proposals for workshops and tutorials: 15 October 2015
Submission of proposals for oral and poster/demo papers: 15 October 2015

Conference: 25 - 26 - 27 May 2016
Pre-conference workshops and tutorials: 23 and 24 May 2016
Post-conference workshops and tutorials: 28 May 2016

 The START page for abstract submission to the Main conference and the webforms for workshops and tutorials submissions will be accessible from:
http://lrec2016.lrec-conf.org/en/submission/
 



PROCEEDINGS
The Proceedings will include both oral and poster papers, in the same format.

There is no difference in quality between oral and poster presentations. Only the appropriateness of the type of communication (more or less interactive) to the content of the paper will be considered.

In addition a Book of Abstracts will be printed.

CONFERENCE PROGRAMME COMMITTEE
Nicoletta Calzolari ? CNR, Istituto di Linguistica Computazionale ?Antonio Zampolli?,
Pisa - Italy (Conference chair)
Khalid Choukri  ? ELRA, Paris - France
Thierry Declerck ? DFKI GmbH, Saarbrücken - Germany
Marko Grobelnik - Jozef Stefan Institute, Ljubljana - Slovenia
Bente Maegaard  ? CST, University of Copenhagen - Denmark
Joseph Mariani  ? LIMSI-CNRS & IMMI, Orsay - France
Asuncion Moreno  ? Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona - Spain
Jan Odijk  ? UIL-OTS, Utrecht - The Netherlands
Stelios Piperidis ? Athena Research Center/ILSP, Athens ? Greece

CONFERENCE EDITORIAL COMMITTEE
IN ADDITION TO THE PROGRAMME COMMITTEE:

Sara Goggi, ILC-CNR, Pisa, Italy
Hélène Mazo, ELDA/ELRA, Paris, France

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3-3-6(2016-05-23) LREC 2016 Workshops and Tutorials

Schedule of all the LREC 2016 Workshops and Tutorials is online at http://lrec2016.lrec-conf.org/en/workshops-and-tutorials/

On this web page you will find a link to each Workshop Call for Papers/Web site and each Tutorial Outline, when available.
For most workshops, the submission information is also provided.

Don't hesitate to contact Workshop and/or Tutorial organisers if you have specific questions on their event.

For general LREC 2016 matters, please contact us at lrec@lrec-conf.org.

www.lrec-conf.org/lrec2016
Follow us on Twitter:

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3-3-7(2016-05-23) LREC HLT Village

The LREC 2016 HLT Village offer is now online: http://lrec2016.lrec-conf.org/en/hlt-projects-village/
An online form is available to apply for a booth online.

Contact us @
lrec@lrec-conf.org

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3-3-8(2016-05-24) CfP ETHI-CA² 2016: ETHics In Corpus Collection, Annotation & Application, Portoro (Slovenia),

Call for Papers: ETHI-CA² 2016: ETHics In Corpus Collection, Annotation & Application
at LREC 2016, Portoro? (Slovenia), 24 May 2016

Dates:

?   Deadline for 1500-2000 words abstract submission: 15 February 2016

?   Notification of acceptance: 10 March 2016

?   Final version of accepted paper: 15 March 2016

?   Workshop: 24 May 2016.

Author Information

1500-2000 words extended abstracts are needed at first for submission. The full papers will be published as workshop proceedings along with the LREC main conference by ELRA. For these, the instructions of LREC need to be followed. The submission will be via the START conference system - a link will follow shortly.

A journal special issue in a related journal is planned for inviting the best papers, but remaining open to further submissions.

Further, a best paper award will be given.

Submissions of extended abstracts need to be made at https://www.softconf.com/lrec2016/ETHI-CA/.

Workshop Description:

ETHI-CA²?s focus spans ethical aspects around the entire processing pipeline from speech and language as well as multimodal resource collection and annotation to system development and application.

In the recent time of ever-more collection ?in the wild? of individual and personal multimodal and ?sensorial ?Big Data?, crowd-sourced annotation by large groups of individuals with often unknown reliability and high subjectivity, and ?deep? and autonomous learning with limited transparency of what is being learnt, and how applications such as in health or robotics depending on such data may behave, ethics have become more crucial than ever in the field of language and multimodal resources making it a key concern of the LREC community. There is, however, a surprising if not shocking white spot in the landscape of workshops, special session, or journal special issues in this field, which ETHI-CA² aims to fill in.

The goal is thus to connect individuals ranging across LREC?s fields of interest s uch as human-machine and ?robot and computer-mediated human-human interaction and communication, affective, behavioural, and social computing whose work touches on crucial ethical issues (e.g., privacy, tracability, explainability, evaluation, responsibility, etc.). According systems increasingly interact with and exploit data of humans of all ranges (e.g., children, adults, vulnerable populations) including non-verbal and verbal data occurring in a variety of real-life contexts (e.g., at home, the hospital, on the phone, in the car, classroom, or public transportation) and act as assistive and partially instructive technologies, companions, and/or commercial or even decision making systems. Obviously, an immense responsibility lies at the different ends from data recording, labelling, and storage to its processing and usage.

Motivation:

Emerging interactive systems have changed the way we connect with our machines, modifying how we socialize, our reasoning capabilities, and our behavior. These areas inspire critical questions centering on the ethics, the goals, and the deployment of innovative products that can change our lives and society. - Many current systems operate on private user data, including identifiable information, or data that provides insight into an individual?s life routine. The workshop will provide discussions of user consent and the notion of informed data collection. - Cloud-based storage systems have grown in popularity as the scope of user-content and user-generated content has greatly increased in size. The workshop will provide discussions on best practices for data annotation and storage and evolving views on data ownership. - Systems have become increasingly capable of mimicking human behavior through research in affective computing. These systems have pr ovided demonstrated utility, for interactions with vulnerable populations (e.g., the elderly, children with autism). The workshop will provide discussions on considerations for vulnerable populations. - The common mantra for assistive technology is, ?augmenting human care, rather than replacing human care.? It is critical that the community anticipates this shift and understands the implication of machine-in-the-loop diagnostic and assessment strategies.

Topics of Interest:

Topics include, but are not limited to:

?   Ethics in recording of private content

?   Ethics in multimodal, sensorial data collection

?   Ethics in annotation (crowd-sourced) of private data

?   Data storage/sharing/anonymization

?   Transparency in Machine Learning

?   Ethics in Affective, Behavioural, and Social Computing

?   Responsibility in Educational Software and Serious Games

?   Human-machine interaction for vulnerable populations

?   Computer-mediated Human-Human Communication

?   Responsibility in Decision-Support based on Data

?   The role of assistive technology in health care

Summary of the Call:

The ETHI-CA² 2016 workshop is crucially needed first edition in a planned for longer series. The goal of the workshop is to connect individuals ranging across LREC?s fields of interest such as human-machine and ?robot and computer-mediated human-human interaction and communication, affective, behavioural, and social computing whose work touches on crucial ethical issues (e.g., privacy, tracability, explainability, evaluation, responsibility, etc.). These areas inspire critical questions centering on the ethics, the goals, and the deployment of innovative products that can change our lives and consequently, society. It is critical that our notion of ethical principles evolves with the design of technology. As humans put increasing trust in systems, we must understand how best to protect privacy, explain what information the systems record, the implications of these recordings, what a system can learn about a user, what a third party could learn by gaining access to the data, changes in human behavior resulting from the presence of the system, and many other factors. It is important that technologists and ethicists maintain a conversation over the development and deployment lifecycles of the technology. The ambition of this workshop is to collect the main ethics, goals and societal impact questions of our community including experts in sociology, psychology, neuroscience or philosophy. At LREC 2016, the workshop shall encourage a broad range of its community?s researchers to reflect about and exchange on ethical issues inherent in their research, providing an environment in which ethics co-evolve with technology.

Organizing Committee:

?   Laurence Devillers, LIMSI-CNRS/Paris-Sorbonne University, France, laurence.devillers@limsi.fr

?   Björn Schuller, Imperial College London, UK/University of Passau, Germany, schuller@IEEE.org

?   Emily Mower Provost, University of Michigan, USA, emilykmp@umich.edu

?   Peter Robinson, University Cambridge, UK, pr10@cam.ac.uk

?   Joseph Mariani, IMMI/LIMSI-CNRS/University Paris-Saclay, France, Joseph.Mariani@limsi.fr

Contact: Laurence Devillers
 

Program Committee:

Gilles Adda, LIMSI-CNRS, France
Jean-Yves Antoine, University of Tours, France
Nick Campbell, TCD, Ireland
Raja Chatila, ISIR-CNRS, France
Alain Couillault, GFII, France
Anna Esposito, UNINA, Italy
Karen Fort, Université Paris-Sorbonne, France
Jean-Gabriel Ganascia, UPMC, France
Alexei Grinbaum, CEA, France
Hatice Gunes, Queen Mary University of London, UK
Dirk Heylen, University of Twente, Netherlands
François Hirsch, INSERM, France
Christophe Leroux, CEA, France
Catherine Tessier, ONERA, France
Isabelle Trancoso, INESC, Portugal

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3-3-9(2016-05-27) 1st International Seminar on Voicing in Speech Production and Perception

1st International Seminar on Voicing in Speech Production and Perception (ISVSPP 2016)

May 27, 2016  Aveiro, Portugal

The University of Aveiro, Portugal, is pleased to announce that it will be hosting the 1st International Seminar on Voicing in Speech Production and Perception (ISVSPP 2016) on the the 27th of May 2016.

A webpagewhere all details about ISVSPP 2016 is now up and running.

Registration is now open

Register and book your accommodation early  in order to get the best deals in our local hotels. Aveiro is a beautiful small city, so why not book an extra day to explore our wonderful city?
 
This year's program theme is 'Articulatory functioning of the larynx - A Day with Professor John Esling'and includes the following invited speakers: 

The ISVSPP seminars aim to bring together senior and junior scientists working in the multidisciplinary ?eld of Speech Production and Perception, ensuring direct and informal interaction between all participants.
The conference program will include keynotes and ample opportunities to discuss participants' own research

Registration will include lunch and a coffee break.

The venue is the School of Health Sciences at the University of Aveiro?s Campus de Santiago, overlooking the Aveiro lagoon, which is renowned internationally for its many buildings designed by famous Portuguese architects, only a short distance from the city centre.
 
Join us for a day with Professor John Esling, THINK speech production and perception for a day, let yourself be engaged and involved in Professor John Esling's unique lecturing style, with various opportunities for informal discussions with the invited speakers, and perhaps take a short break over the weekend at this unique coastal region we call Aveiro.
 
Luis M. T. Jesus
(General Chair)
University of Aveiro, Portugal
 
 
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3-3-10(2016-06-06) ACM International Conference on Multimedia Retrieval ICMR 2016, New York, USA

ACM ICMR 2016,  New York, USA
International Conference on Multimedia Retrieval
http://www.icmr2016.com/

*** CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS ***

ACM ICMR-2016 is the premier conference for multimedia information retrieval. We are
seeking high quality and original papers that address novel problems and explore
innovative technical approaches for multimedia retrieval that are of interest to a broad
community of multimedia scientists, engineers, practitioners, and students. Of particular
interest are contributions that investigate multimedia retrieval in practice including
challenges related scale, effectiveness, efficiency, multi-modal integration, user
interfaces and multimedia retrieval deployment across a range of industries. We
particularly welcome contributions on the following topics:

. Multimedia content extraction, analysis and indexing
. Multimedia content-based search and retrieval
. Multimedia semantic modeling, taxonomies, ontologies, facets
. Multi-modal integration (audio, visual, text, metadata)
. Multimedia machine learning, deep learning, neural nets
. Relevance feedback, active learning and transfer learning
. Audio-visual feature design and evaluation
. Multimedia retrieval metrics, data sets and evaluation
. Social media, crowdsourcing and tagging
. Large-scale multimedia indexing and search
. Multimedia analysis/search acceleration: GPU, FPGA, etc.
. Solutions: video repositories, smart albums, media sharing, media
personalization, content management
. Industry applications: medicine, retail, travel, media and entertainment, Web,
advertising, fashion, security


***IMPORTANT DATES***

* FULL PAPERS and SHORT PAPERS
* TECHNICAL DEMONSTRATIONS
        Paper Submission: January 29, 2016 11:59 PM PST
        Notification of Acceptance: March 25, 2016

* BRAVE NEW IDEAS PAPERS
* DOCTORAL SYMPOSIUM
        Paper Submission: February 12, 2016 11:59 PM PST
        Notification of Acceptance: March 25, 2016

* GRAND CHALLENGE PROPOSALS
* SPECIAL SESSIONS PROPOSALS
        Special session paper submission: January 29, 2016
        Notification of acceptance: March 25, 2016

* WORKSHOPS PROPOSALS
        Proposal for a Workshop due: January 5, 2016
        Proposal acceptance:: January 14, 2016
        Workshop Paper Submission Deadline: February 15, 2016
        Workshop Paper Notification: March 25, 2016

* TUTORIALS PROPOSALS
        Proposal for a Tutorial due: February 12, 2016
        Decision for Tutorials proposals: February 26, 2016

Details of each track are available on the conference website
http://www.icmr2016.com/call.html

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3-3-11(2016-06-09) 19th Rencontres Jeunes Chercheurs (RJC 2016), University Sorbonne-Nouvelle - Paris III, France

19th Rencontres Jeunes Chercheurs (RJC 2016)

June 9th and 10th, 2016

Created in 1998, the Rencontres Jeunes Chercheurs (RJC) of the Doctoral School “Langage et langues” (ED

268, Sorbonne Nouvelle University - Paris 3) offer junior researchers preparing for a master's or a doctorate degree, as

well as post-doctorates, the opportunity to present their work in paper or poster sessions.

Language alterity: strategies of adaptation and appropriation

In a now classic book, The Mirror of Herodotus, François Hartog (1980) proposed an analysis of Herodotus’

discourse developed on Scythians. By describing the 'rhetoric of alterity', through which the Greek historian managed

to 'inscribe the world which is told into the world where it is told', he distinguished several ways to make the foreigner

comprehensible in his own language: inversion, comparison and wonder.

By continuing this reflection, we would like to invite participants to explore the strategies through which one

makes place for alterity within one’s language and one’s discourse. Alterity, that is, the nature of what is perceived as

different, foreign, and sometimes even strange, is a necessary focus in the construction of identities (Ferréol & Jucquois,

2003). How can I negotiate this difference, how can I make it familiar or at least comprehensible in my language?

Several strategies can operate in parallel or in opposite ways.

The strategies of appropriation and adaptation are both opposite and complementary. Repetition, interpretation,

citation, transcription, reformulation, translation and foreign language learning are included.

From an epistemological point of view, alterity doesn’t always have the same place in linguistic theories

(Dufaye & Gournay, 2010). From dialogal speech to bakhtinian dialogism, from interdiscourse to the concept of costatement,

alterity takes different forms. We can think of the researches inscribed in the lineage of Michel Pêcheux

(Maldidier, 1990) on discourse analysis, on discursive constraints in which the subject products his discourse, more

broadly on the notion of 'interdiscourse', which shows the discourse through the collective. Works on pragmatics of

discourse (Ducrot, 1980) also conceive the later as built by several people.

The theme of language alterity, from a discourse perspective, also invites us to consider research on alterity

inherent to the subject. Starting from research on reported speech, the problem of cleaved subject and its syntactic

marks can be raised, especially if one thinks about the notion of 'constitutive heterogeneity' elaborated by Jacqueline

Authier-Revuz (1982), which is fully integrated into the proposed themes.

However, the concept of alterity can be expanded to other fields in language sciences. How can a translation be

faithful to the original text when the expressions or the imagination of the target language differ? How can a recognition

system work when a non-standard variant is used? How do learners build their linguistic identities when they are in

contact with the other? These questions are just a sample of those the researchers in language sciences may have when

facing the problem of alterity.

Alterity is also a transversal subject which is related to the way that the speaker encounters the thought, the

language, the discourse and the culture of the other (Bornand & Leguy, 2013). The confrontation with a distant

language, whether the distance is cultural, geographical or chronological, imposes some choices which can lead to the

loss or creation of components (Chauvier, 2011). How can we observe the impact of alterity on a language, individual,

or community?

All of these theoretical approaches allow the researchers in language sciences to gather around a common

problematic. The participants can consider the language in all its media (oral, written, sign language).

Bibliography :

Authier-Revuz, J. (1982). Hétérogénéité montrée et hétérogénéité constitutive, éléments pour une approche de l'autre

dans le discours. In DRLAV, n°26, pp.91-151.

Authier-Revuz, J. (1995). Ces mots qui ne vont pas de soi : Boucles réflexives et non-coïncidences du dire. Paris :

Larousse.

Bakhtine, M. (1978). Esthétique et théorie du roman. Paris : Gallimard.

Bakhtine, M. (1984). Esthétique de la création verbale. Paris : Gallimard.

Bornand, S. & Leguy, C. (2013). Anthropologie des pratiques langagières. Paris : Armand Colin.

Chauvier, E. (2011). Anthropologie de l’ordinaire : une conversion du regard. Toulouse : Anacharsis.

Ducrot, O. (1980). Le Dire et le Dit. Paris : Minuit.

Dufaye, L. & Gournay, L. (2010). L’altérité dans les théories de l’énonciation. Paris/Gap : Ophrys.

Ferréol, G. & Jucquois, G. (2003). Dictonnaire de l’altérité et des relations interculturelles. Paris : Armand Colin.

Hartog, F. (1980). Le Miroir d'Hérodote. Essai sur la représentation de l'autre. Paris : Gallimard.

Maldidier, D. (1990). L’inquiétude du discours : textes de Michel Pêcheux. Paris : Cendres.

Scientific committee:

Martine ADDA DECKER, José Ignacio AGUILAR RIO, Angélique AMELOT, Jacqueline AUTHIER-REVUZ,

Michelle AUZANNEAU, Jean-Claude BEACCO, Eric BEAUMATIN, Irmtraud BEHR, Violaine BIGOT, Philippe

BOULA DE MAREUIL, Maria CANDEA, Jean-Louis CHISS, Francine CICUREL, Jeanne-Marie DEBAISIEUX,

Didier DEMOLIN, Christine DEPREZ, Martine DERIVRY, Claire DOQUET, Serge FLEURY, Jean-Marie

FOURNIER, Emmanuel FRAISSE, Florentina FREDET, Stéphanie GALLIGANI, Cedric GENDROT, Kim GERDES,

Anna GHIMENTON, Yana GRINSHPUN, Jean-Patrick GUILLAUME, Agnès HENRI, Frédéric ISEL, Raphaël

KABORE, Takeki KAMIYAMA, Dominique KLINGLER, René LACROIX, Marie-Christine LALA, Florence

LEFEUVRE, Cécile LEGUY, Muriel MOLINIE, Catherine MULLER, Valélia MUNI TOKE, Samia NAIM, Jean-Paul

NARCY-COMBES, Gabriella PARUSSA, Claire PILLOT-LOISEAU, Konstantin POZDNIAKOV, Christian PUECH,

Nicolas QUINT, Christine RAGUET, Sandrine REBOUL-TOURE, Patrick RENAUD, Rachid RIDOUANE, Anne

SALAZAR ORVIG, Didier SAMAIN, Pollet SAMVELIAN, Dan SAVATOVSKY, Valérie SPAËTH, Sofia

STRATILAKI, Isabelle TELLIER, Jacqueline VAISSIERE, Andrea VALENTINI, Daniel VERONIQUE, Patricia VON

MÜNCHOW, Geneviève ZARATE.

Organizing committee:

Sophia AKESBI, Jean ARZOUMANOV, Emre BAYRAKTAR, Marie-Amélie BOTALLA, Carla CAMPOS

CASCALES, Jacopo D'ALONZO, Nada DAOU, Paola GAMBOA DIAZ, Shahrzad KESHVARIRAD, Mathilde

MECHLING, Shima MOALLEMI, Coraline PRADEAU, Magali RUET, Bowei SHAO, Komi SIMNARA, Marco

STEFANELLI, Lucien TISSERAND, Amandine WATTELIER-BRICOUT, Jane WOTTAWA, Yaru WU.

The conference is open to graduate students (master, doctorate) and young researchers.

Free admission.

Participants will receive a certificate of attendance.

Important dates :

Submission deadline : January 31st, 2016

Notification of acceptance : end of March 2016

Conference dates : June 9th and 10th, 2016

Corrected article deadline : 30 June 2016

Conference location:

Institut de linguistique et de phonétique générales et appliquées (ILPGA)

Address: 19, rue des Bernardins - 75005 PARIS

Public transportation : Metro : Maubert Mutualité (line 10) ; Bus: 24, 47, 63, 86, 87 ; RER : Saint Michel (B and C

lines)

Presentations:

Oral presentations and posters will be made in English or in French.

Oral presentations will be allocated 20 minutes, plus 10 minutes for discussion.

The size of the posters will be A0. Poster authors will be invited to give a short oral presentation of their work.

Submission :

Paper submissions are to be sent by e-mail to the following address: rjc-ed268@univ-paris3.fr, before January 31st,

2016.

The e-mail message should specify:

Personal data (last name, first name, e-mail and personal postal address);

University affiliation;

Educational level (master / doctorate / postdoc; specify the number of years for the doctorate);

Research supervisor(s);

Research field(s) of the submitted paper;

Title of the submitted paper.

Submissions are to be sent in the form of an article, in an attached .rtf file named “rjc2016_NAME.rtf” (eg:

“rjc2016_SMITH.rtf”). This file should contain only the following information:

Title of the submitted paper;

Summary of about 100 words, in the paper’s language;

5 keywords in French, the same keywords in English;

For oral presentations: a 6 to 8-page article (25 000 characters maximum, spaces included) ; for posters: a 5-

page article (15 000 characters maximum, spaces included);

Bibliography.

The format of the article should be as follows:

Times New Roman 12 pt font;

1,5 line spacing;

2,5 cm margins at all edges;

justified left and right;

headings: Times New Roman 12 pt, bold, using a hierarchical numbering (1. ; 1.1. ; 1.1.1) and no more than 3

heading levels.

In the case of phonetic transcriptions, please use the SILDoulos font, available here.

Only one submission will be examined for each participant.

The accepted submissions will be sent back to the authors in order to be corrected and laid out in mid-April.

The corrected article will have to be transmitted to the organizing committee before the conference.

The organizing committee reserves the right to refuse an article that would not meet the conference’s scientific

requirements after correction.

Publication:

The proceedings will be published on-line after the conference.

All information is available on : www.univ-paris3.fr/rjc-

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3-3-12(2016-06-15) CfP 14th International Workshop on Content-Based Multimedia Indexing (CBMI), Bucharest, Romania (Extended deadline)

CBMI 2016
14th International Workshop on Content-Based Multimedia Indexing
June 15-17 2016, Bucharest, Romania
http://cbmi2016.upb.ro/
https://www.facebook.com/CBMI2016
https://twitter.com/cbmi16


*********************************
*** Call for papers and demos ***
*********************************

Submission deadlines: February 15th, 2016 (extended)
* Full/short papers
* Special session on Deep Learning for Multimedia Indexing
* Special session on Multimedia Indexing for eLearning
* Special session on CBMI for Healthcare

Submission deadline: February 29th, 2016
* Demo papers

Following the thirteen successful previous events of CBMI, the 14th
International CBMI Workshop aims at bringing together the various
communities involved in all aspects of content-based multimedia indexing for
retrieval, browsing, visualization and analytics.

The scientific program of CBMI 2016 will include invited keynote talks and
regular, special and demo sessions with contributed research papers.

Authors are encouraged to submit previously unpublished research papers
in the broad field of content-based multimedia indexing and
applications. In addition to multimedia and social media search and
retrieval, we wish to highlight related and equally important issues
that build on content-based indexing, such as multimedia content
management, user interaction and visualization, media analytics, etc.

Topics include  (but are not limited to):

? Audio and visual and multimedia indexing;
? Multimodal and cross-modal indexing;
? Deep learning for multimedia indexing;
? Visual content extraction;
? Audio (speech, music, etc) content extraction;
? Identification and tracking of semantic regions and events;
? Social media analysis;
? Metadata generation, coding and transformation;
? Multimedia information retrieval (image, audio, video, text);
? Mobile media retrieval;
? Event-based media processing and retrieval;
? Affective/emotional interaction or interfaces for multimedia retrieval;
? Multimedia data mining and analytics;
? Multimedia recommendation;
? Large scale multimedia database management;
? Summarization, browsing and organization of multimedia content;
? Personalization and content adaptation;
? User interaction and relevance feedback;
? Multimedia interfaces, presentation and visualization tools;
? Evaluation and benchmarking of multimedia retrieval systems;
? Applications of multimedia retrieval, e.g., medicine, lifelogs,
satellite imagery, video surveillance.

Authors are invited to submit full length (6 pages - to be presented as
oral presentation) and short papers (4 pages - to be presented as
posters). The submissions are peer reviewed in a single blind process.

The CBMI proceedings will be indexed and distributed by IEEE Xplore and
ACM DL. In addition, authors of selected papers of the conference will
be invited to submit extended versions of their contributions to a
special issue of Multimedia Tools and Applications journal (MTAP).

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3-3-13(2016-07-04) 5ème Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française, Tours, France

 

5ème Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française

Organisé par l’Institut de Linguistique Française (CNRS – FR 2393)

du 4 au 8 juillet 2016,

à l’Université François Rabelais de Tours

APPEL A COMMUNICATIONS

Organisation

Dates : 4 au 8 juillet 2016

Lieu : Université François Rabelais de Tours

Site web : http://cmlf2016.sciencesconf.org/

Contact : fr2393.cmlf2016@cnrs.fr

Institution en charge de l’organisation

Institut de Linguistique Française – FR 2393 du CNRS Courriel : FR2393.secretariat-general@cnrs.fr

Téléphone : 01 43 13 56 45

Adresse : 44, rue de l’Amiral Mouchez – 75014 Paris

Site web : http://www.ilf.cnrs.fr/

Programme prévisionnel

Le Congrès fonctionne par appel à communications. Les réponses à l’appel à communications sont attendues jusqu’au 30 novembre 2015. Le nombre total de communications est estimé à 200 environ.

4 conférences et 2 tables rondes plénières seront organisées.

Les conférences plénières permettent à des chercheurs invités de réputation internationale d’offrir un état de la recherche en linguistique française :

 Marie-José Béguelin, Université de Neuchâtel (Suisse)

Aidan Coveney, University of Exeter (Royaume-Uni)

 Harriet Jisa, Université Lyon 2

 Alain Polguère, Université de Lorraine

Tables rondes plénières thématiques

Philologie et herméneutique numérique(s)

 Le français, langue en contact

Calendrier

15 mai 2015 : Ouverture de la plateforme de dépôt des communications

 30 novembre 2015 : Date limite de réception des communications

 29 février 2016 : Notification de l'acceptation ou du refus des propositions de communication, et directives pour la version définitive

 31 mars 2016 : Réception de la version définitive des articles

2

Organisateurs

- Franck Neveu, Directeur de l’ILF (Institut de Linguistique Française), Université Paris-Sorbonne

- Gabriel Bergounioux, Université d‘Orléans

- Marie-Hélène Côté, Université Laval (Québec)

- Jean-Michel Fournier avec l’assistance de Sylvester Osu et Philippe Planchon, Université François Rabelais de Tours

- Linda Hriba, Université d’Orléans

- Sophie Prévost, CNRS, laboratoire Langues, Textes, Traitements informatiques, Cognition (Lattice)

Co-organisateurs

Les unités de recherche composant l’Institut de Linguistique Française :

Unités Mixtes de Recherche

Analyse et Traitement Informatique de la Langue Française (ATILF)

UMR 7118 CNRS – Université de Lorraine – Direction : Éva Buchi

Bases, Corpus, Langage (BCL)

UMR 7320 CNRS – Université Nice Sophia Antipolis – Direction : Damon Mayaffre

Cognition, Langues, Langage, Ergonomie (CLLE)

UMR 5263 CNRS – Université de Toulouse II - Direction : Hélène Giraudo. Responsable de l’équipe de linguistique CLEE-ERSS : Cécile Fabre

Equipe d’informatique linguistique du Laboratoire d’Informatique Gaspard Monge (LIGM)

UMR 8049 – CNRS – Université Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée – Direction : Marie-Pierre Béal. Responsable de l’équipe d’informatique linguistique : Eric Laporte et Tita Kyriacopoulou

Interactions, Corpus, Apprentissages, Représentations (ICAR)

UMR 5191 CNRS – Université Lumière Lyon 2 – ENS de Lyon – INRP – Direction : Sandra Teston-Bonnard

Laboratoire Parole et Langage (LPL)

UMR 7309 CNRS – Aix - Marseille Université – Direction : Noël Nguyen

Langues, Textes, Traitements informatiques, Cognition (Lattice)

UMR 8094 CNRS – ENS – Université Sorbonne Nouvelle – Direction : Thierry Poibeau

Lexiques, Dictionnaires, Informatique (LDI)

UMR 7187 CNRS – UP13 – UCP – Direction : Gabrielle Le Tallec Lloret

Modèles, Dynamiques, Corpus (MoDyCo)

UMR 7114 CNRS – Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense – Direction : Jean-Luc Minel

Equipe «Linguistique» de l’Institut des Textes et Manuscrits Modernes (ITEM)

UMR 8132 CNRS – Direction : Paolo d’Iorio, Responsable de l’équipe « Linguistique » : Irène Fenoglio

PRAXILING

UMR 5267 CNRS – Université Paul-Valéry – Montpellier 3 – Direction : Agnès Steuckardt. Représentante du laboratoire à l’ILF : Christine Béal

Savoirs, Textes, Langage (STL)

UMR 8163 CNRS – Université de Lille – Direction : Philippe Sabot. Représentante du laboratoire à l’ILF : Georgette Dal

Laboratoire Ligérien de Linguistique (LLL)

UMR 7270 – Université d’Orléans – Université de Tours – CNRS – BnF – Direction : Gabriel Bergounioux 3

Analyse Linguistique Profonde à Grande Echelle (ALPAGE)

UMR-I 001 – INRIA et Université Paris-Diderot – Direction Benoît Sagot

Équipes d’accueil

Centre de Recherche sur les médiations (CREM)

EA 3476 – Université de Lorraine – Pôle PRAXITEXTE – Direction : Jacques Walter. Représentante du laboratoire à l’ILF : Béatrice Fracchiolla

Centre de Recherches Inter-langues sur la Signification en Contexte (CRISCO)

EA 4255 – Université de Caen Basse-Normandie – Direction : Pierre Larrivée

CLESTHIA

EA 7345 – Langages, systèmes, discours – Direction : Gabriella Parussa. Représentante du laboratoire à l’ILF : Florence Lefeuvre

Linguistique et Didactique des Langues Etrangères et Maternelle (LIDILEM)

EA 609 – Université Stendhal Grenoble 3 – Direction : Marinette Matthey

Linguistique, Langues et Parole (LiLPa)

EA 1339 – Université de Strasbourg – Direction : Rudolph Sock

Sens, Texte, Informatique, Histoire (STIH)

EA 4509 – Université Paris-Sorbonne (Paris 4) – Direction : Joëlle Ducos

Remarques sur l’évaluation des propositions

Le Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française est une grande manifestation internationale sur et pour la linguistique française qui se caractérise par une procédure exigeante en matière d’évaluation des communications présentées au congrès :

 les propositions de communication ne sont pas des résumés mais de véritables articles (10 pages minimum, 15 pages maximum) comprenant une bibliographie ;

la gestion des propositions, de leur répartition entre comités thématiques et au sein des comités thématiques s'effectue via une plateforme de gestion de congrès scientifique - http://www.sciencesconf.org/ - et d'EDP - http://www.edpsciences.org avec publication des actes sur www.linguistiquefrancaise.org);

l'évaluation des propositions est faite par des experts au moyen d'une grille unifiée et après une anonymisation des soumissions ;

 la production d'un CD-ROM d'actes avec index, moteur de recherche et d'un livret des résumés est assurée par le logiciel dédié, ce qui assure l'homogénéité et la qualité du résultat ;

 les communications acceptées font l'objet d'une publication en version intégrale dans les actes ;

 les actes sont distribués à l'ouverture du congrès.

Partenaires sollicités pour du financement de la manifestation

Agence Universitaire de la Francophonie

 CNRS : Institut des Sciences Humaines et Sociales - Section 34 du CNRS

 Ministère de la Culture et de la Communication - Délégation Générale à la Langue Française et aux Langues de France

 Ministère de l'Éducation Nationale, de l'Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche

 Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense

 Ville de Tours

 Communauté d’agglomération Tours Plus

 Département d’Indre-et-Loire

 Région Centre-Val de Loire

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Présentation scientifique

Intérêt scientifique

Le cinquième Congrès Mondial de Linguistique Française est organisé par l’Institut de Linguistique Française (ILF), Fédération de Recherche du CNRS (FR 2393) qui est sous la tutelle de cet organisme et du Ministère de l'Éducation Nationale, de l'Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche. L’ILF regroupe vingt laboratoires de recherche, qui sont les co-organisateurs de ce congrès en partenariat avec de nombreuses associations nationales et internationales. Une telle organisation, conjointement prise en charge par vingt unités de recherche, est exceptionnelle par son ampleur et la volonté de partenariat scientifique qu’elle révèle.

Le premier Congrès Mondial a été organisé à Paris par l’ILF en 2008, le deuxième à La Nouvelle-Orléans, le troisième à Lyon en 2012 et le quatrième à Berlin en 2014. Chacun de ces quatre congrès a attiré plus de 300 participants et les résultats ont fait l’objet d’une publication en ligne immédiate accompagnée par un volume de résumés et un CD-ROM d’actes.

Ce congrès est organisé sans aucun privilège d'école ou d'orientation et sans exclusive théorique ou conceptuelle. Chaque domaine ou sous-domaine, chaque type d'objet, chaque type de questionnement et chaque problématique portant sur le français peut y trouver sa place.

Le CMLF est organisé en 15 sessions, lesquelles soulignent le fait que la linguistique française n’est pas limitée à tel ou tel domaine érigé en modèle pour les autres sous-disciplines du champ. Quatorze thématiques ont été retenues, qui permettent de balayer la plus grande partie du champ scientifique : (1) Discours, Pragmatique et Interaction, (2) Francophonie, (3) Histoire du français : perspectives diachronique et synchronique, (4) Histoire, Épistémologie, Réflexivité, (5) Lexique(s), (6) Linguistique de l’écrit, Linguistique du texte, Sémiotique, Stylistique, (7) Linguistique et Didactique (français langue première, français langue seconde), (8) Morphologie, (9) Phonétique, Phonologie et Interfaces, (10) Psycholinguistique et Acquisition, (11) Ressources et Outils pour l’analyse linguistique, (12) Sémantique, (13) Sociolinguistique, Dialectologie et Écologie des langues, (14) Syntaxe. A ces quatorze thématiques a été ajoutée une quinzième session « pluri-thématique », laissant ouverte la possibilité de travailler dans plusieurs domaines, voire en marge des territoires disciplinaires traditionnels.

Chaque thématique est pilotée par un Président et coordonnée par un Vice-président (membre du Comité directeur de l’ILF, ou bien choisi par ce comité). Les comités scientifiques comportent une proportion équilibrée de spécialistes français et étrangers. Un soin particulier a été accordé à la sélection des comités afin de s’assurer qu’ils présenteraient les plus grandes garanties scientifiques pour le succès du congrès. On trouve donc dans chaque comité des linguistes connu(e)s mondialement pour leur contribution au domaine. Le rôle de ces comités est de sélectionner les propositions de communications.

Les soumissions se feront sous la forme de brefs articles de 10 à 15 pages.

Toutes les communications (y compris les conférences plénières) seront publiées sous la forme d'un article de 10 à 15 pages dans les actes du congrès (sous forme de CD-ROM accompagnant un livret des titres et des résumés des communications) et maintenues sous forme électronique sur le site du CMLF. L'archive électronique restera accessible après le congrès.

Comité scientifique

Le Comité scientifique est composé des comités des 14 thématiques du Congrès et des responsables de la session pluri-thématique : 5

- Discours, Pragmatique et Interaction

Présidente : Sabine Diao-Klaeger (Universität Koblenz-Landau, Allemagne), Vice-présidente/coordonnatrice : Christine Béal (Université Paul-Valéry – Montpellier 3)

Autres membres du comité : Chantal Claudel (Université Paris 8), Gaétane Dostie (Université de Sherbrooke, Canada), Laurent Fillietaz (Université de Genève, Suisse), Marie-Noëlle Guillot (University of East Anglia, Royaume-Uni), Catherine Kerbrat-Orecchioni (Université Lumière - Lyon 2), Sophie Moirand (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3), Kerry Mullan (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Australie), Juan Manuel Lopez Muñoz (Universidad de Cádiz, Espagne), Christian Plantin (Université Lumière - Lyon 2), Agnès Steuckardt (Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3), Britta Thörle (Universität Siegen, Allemagne), Frédéric Torterat (Université Nice Sophia Antipolis), Patricia Von Münchow (Université Paris Descartes), Véronique Traverso (Université Lumière - Lyon 2)

Présentation

L’analyse du discours, dans son acception contemporaine, se définit essentiellement par la mise en relation des manifestations concrètes du langage avec ses conditions de production, et implique donc une prise en considération du locuteur, du référent et de la situation de communication. Vu sous cet angle, le discours, qu’il soit écrit ou oral, se caractérise par la présence de la subjectivité de l’énonciateur (linguistique de l’énonciation) et également par la manière dont le locuteur met en scène de façon plus ou moins implicite d’autres voix que la sienne à propos du même objet (dialogisme). La pragmatique possède un champ d’application très large, couvrant tous les aspects pertinents pour l’interprétation des énoncés, liés non seulement au système linguistique mais aussi au contexte de production. Son domaine s’est encore enrichi avec le développement de nouvelles pratiques de constitution de corpus de données orales et vidéo, qui permettent d’intégrer dans les analyses une grande diversité de phénomènes (prosodie, multimodalité notamment). Dans le cas des interactions verbales, c’est la co-présence (en face à face, au téléphone, sur skype) de deux ou plusieurs personnes qui exerce une influence déterminante sur la forme et le contenu que va prendre l’énoncé. Pour certains linguistes, elles constituent simplement une sous-catégorie du discours, qui possède des caractéristiques propres (notamment le contexte interactif), mais qui ne peut être décrite comme un objet entièrement autonome (certains parlent d’ailleurs de discours-en-interaction). Parallèlement, le courant de l’analyse conversationnelle développe une méthodologie et des objectifs distincts de l’analyse du discours (approche strictement empirique et inductive, focalisation sur les usages situés, le contexte séquentiel et les conduites multimodales). Cette section, ouverte à toute forme d’analyse du discours et de l’interaction, privilégiera néanmoins les approches qui sont clairement ancrées sur des données empiriques et qui interrogent les imbrications théoriques des champs de l’analyse du discours, de la pragmatique et de l’interaction.

- Francophonie

Présidente : Chantal Lyche (Université d’Oslo, Norvège), Vice-président/ coordonnateur : André Thibault (Université Paris-Sorbonne)

Autres membres du comité : Fouzia Benzakour (Université de Rabat et Université de Sherbrooke), Peter Blumenthal (Universität zu Köln, Allemagne), Jürgen Erfurt (Goethe Universität Frankfurt am Main, Allemagne), Carole de Féral (Université Nice Sophia Antipolis), Michel Francard (Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgique), Andres Kristol (Université de Neuchâtel, Suisse), Gudrun Ledegen (Université de Rennes 2), Salah Mejri (Université Paris-XIII)

Présentation

L'étude du français en francophonie occupe de plus en plus de place dans la discussion scientifique, de pair avec l'extension de sa diffusion dans le monde. Cet objet polymorphe peut être appréhendé de plusieurs façons : les points de vue internes, qu'il s'agisse des aspects phonétiques/phonologiques, morpho-syntaxiques et lexico-sémantiques, gagnent à être croisés avec les points de vue externes (facteurs de variation diachronique, diastratique, pragmatique et stylistique; contacts de langue, 6

alternance et mélange codiques; étiolement, accommodation et loyauté linguistiques; étymologie, histoire des mots et lexicographie historico-différentielle ; élaboration de normes nationales; sémiotique littéraire). La session invite à soumettre des articles se rattachant à toutes ces approches, dans le respect de tous les cadres théoriques.

- Histoire du français : perspectives diachronique et synchronique

Présidente : Lene Schøsler (Université de Copenhague, Danemark), Vice-présidente/coordonnatrice : Sophie Prévost (CNRS/ENS/Université Sorbonne Nouvelle)

Autres membres du comité : Wendy Ayres-Bennett (Cambridge University, Royaume Uni) , Eva Buchi (CNRS/Université de Lorraine), Anne Carlier (Université Lille 3), Bernard Combettes (Université de Lorraine), Walter De Mulder (Université d’Anvers, Belgique), Monique Dufresne (Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada), Céline Guillot-Barbance (ENS de Lyon), Christiane Marchello-Nizia (ENS de Lyon), Nicolas Mazziotta (Universität Stuttgart, Allemagne), Maria Selig (Universität Regensburg, Allemagne), Richard Waltereit (Newcastle University, Royaume Uni).

Présentation

Les études proprement diachroniques, portant sur l'évolution de phénomènes à travers les siècles ou sur des diachronies courtes (y compris de la langue des 20-21èmes siècles) sont encouragées, quel que soit le domaine dont elle relèvent (phonétique, morphologie, syntaxe, sémantique, ou pragmatique), qu’il s’agisse d’écrit ou d’oral, et que les analyses soient descriptives ou plus spécifiquement théoriques.

Seront également accueillis des travaux visant à approfondir ou discuter des théories sur le changement.

Enfin, des études synchroniques consacrées à une période ancienne précise, antérieure au 20ème siècle, trouveront également leur place dans cette section.

- Histoire, Épistémologie, Réflexivité

Président : Bernard Colombat (Université Paris-Diderot), Vice-président/coordonnateur : Franck Neveu (Université Paris-Sorbonne)

Autres membres du comité : Danielle Candel (CNRS/Université Paris-Diderot), Marie-Christine Lala, (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3), Jacqueline Léon (Université Paris-Diderot), Sophie Piron (Université du Québec, Montréal), Pierre-Yves Testenoire (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3), Anne-Gaëlle Toutain (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3)

Présentation

L’histoire et l’épistémologie de la science linguistique ont connu au cours des dernières décennies un développement considérable, témoignant en cela de la nécessité cruciale pour les linguistes de s’interroger sur les objets, les orientations, le langage, les frontières et l’historicité de leur domaine de recherche. La session « Histoire, Épistémologie, Réflexivité » du Congrès se donne pour objectif d’établir un état des lieux de cet ensemble de problématiques. Pour ce faire, elle souhaite susciter des propositions de communication orientées, notamment, vers les questions suivantes :

- la grammatisation et l’histoire du français ;

- la linguistique française comme linguistique du français ou comme théorisation française des langues; les modélisations et les pratiques de recherche en linguistique française ; la notion de

« tradition » en linguistique; la « tradition grammaticale française » ; la notion de « linguistique nationale » ;

- l’histoire des théories des langues et du langage comme composante de la réflexivité linguistique ; la notion d’« école linguistique » ;

- la terminologie et la terminographie linguistiques ;

- l’histoire du métalangage français ; l’historicité de la linguistique française ; les fondements et les objectifs de l’historiographie en linguistique française ; la constitution et l’emploi des bases de données textuelles en histoire de la linguistique ; l’édition de textes grammaticaux anciens ;

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l’usage des corpus en terminographie linguistique ; l’exploitation scientifique des premiers outils linguistiques français ;

- l’interface science du langage/philosophie du langage ; le tournant philosophique de la linguistique ; la philosophie de la linguistique, etc.

- Lexique(s)

Président : Jean-François Sablayrolles (Université Paris 13), Vice-président/coordonnateur : Francis Grossmann (Université Stendhal - Grenoble 3)

Autres membres du comité : Xavier Blanco (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Espagne), François Gaudin (Université de Rouen et LDI), Alicja Kacprzak (Université de Lodz, Pologne), Marie-Claude L’Homme (Université de Montréal, Canada), Aïno Niklas-Salminen (Université Aix-Marseille), Alain Polguère (Université de Lorraine et IUF), Agnès Tutin (Université Stendhal - Grenoble 3), Vorger Camille (Université de Lausanne, Suisse), Esme Winter-Froemel (Universität Trier, Allemagne)

Présentation

Le lexique entretient des relations avec (quasiment) toutes les branches de la langue (à laquelle serait-il complètement étranger ?) et, par voie de conséquence, la lexicologie est donc en relation avec (quasiment) toutes les branches des sciences du langage (à laquelle serait-elle complètement étrangère ?). Les évolutions des approches théoriques dans les sciences du langage (morphologie constructionnelle, études combinatoires, linguistique cognitive, approche computationnelle, linguistique de corpus, lexicométrie, textométrie, analyse du discours… se répercutent donc sur les études lexicales. À côté de ces études synchroniques, diverses, on observe aussi un retour à l’histoire et à l’évolution des mots et de leurs sens. De nouvelles réflexions se sont développées sur la nature des unités lexicales et des éléments qui les forment, sur leur traitement polysémique ou homonymique, sur les processus de figement et de défigement, sur la néologie et sur les évolutions du lexique de la langue, etc. et tout ceci a des répercussions pratiques sur la confection de dictionnaires (traditionnels ou tournés vers le TAL), l’enseignement des langues, la traduction…Cette session souhaite fournir des regards croisés entre lexicologie, terminologie, lexicographie, métalexicographie, constitution de lexiques électroniques pour le traitement automatique de la langue, analyse des textes fondée sur le lexique…La session Lexique(s) invite les contributeurs à soumettre des propositions portant sur tous les aspects de l’étude du lexique français : description et/ ou modélisation soit dans une perspective historico-comparative, soit dans une perspective synchronique.

- Linguistique de l’écrit, Linguistique du texte, Sémiotique, Stylistique

Président : Thomas Broden (Université de Purdue, États-Unis), Vice-présidente/coordonnatrice : Irène Fenoglio (ITEM, CNRS-ENS)

Autres membres du Comité d’évaluation : Driss Ablali (Université de Lorraine) Céline Beaudet (Université de Sherbrooke, Canada), Christophe Leblay (Université de Turku, Finlande), Julie Lefebvre (Université de Lorraine), Aya Ono (Université de Keio, Japon), Gilles Philippe (Université de Lausanne, Suisse)

Présentation

Cette section invite à s’interroger sur les propriétés linguistiques de l’écrit. Plusieurs angles d’approche peuvent être proposés : l’écriture en production (genèse, cognition, textualisation), l’écrit constitué (formes énonciatives, faits de discours, constitution des genres), le texte (cohérence, composantes, argumentation) mais aussi la sémiotique de l’écrit et la stylistique, dans sa dimension théorique et comparative. Vu l’ampleur de la thématique, on privilégiera les propositions dont les enjeux ne se limitent pas à la seule analyse du corpus d’appui mais manifestent une préoccupation épistémologique et méthodologique claire et innovante. Le Congrès mondial de linguistique française visant tout particulièrement à faire un état des lieux de la recherche et à dégager des perspectives nouvelles, on veillera donc, dans tous les cas, à privilégier la problématique sur le corpus. 8

- Linguistique et Didactique (français langue première, français langue seconde)

Présidente : Carole Fleuret (Université d'Ottawa, Canada), Vice-présidente/coordonnatrice : Béatrice Fracchiolla (Université de Lorraine)

Autres membres du comité : Nathalie Auger ((Université Paul-Valéry – Montpellier 3)), Lucile Cadet (Université Paris 8), Pierre Escudé (Université de Bordeaux), Cécile Gois (Université François Rabelais de Tours), Martine Kervran (Université de Brest), Eva Lemaire (University of Alberta, Canada), Jean-François de Pietro (Institut de recherche et de documentation pédagogique de Neuchâtel, Suisse)

Présentation

Les domaines de recherche couverts par la didactique du français (langue première ou seconde) sont en lien étroit – mais non exclusifs – avec différents champs des sciences du langage, comme la psycholinguistique et l'acquisition, la linguistique textuelle, l'analyse du discours et l'enseignement, la sociolinguistique, la morphologie et l'enseignement de l’orthographe, de le la lecture et de l'écriture, la syntaxe et l'enseignement de la grammaire, la sémantique, le lexique, la phraséologie et l'enseignement du vocabulaire, etc. Les liens nombreux, divers et complexes qui peuvent lier ces différents champs mériteront d’être investis lors de cette nouvelle édition du CMLF, dans toute leur variété et avec toute la précision requise. De telles exigences sont d’autant plus fortes que sont remarquables la diversité des situations d’enseignement de la langue française et l’étendue des recherches entreprises dans ce cadre thématique ; sans parler des enjeux sociaux de réussite scolaire qui sont associés à la maîtrise du français.

Les contributions soumises devront circonscrire, dans le cadre d’une problématique linguistique et didactique définie, les fondements notionnels et méthodologiques sur lesquels elles se développent, ainsi que les conditions des observations, des applications et des résultats qu’elles auront permis de mettre à jour.

- Morphologie

Présidente : Angela RALLI (Université de Patras, Grèce), Vice-présidente/ coordonnatrice : Georgette Dal (Université de Lille)

Autres membres du comité : Bernard Fradin (Université Paris-Diderot), Nabil Hathout (Université Jean Jaurès), Marianne Kilani-Schoch (Université de Lausanne, Suisse), Judith Meinschaefer (Freie Universität Berlin, Allemagne), Fiammetta Namer (Université de Lorraine), Angela Ralli (Université de Patras, Grèce), Franz Rainer (Institut für romanische Sprachen Wirtschaftsuniversität, Autriche)

Présentation

La thématique « Morphologie » se conçoit comme un lieu d’échanges, sans exclusive théorique. Elle accueille toute soumission originale portant sur la morphologie constructionnelle ou la morphologie flexionnelle du français, le cas échéant dans une perspective contrastive. La thématique est ouverte aux propositions théoriques ou davantage applicatives, dès lors qu’elles prennent appui sur des données du français. Elles peuvent également porter sur les interfaces, intra- ou extrasystème, se situer dans une perspective psycholinguistique ou dans celle du traitement automatique des langues.

Les principaux critères de sélection des soumissions sont les suivants :

- nouveauté des faits linguistiques étudiés ou originalité de l’analyse proposée,

- assise empirique des analyses et couverture des données,

- clarté de l’exposition et solidité de l’argumentation,

- connaissance de la littérature scientifique du champ, nationale et internationale.

- Phonétique, Phonologie et Interfaces

Président : Zsuzsanna Fagyal (Université d’Illinois Urbana-Champaign, États-Unis), Vice-président/coordonnateur : Rudolph Sock (Université de Strasbourg)

Autres membres du comité : Lorraine Baqué (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Espagne), Marie-Hélène Côté (Université Laval, Québec), Cécile Fougeron (CNRS/ Université Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3), Randall Gess (Université Carleton, Canada), Bernard Harmegnies (Université de Mons, Belgique), Yvan Rose (Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada) 9

Présentation

Les grands phénomènes phonologiques du français, domaine longtemps privilégié des modélisations théoriques, ont reçu ces dernières années un éclairage fructueux grâce aux apports de disciplines connexes. La session phonologie a pour objectif de témoigner des bienfaits de cette synergie et de montrer comment la diversité des approches a permis de réelles avancées dans la compréhension de nombreux problèmes et dans la réflexion phonologique en général. Elle est ouverte à la pluralité des thématiques, et s’intéresse aux regards croisés que la phonologie (phonologie théorique, phonologie de laboratoire), la phonétique, et les disciplines qui les côtoient peuvent apporter aux grandes questions de la phonologie du français et de la théorie phonologique. La session phonologie/phonétique invite à des soumissions d’articles originaux sur tous les aspects de la phonologie/phonétique du français. Cela inclut notamment :

- la phonologie segmentale

- la phonologie autosegmentale

- la phonétique et la phonologie de laboratoire

- la prosodie

- l’interface phonétique/phonologie

- l’interface phonologie/morphologie

- l’interface phonologie/syntaxe

- l’interface phonologie/pragmatique

- l’interface phonologie/sémantique

- l’interface phonologie/psycholinguistique

- l’interface phonologie/sociolinguistique

- les phonologies en contact

- phonétique, phonologie et études cliniques

- Psycholinguistique et Acquisition

Présidente : Michèle Kail (CNRS/Université Paris 8), Vice- président/coordonnateur : Christophe Parisse (INSERM, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense)

Autres membres du comité : Sandra Benazzo (Université Paris 8), Séverine Casalis (Université de Lille), Lucile Chanquoy (Université Nice Sophia Antipolis), Michèle Guidetti (Université Toulouse II – Le Mirail), Heather Hilton (Université Lumière – Lyon 2), Sophie Kern (CNRS/Université Lumière – Lyon 2), Virginie Laval (Université de Poitiers), Christelle Maillart (Université de Liège, Belgique), Armanda Martins da Costa (Université de Lisbonne, Portugual), Colette Noyau (Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense), Anne Salazar Orvig (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris 3), Hélène Delage (Université de Genève, Suisse), Marie-Anne Schelstraete (Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgique), Annie Tremblay (Université du Kansas, Etats-Unis), Jürgen Weissenborn (Université Humboldt, Allemagne)

Présentation La psycholinguistique étudie les processus mentaux et les structures cognitives intervenant dans la perception, la compréhension, la production et l’acquisition du langage oral et du langage écrit. Elle concerne un large champ de recherches interdisciplinaires. Les études présentées dans la thématique « Psycholinguistique, Acquisition » concerneront des locuteurs adultes et enfants, normaux ou présentant une pathologie du langage. Elles seront centrées sur la langue française notamment lorsque celle-ci est susceptible de mettre en évidence des aspects particuliers du traitement ou du développement, par comparaison ou non avec d’autres langues. Ces études peuvent concerner des locuteurs monolingues francophones ou des locuteurs qui comptent le français dans le répertoire des langues qu’ils utilisent.

- Ressources et Outils pour l’analyse linguistique

Présidente : Christiane Fellbaum (Université de Princeton, Etats-Unis), Vice-président /coordonnateur: Jean-Luc Minel (MoDyCo, Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense et CNRS)

Autres membres du comité : Delphine Battistelli (Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense), Olivier Baude (Université d’Orléans), Farah Benamara (Université Paul Sabatier -Toulouse), Maria Jose Bocorny-Fillato (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sud, Brésil), Anne Condamines (CNRS et Université Toulouse), Serge Heiden (ENS de Lyon), Guy Lapalme (Université de Montréal, Canada), Eric Laporte (Université Paris-Est Marne-la-Vallée), 10

Dominique Longrée (Université de Liège et Université Saint-Louis, Belgique), Yvette Yannick Mathieu (CNRS et Université Paris-Diderot), Emmanuel Morin (Université de Nantes), Jean-Marie Pierrel (Université de Lorraine), Dina Wonsever (Universidad de la Republica, Uruguay)

Présentation La mise à disposition de grands corpus électroniques oraux ou écrits ainsi que celle de ressources annotées à des niveaux divers (morphologique, syntaxique, sémantique et discursif) ouvre la voie à des travaux qui interrogent les approches classiques des Sciences du Langage. Le développement d’outils de traitement informatique (tels que les outils de collectes de données langagières, les outils d'aide à la transcription, les outils d’annotation automatique ou manuelle, les outils d'analyse fondés sur des traitements symboliques et/ou statistiques, les systèmes d’apprentissage, etc.) transforme les méthodes d’accès aux sources et affecte les démarches d'étude linguistique. La question de la mutualisation et de la capitalisation des ressources devient maintenant un enjeu majeur pour l’ensemble de la communauté, soulevant des problématiques d’interopérabilité, de normalisation et des questions d’ordre juridique, éthique et déontologique. Différentes initiatives internationales contribuent ainsi à développer un Web de données linguistiques (LLOD) et l’on observe une tendance des instances à accompagner ce mouvement : divers projets de constitution de « grands » corpus et de groupes de travail d'annotation, mise en place de laboratoires et d’équipements d’excellence dédiés, tels que l’Equipex ORTOLANG, les consortium de la TGIR HumaNum, l’ European Research Infrastructure Consortium DARIAH, etc. Avec une démarche différente des colloques internationaux spécialisés dans le Traitement Automatique des Langues (TAL), cette session du CMLF 2016 voudrait ouvrir un espace d’échanges scientifiques entre différentes approches linguistiques, sans exclusive de cadres théoriques, de méthodologies ou de pratiques axées sur la théorie et/ou l’empirisme. Cette session sera l’occasion de mettre en relief tout aussi bien des recherches émergentes que des travaux qui consolident les approches existantes. La session « Ressources et outils pour l’analyse linguistique» invite à soumettre des propositions d’articles originaux dont l’objet est de construire, développer, exploiter des ressources ou des outils dans tous les domaines de la linguistique française, aussi bien à l’oral qu’à l’écrit : morphologie, syntaxe, sémantique, discursif, phonétique, phonologie.

- Sémantique

Président : Maj-Britt Mosegaard-Hansen (University of Manchester, Royaume Uni), Vice-présidente/coordonnatrice : Catherine Schnedecker (Université de Strasbourg)

Autres membres du comité : Hava Bat-Zeev Shyldkrot (Tel Aviv University, Israël), Claire Beyssade (Institut Jean Nicod, CNRS Paris), Jacques François (Université Caen Basse Normandie et Université Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3), Catherine Fuchs (ENS/Université Paris 3), Agatha Jackiewicz (Université Paris-Sorbonne), Anne Le Draoulec (CNRS/Université Toulouse II - Le Mirail), Wiltrud Mihatsch (Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Allemagne), Jacques Moeschle (Université de Genève), Henning Nolke (Université d’Aarhus, Danemark), Coco Noren (Université d’Uppsala, Suède), Iva Novakova (Université Stendhal - Grenoble 3), Vincent Nyckees (Université Paris-Diderot), Corinne Rossari (Université de Neuchâtel, Suisse), Marleen Van Peteghem (Université de Gand, Belgique)

Présentation

Le comité scientifique de la thématique Sémantique du CMLF est ouvert à toute proposition de communication en rapport avec le champ tel que caractérisé ci-dessous, sans aucune exclusive, ni théorique ni méthodologique.

Outre l’exploration des sous-domaines désormais bien identifiés (cf. axes 1 à 8) que couvre la sémantique, sera également envisagée une dimension prospective (axes 9 à 10) :

1. Sémantique lexicale et grammaticale en synchronie et en diachronie ;

2. Sémantique et interfaces avec d’autres disciplines linguistiques : prosodie, morphologie lexicale, syntaxe, pragmatique du discours, linguistique textuelle …;

3. Sémantique pragmatique (présupposition, implicatures, …

4. Sémantique générale et typologie des langues, sémantique contrastive ;

5. Sémantique et applications dans les domaines de :

a. la lexicographie uni- et multi-lingue ;

11

 

b. le TAL ((faisceaux d’)indices sémantiques utilisés pour la fouille textuelle ; constitution d’ontologies, … ;

c. …

6. Sémantique cognitive

7. Sémantique(s) formelle(s)

8. Sémantique et modélisation(s)

9. Place et rôle de la sémantique dans la réflexion épistémologique en Sciences du Langage

10. Perspectives pour la sémantique de demain

11. Nouvelles méthodes d’investigation en sémantique (apports des grands corpus, techniques de fouille documentaire, …

- Sociolinguistique, Dialectologie et Écologie des langues

Présidente : Annette Gerstenberg (Freie Universität Berlin, Allemagne), Vice-président/coordonnateur : Gabriel Bergounioux (Université d'Orléans)

Autres membres du comité : Hélène Blondeau (Université de Floride, Etats-Unis), Janice Carruthers (Université de Belfast, Royaume-Uni), Federica Diémoz (Université de Neuchâtel, Suisse), Martin Elsig (Université de Francfort, Allemagne), Dominique Fattier (Université de Cergy-Pontoise), Narcis Iglesias (Université de Gérone, Espagne), Marinette Matthey (Université Stendhal - Grenoble 3), Chérif Mbodj (CLAD/Université Cheikh Anta Diop, Sénégal)

Présentation

La sociolinguistique est à concevoir comme la prise en compte, dans la linguistique, de la variation inhérente aux langues et à leurs emplois. Longtemps fondée sur une pratique philologique des textes et sur une analyse des auteurs qui sous-estimaient l’hétérogénéité des productions, la linguistique, confrontée à la description de langues à tradition orale, a dû établir des données finalisées en constituant des corpus représentatifs du savoir et des pratiques des locuteurs. Les enquêtes ont mis en évidence la grande diversité et variabilité des formes phonétiques, morphosyntaxiques ou lexicales. Elles ont rendu sensibles les différences qu’introduisent les genres du discours et l’imbrication des faits de langue et de culture. L’étude des dialectes et des créoles, des langues mixtes et des pidgins, et plus généralement la notation des langues à tradition orale dans des contextes où les relations d’échange étaient inégales ont transformé les représentations traditionnelles et les outils de description. Les réalités plurilingues des sociétés contemporaines comportent des nouveaux enjeux sociolinguistiques. La sociolinguistique, dans son acception la plus large, participe à une compréhension des phénomènes qui, dans le temps, relèvent de la diachronie, dans l’espace, de la dialectologie, dans l’espace social de la sociologie du langage, dans les emplois de la pragmatique, de la théorie de la communication, voire de l’ethnométhodologie. Cependant, au lieu d’une conception qui raisonne en termes d’écarts les réalisations qui ne coïncident pas avec une image de la langue fixée par une écriture et des principes normatifs, elle conçoit la diversité interne (sociologie) et externe (écologie des langues) comme étant au principe même de leur analyse, précédant les réductions opérées pour en sélectionner une forme stabilisée à des fins de transcription ou d’étude. Dès lors que l’oral a prévalu sur l’écrit, que les langues vivantes ont supplanté les langues mortes, que les effets omniprésents du contact des langues ont ruiné le mythe de leur pureté, les circonstances de leur usage ont été mises en avant et, en même temps, des outils d’analyse efficaces ont été développés. La sociolinguistique est devenue le lieu d’un débat avec des disciplines qui, dans leur domaine, se trouvaient confrontées aux mêmes phénomènes. En linguistique, le français, par l’importance de sa diffusion internationale et les flux migratoires dans son aire d’expansion, par son horizon de rétrospection, son observation attentive des effets du changement linguistique et la grande diversité de ses variations, par sa créolisation et sa présence sur les nouveaux canaux de communication, le français, donc, représente un terrain d’observation privilégié, un champ d’expérimentation pour les théories contemporaines. La tradition sociolinguistique 12

du français l’a illustré qui ne demande qu’à poursuivre son déploiement dans la session « Sociolinguistique, dialectologie et écologie des langues ».

- Syntaxe

Président : Michel Pierrard (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgique),

Vice-présidente/coordonnatrice : Florence Lefeuvre (Université Sorbonne Nouvelle-Paris 3)

Autres membres du comité :

Christophe Benzitoun (Université de Lorraine), Gilles Corminboeuf (Université de Neuchâtel, Suisse), Antoine Gautier (Université Paris-Sorbonne), Eva Havu (Université d’Helsinki, Finlande), Hans Petter Helland (Université d’Oslo, Norvège), Dominique Legallois (Université de Caen Basse Normandie), Nathalie Rossi-Gensane (Université Lumière - Lyon 2), Elisabezth Stark (Université de Zurich, Suisse)

Présentation

La syntaxe du français est un domaine fondamental dans la connaissance de la langue et sa description. Elle participe à la diversification des méthodes de recherche et au renouveau des approches théoriques qui recouvre les divers domaines linguistiques. Elle s’enrichit de la confrontation à la diversité des structures syntaxiques qui sont étudiées en typologie et syntaxe générale. Grâce à l’élaboration actuelle de corpus variés, aussi bien oraux qu’écrits, elle peut affiner ses modèles conceptuels.

La section « syntaxe » a pour objectif de faire état des dernières avancées sur les plans descriptif et théorique. Elle accueillera des thèmes variés et des approches diversifiées tout en privilégiant des sujets originaux et des démarches novatrices qui contribuent à une meilleure compréhension de la syntaxe du français ou qui constituent des avancées dans la modélisation théorique. Les personnes intéressées sont invitées à soumettre des communications portant sur tous les phénomènes syntaxiques (syntaxe des catégories, syntaxe (inter-)propositionnelle, ordre des mots, variation synt

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3-3-14(2016-07-06) International Workshop on Sensing, Processing and Learning for Intelligent Machines (SPLINE 2016), Aalborg, Denmark
International Workshop on Sensing, Processing and Learning for Intelligent Machines (SPLINE 2016)
July6-8,2016 Aalborg,Denmark
 
Call for Papers
Machines are playing an ever-increasing role in how we conduct our daily lives and business, and this trend is certainly not expected to slow down any time soon. Intelligent machines and robots penetrate into every corner of our environments, and interlink humans, physical and digital worlds. Key scientific areas include sensing, signal and data processing, and machine learning. These areas are challenging, but exciting ones, and require bringing together several central technologies in a harmonious way. It is therefore not surprising that interest in these areas has surged in recent years, and activities are now very high.
This workshop aims at creating a forum for researchers and engineers from a wide variety of disciplines related to creating intelligent machines and robots. We encourage contributions that will bring state-of-the-art forward, and facilitate an active and constructive exchange of ideas on current areas of interest. The workshop will feature keynote speeches, industrial talks, invited presentations and presentations with full paper submissions, and demos.
 
Scope
We invite previously unpublished manuscripts directly targeting the following areas: sensing and processing, machine learning and pattern recognition, social and service robots, big data, biometrics and de-identification. The scope includes, but is not limited to:
  •  Sensing Technology
  • ? Audio and Speech Processing
  • ? Computer Vision and Image Processing
  • ? Signal Processing
  • ? Data Science and Big Data
  • ? Recommender Systems
  • ? Pattern Recognition and
  •  Machine Learning
  •  Deep Learning
  • ? Artificial Intelligence
  • ? Perceptual Models
  • ? Social and Service Robots
  • ? Human-Robot Interaction
  • ? Biometrics, Soft-Biometrics and
  •  De-identification
  • ? Privacy Protection
Important dates
Full-Paper submission deadline: 8 April 
Paper acceptance notification: 2 May 
Camera-ready paper submissions and registration deadline for authors: 15 May
 
 
For paper submission please follow
 
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3-3-15(2016-07-11) Lexicom 2016 (Vienna, Austria)
 
Workshop in Lexicography, Corpus Linguistics and Lexical Computing
Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna, Austria, July 11th-15th 2015


Lexicom is a five-day intensive workshop created by the 
Lexicography MasterClass.  Seminars on theoretical issues alternate with hands-on work using a range of corpus-analysis and other software tools. Working in small groups or individually, you will learn how to develop dictionaries and other lexical resources, from the creation and annotation of corpora to the planning, design and writing of lexical entries. This is the workshop's sixteenth year and we now have over 400 graduates, from all parts of the world: reviews of previous events can be found here.
It will be led by Michael Rundell, Milos Jakubicek and Vojtech Kovar

In 2016, there will be two Lexicom workshops: one in Europe and one in the US. For details of both events, and registration, go to http://www.lexmasterclass.com/

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3-3-16(2016-07-12) Workshop at the Digital Humanities Conference DH2016, Krakow, Poland
*Call for Abstracts*
Audiovisual data and digital scholarship: towards multimodal literacy
Workshop at the Digital Humanities Conference DH2016, Krakow, Poland
Date: 12 July 2016
 
*Workshop Overview*
This full-day workshop will start with a keynote address on multimodal literacy by Dr. Claire Clivaz, Head of Digital Enhanced Learning at the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics of Lausanne and active in #dariahTeach for which she is Head of dissemination and developer of the module Multimodal Literacies. This keynote will be followed by three sessions of paper presentations based around three themes:
-Models for training digital humanists in accessing and analyzing audiovisual collections
-Analysis and discovery models for audiovisual materials
-Copyright and sustainability
During the fourth session, workshop participants can give very short lightning talks/project pitches of max 5 minutes of ongoing work, projects or plans. Registration for this session will take place during the workshop so no submission is needed for part of the workshop. The workshop will be closed with a plenary & interactive session.
                       
*Submission Details*
The workshop organisers invite abstracts (max 500 words)  that deal with the aforementioned issues and that can be presented in one of the three sessions.
To submit an abstract, please send a docx or pdf file to avindhworkshop@gmail.com before May 1 2016.
Accepted abstracts will be published  on the website of the AVinDH Special Interest Group.
 
*Important Dates*
Deadline submission: 1 May 2016 23:59 CET
Date for notifications: 15 May 2016
Workshop date: 12 July 2016
 
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3-3-17(2016-07-13) LabPhon15: Speech Dynamics and Phonological Representation, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY USA

LabPhon15: Speech Dynamics and Phonological Representation

July 13-16, 2016, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY USA

 

Abstract submission is now open for the 15th conference on Laboratory Phonology. LabPhon15 will feature oral sessions that are primarily thematic (see below) as well as poster sessions. Submissions on any aspect of laboratory phonology are welcome.

 

Student submissions are particularly encouraged. Reduced registration fees will be available for all students, and a number of student travel grants will be awarded.

 

The abstract submission deadline is midnight December 1, any time zone. All abstracts must be submitted through EasyChair (via the LabPhon15 website) between October 1 and December 1, 2015.


Thematic sessions

 

Production dynamics: How are representations constructed and implemented in speech, and what does articulation reveal about the dynamics of production mechanisms? How do these mechanisms shape representations on longer timescales?

Invited Speaker: Khalil Iskarous, University of Southern California
Invited Discussant: Elizabeth Zsiga, Georgetown University

 

Perceptual dynamics: What forms of perceptual representation do speaker-hearers use and what are the temporal dynamics of perception? How does the interaction between perception and production constrain phonological systems on life-span and diachronic timescales?

Invited Speaker: Meghan Sumner, Stanford University
Invited Discussant: Jennifer Hay, University of Canterbury

 

Prosodic organization: What are the mechanisms of prosodic organization and how do they give rise to cross-linguistic differences? What are the connections between perception and production of prosodic structure?

Invited Speaker: Yiya Chen, Leiden University
Invited Discussant: Martine Grice, University of Cologne

 

Lexical dynamics and memory: How do experience and lexical memory influence phonological representations? What are the relations between lexical representation, production, and perception across diverse timescales?

Invited Speaker: Matthew Goldrick, Northwestern University
Invited Discussant: Keith Johnson, University of California, Berkeley

 

Phonological acquisition and changes over the life-span: What is the nature of early representations and how do they change? How does learning a second-language interact with existing representations?

Invited Speaker: Sharon Goldwater, University of Edinburgh
Invited Discussant: Stefan Frisch, University of South Florida

 

Social network dynamics: How does the structure of social networks influence phonological representations on diverse timescales? What are the roles of perception and production in relation to social network dynamics?

Invited Speaker: Jane Stuart-Smith, University of Glasgow

Invited Discussant: Erik Thomas, North Carolina State University

 

Abstract Submission

Deadline: December 1, 2015
Notification of acceptance: February 15, 2016

All abstracts must be submitted through EasyChair (via the LabPhon15 website,www.labphon.org/labphon15) between October 1 and midnight December 1 (any time zone).

 

Abstract submission guidelines:

  • Individuals may submit only one abstract as first or sole author.
  • Individuals may be a co-author on more than one abstract.
  • Submitted abstracts must be in .pdf format, with A4 or letter size (8.5 x 11 in.) page setting.
  • Abstracts may be up to 2 pages, including references and figures.
  • Include the paper title in the abstract.
  • Abstracts must have a minimum of 1-inch margins and 11 point font.
  • Authors are allowed (but not required) to include one or more figures in their abstract, but any figures should be clearly labeled and should be described in the abstract text.
  • The filename must be in the form 'Paper_title.pdf', or 'Paper_title_abbreviated.pdf'.
    For example: Longitudinal_study_long_distance_coarticulation.pdf.
  • Review of submitted abstracts is double-blind. Therefore, abstracts must be anonymous; author name(s) must not appear in the abstract or file name. Authors should check that no author name is in the document properties of the .pdf file.
  • During the submission process authors may identify which conference theme(s), if any, their submission relates to.
For more information, please visit LabPhon15 website (http://labphon.org/labphon15).

 

Please feel free to distribute and forward this announcement to your colleagues
and/or members of your institution/mailing-list.

We look forward to welcoming you to Ithaca!

 
Best,
LabPhon15 Organizing Committee
 

 

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3-3-18(2016-07-18) Summer Workshop eNTERFACE'16, Enschede, the Netherlands
Call for Participation eNTERFACE'16
University of Twente, DesignLab, Enschede, the Netherlands, 18 July - 12 Aug 2016
 
The Human Media Interaction group (HMI), University of Twente (Enschede, the Netherlands) invites researchers from all over the world to join eNTERFACE'16,  the 12th one-month Summer Workshop on Multimodal Interfaces. During this workshop, senior project leaders, researchers, and students gather in one single place to work in teams on pre-specified challenges for 4 weeks long. Each team has a project defined and will address specific challenges. The list of projects that participants can choose from can be found here and in more detail on the website http://hmi.ewi.utwente.nl/enterface16/index.php/projects/
 
- A smell communication interface for affective systems (Adrian David Cheok, Emma Yann Zhang)
 
- CARAMILLA: Combining Language Learning and Conversation in a Relational Agent (Nick Campbell, Benjamin R. Cowan, Emer Gilmartin, Ketong Su)
 
- Collaborative serious gaming in augmented reality for motor function assessment (Marina Cidota, Stephan Lukosch)
 
- Development of low-cost portable hand exoskeleton for assistive and rehabilitation purposes (Matteo Bianchi, Francesco Fanelli)
 
- Embodied conversational interfaces for the elderly user (Marieke Peeters, Mark Neerincx)
 
- Heterogeneous Multi-Modal Mixing for Fluent Multi-Party Human-Robot Interaction (Dennis Reidsma, Daniel Davison, Edwin Dertien)
 
- MOVACP: Monitoring computer Vision Applications in Cloud Platforms (Sidi Ahmed Mahmoudi, Fabian Lecron)
 
- SCE in HMI: Social Communicative Events in Human Machine Interactions (Hüseyin Çakmak, Kevin El Haddad)
 
- The Roberta IRONSIDE project: A dialog capable humanoid personal assistant in a wheelchair for dependent persons (Hugues Sansen, Maria Inés Torres, Kristiina Jokinen, Gérard Chollet, Dijana Petrovska-Delacretaz, Atta Badii, Stephan Schlögl, Nick Campbell)
 
- The Virtual Human Journalist (Michel Valstar)
 
If you are a senior/junior researcher or a PhD/Master student working on similar topics and you want to collaborate in (at least) one of these projects, please submit your application (pdf) before 1st of April 2016 to enterface16@gmail.com. Your application should contain the following information:
 
1. A short CV.
2. A list of max. 3 preferred projects to work on. 
3. A short motivation and list of skills that you can offer to each of your projects selected.
4. It is expected that participants will attend the full workshop, i.e. for 4 weeks. However, we understand that this may not be possible for everyone. If you are not able to attend for the full 4 weeks, please indicate what days/weeks you will attend the workshop.
 
The project leaders will select their team members among the applicants. We will try to make sure that each participant can participate in their most preferred project. This partly depends on the number of available free spots in the team and the skills as requested by the project leaders.
 
The workshop attendance is free of charge but participants must fund their own travel, accommodation, and living expenses. More information about accommodation can be found on the eNTERFACE'16 website.
 
Important dates
1 April 2016 Call for participation is closed
10 April 2016 Teams are organized, notifications are sent to participants
18 July ? 12 August 2016: eNTERFACE'16 Workshop
 
Contact
Khiet Truong k dot p dot truong at utwente dot nl
 
Organization
Khiet Truong, Dennis Reidsma, Dirk Heylen, Vanessa Evers
Human Media Interaction, University of Twente
 
 
 
 
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3-3-19(2016-07-22) CfP ACM Symposium on Applied Perception-SAP 2016, Anaheim, USA

CALL FOR PAPERS AND POSTERS

ACM Symposium on Applied Perception - SAP 2016
July 22-23, 2016, Anaheim, USA

Paper submission deadline (extended): March 30
Poster submission deadline: May 10

http://sap.acm.org/2016/cfp.php
============================================================

The ACM Symposium on Applied Perception (ACM SAP) aims to advance and promote research
that crosses the boundaries between perception and disciplines such as graphics,
visualization, computer vision, haptics and acoustics. These fields can benefit from the
exchange of ideas. The scope of the conference includes applications and algorithms in
any area of research that incorporates elements of perception and computer science.

Our thirteenth annual event provides an intimate, immersive forum for exchanging ideas
about areas of overlapping interests. The ACM SAP 2016 conference will be held in
Anaheim, California on July 22nd and 23rd, immediately prior to the 43rd International
Conference and Exhibition on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques (SIGGRAPH). We
aim to further promote communication between the core perception and computer graphics
communities.

We invite submissions of original work in all areas of applied perception. Relevant areas
include:

  - Modeling, rendering, and animation
  - Visualization
  - Computational aesthetics
  - Haptic rendering, haptic input and perception
  - Perception of virtual characters
  - Color vision and color appearance modeling
  - Perception of high dynamic range scenes and images
  - Interaction techniques and interfaces
  - Augmented reality
  - Virtual worlds
  - Display technologies
  - Auditory display and interfaces
  - Perceptual auditory coding
  - Spatialized sound
  - Speech synthesis and recognition
  - Sensory integration
  - Multimodal rendering
  - Spatial and temporal vision
  - Attention and eye movements
  - Statistical learning and perception of natural scenes
  - Perception of shapes, surfaces, and materials

PAPERS
Research can be submitted as a long paper (up to 8 pages and up to 20 minute talk), a
short paper (up to 4 pages and up to 15 minute talk), or as a poster presentation (1 page
abstract). Papers that are not accepted will be considered for the poster session.
Authors of posters accepted by this route will, of course, have the option to decline the
opportunity to present a poster. Please check the formatting guidelines before submitting
your work.

POSTERS
A poster presentation is an opportunity for authors to display and discuss achievements
that are not ready for publication or have not been published previously. The poster
session is always an integral part of SAP with specific time allotted for participants to
view and discuss the work. All poster presenters will have the opportunity to give a
one-minute description of their work during a poster fast-forward session. Poster
presentations are not formal publications. We encourage all types of scholarly poster
submissions that fit the scope of ACM-SAP. Poster abstracts should follow the ACM
SIGGRAPH formatting guidelines for papers, except that they should be 1 page long.

FURTHER DETAILS
All papers will be carefully reviewed by our International Program Committee. SAP follows
a double blind review process. Papers will be evaluated as submitted, given limited time
between submission and printing of final versions. Under a recent agreement with the ACM
Transactions on Applied Perception (TAP) and the ACM Publications Board, the strongest
accepted papers will be offered publication as full papers in the ACM journal TAP. These
papers will undergo a second review cycle, during which the authors will revise the paper
to address concerns posed in the summary review (similar to conditional acceptances at
ACM SIGGRAPH). Authors of such special issue papers must agree to present the paper at
ACM SAP. As has always been the case, authors of regular ACM SAP papers can still submit
to TAP regular issues with appropriate additions.

DEADLINES

Papers:
  Friday, March 25 (extended): Mandatory abstract submission
  Wednesday, March 30 (extended): Paper submission deadline
  Monday, April 25: Decisions announced
  Tuesday, May 10: Final papers due

Posters:
  Tuesday, May 10: Poster submission deadline
  Tuesday, May 24: Decisions announced
  Tuesday, May 31: Camera ready version of 1-page abstract due

Organizers:

  Conference Chairs:
    Eakta Jain, University of Florida
    Sophie Joerg, Clemson University

  Program Chairs:
    Reynold Bailey, Rochester Institute of Technology
    Laura Trutoiu, Oculus Research

  Poster Chair:
    Andrew Robb, Clemson University

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3-3-20(2016-08-11) ACL 2016 Workshop on Cognitive Aspects of Computational Language Learning (CogACLL), Berlin, Germany
==================================================
              CogACLL 2016 - First Call For Papers
==================================================
ACL 2016 Workshop on
Cognitive Aspects of Computational Language Learning (CogACLL)

 

               August 11, 2016
Berlin, Germany

 

 

Deadline for Long and Short Paper Submissions: May 8, 2016 (11:59pm GMT -12)
Deadline for System Demonstrations: May 29, 2016  (11:59pm GMT -12)   

 

This workshop is endorsed by SIGNLL, the Special Interest Group on Natural Language Learning of theAssociation for Computational Linguistics.
---------------------------------------------------------------

 

The human ability to acquire and process language has long attracted interest and generated much debate due to the apparent ease with which such a complex and dynamic system is learnt and used on the face of ambiguity, noise and uncertainty. This subject raises many questions ranging from the nature vs. nurture debate of how much needs to be innate and how much needs to be learned for acquisition to be successful, to the mechanisms involved in this process (general vs specific) and their representations in the human brain. There are also developmental issues related to the different stages consistently found during acquisition (e.g. one word vs. two words) and possible organizations of this knowledge. These have been discussed in the context of first and second language acquisition and bilingualism, with crosslinguistic studies shedding light on the influence of the language and the environment.

 

The past decades have seen a massive expansion in the application of statistical and machine learning methods to natural language processing (NLP). This work has yielded impressive results in numerous speech and language processing tasks, including e.g. speech recognition, morphological analysis, parsing, lexical acquisition, semantic interpretation, and dialogue management. The good results have generally been viewed as engineering achievements. Recently researchers have begun to investigate the relevance of computational learning methods for research on human language acquisition and change.

 

The use of computational modeling is a relatively recent trend boosted by advances in machine learning techniques, and the availability of resources like corpora of child and child-directed sentences, and data from psycholinguistic tasks by normal and pathological groups. Many of the existing computational models attempt to study language tasks under cognitively plausible criteria (such as memory and processing limitations that humans face), and to explain the developmental stages observed in the acquisition and evolution of the language abilities. In doing so, computational modeling provides insight into the plausible mechanisms involved in human language processes, and inspires the development of better language models and techniques. These investigations are very important since if computational techniques can be used to improve our understanding of human language acquisition and change, these will not only benefit cognitive sciences in general but will reflect back to NLP and place us in a better position to develop useful language models.

 

Success in this type of research requires close collaboration between the NLP, linguistics, psychology and cognitive science communities. The workshop is targeted at anyone interested in the relevance of computational techniques for understanding first, second and bilingual language acquisition and language change in normal and clinical conditions. Long and short papers are invited on, but not limited to, the following topics:

 

*Computational learning theory and analysis of language learning and organization
*Computational models of first, second and bilingual language acquisition
*Computational models of language changes in clinical conditions
*Computational models and analysis of factors that influence language acquisition and use in different age groups and cultures
*Computational models of various aspects of language and their interaction effect in acquisition, processing and change
*Computational models of the evolution of language
*Data resources and tools for investigating computational models of human language processes
*Empirical and theoretical comparisons of the learning environment and its impact on language processes
*Cognitively oriented Bayesian models of language processes
*Computational methods for acquiring various linguistic information (related to e.g. speech, morphology, lexicon, syntax, semantics, and discourse) and their relevance to research on human language acquisition
*Investigations and comparisons of supervised, unsupervised and weakly-supervised methods for learning (e.g. machine learning, statistical, symbolic, biologically-inspired, active learning, various hybrid models) from a cognitive perspective

 

---------------------------------------------------------------
SUBMISSIONS

 

We invite three different submission modalities:

 

* Regular long papers (8 content pages + 1 page for references):
 Long papers should report on original, solid and finished research
 including new experimental results, resources and/or techniques.

 

* Regular short papers (4 content pages + 1 page for references):
 Short papers should report on small experiments, focused contributions,
 ongoing research, negative results and/or philosophical discussion.

 

* System demonstration (2 pages): System demonstration papers should
 describe and document the demonstrated system or resources. We
 encourage the demonstration of both early research prototypes and
 mature systems, that will be presented in a separate demo session.

 

All submissions must be in PDF format and must follow the ACL 2016
formatting requirements.

 

We strongly advise the use of the provided Word or LaTeX template
files. For long and short papers, the reported research should
be substantially original. The papers will be presented orally or as
posters. The decision as to which paper will be presented orally
and which as poster will be made by the program committee based
on the nature rather than on the quality of the work.

 

Reviewing will be double-blind, and thus no author information
should be included in the papers; self-reference should be
avoided as well. Papers that do not conform to these requirements
will be rejected without review. Accepted papers will appear in the
workshop proceedings, where no distinction will be made between
papers presented orally or as posters.

 

Submission and reviewing will be electronic, managed by the START system:

 

  

 

Submissions must be uploaded onto the START system by the submission deadline:

 

    May 8, 2016 (11:59pm GMT -12 hours)

 

Please choose the appropriate submission type from the START
submission page, according to the category of your paper.

 

---------------------------------------------------------------
IMPORTANT DATES

 

May 8, 2016     Long and Short Paper submission deadline
May 29, 2016  System Demonstrations submission deadline
June 5, 2016      Notification of acceptance
June 22, 2016  Camera-ready deadline
August 11, 2016  Workshop

 

---------------------------------------------------------------
PROGRAM COMMITTEE

 

Dora Alexopoulou,  University of Cambridge (UK)
Afra Alishahi,  Tilburg University (Netherlands)
Colin Bannard, University of Liverpool (UK)
Philippe Blache, LPL-CNRS (France)    
Antal van den Bosch, Radboud University Nijmegen (Netherlands)
Chris Brew, Nuance Communications (USA)
Grzegorz Chrupa?a, Saarland University (Germany)
Alexander Clark,  Royal Holloway, University of London (UK)
Robin Clark,  University of Pennsylvania (USA)
Walter Daelemans,  University of Antwerp (Belgium)
Dan Dediu, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics (The Netherlands)
Barry Devereux,  University of Cambridge (UK)
Emmanuel Dupoux, ENS - CNRS (France)
Afsaneh Fazly,  University of Toronto (Canada)
Marco Idiart,  Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil)
Gianluca Lebani, University of Pisa (Italy)
Igor Malioutov,  Massachusetts Institute of Technology (USA)
Tim O'Donnel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (USA)
Muntsa Padró, Nuance (Canada)
Lisa Pearl, University of California - Irvine (USA)
Ari Rappoport,  The Hebrew University of Jerusalem (Israel)
Sabine Schulte im Walde,  University of Stuttgart (Germany)
Ekaterina Shutova, University of Cambridge (UK)
Maity Siqueira,  Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil)
Mark Steedman,  University of Edinburgh (UK)
Suzanne Stevenson,  University of Toronto (Canada)
Remi van Trijp, Sony Computer Science Laboratory Paris (France)
Shuly Wintner,  University of Haifa (Israel)
Charles Yang,  University of Pennsylvania (USA)
Menno van Zaanen,  Tilburg University (Netherlands)
Alessandra Zarcone, Saarland University (Germany)

 

---------------------------------------------------------------
WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS AND CONTACT

 

Anna Korhonen (University of Cambridge, UK)
Alessandro Lenci (University of Pisa, Italy)
Brian Murphy (Queen's University Belfast, UK)
Thierry Poibeau (LATTICE-CNRS, France)
Aline Villavicencio (Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil)

 

For any inquiries regarding the workshop please send an email
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3-3-21(2016-08-23) SPECOM 2016, Budapest, Hungary

Call for papers

SPECOM 2016

 18th International Conference

on Speech and Computer

August 23-27, 2016 | Budapest, Hungary

PROGRAMME COMMITTEE

Rodmonga Potapova

Moscow State Linguistic University, Russia

General Conference Co-Chair

Andrey Ronzhin

SPIIRAS, Saint-Petersburg, Russia,

General Conference Co-Chair

Géza Németh

Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary

Organising Committee Chair

THE CONFERENCE

The International Conference on Speech and Computer – SPECOM is a regular event organized since 1996 and attracts researchers in the area of computer speech processing, multimodal interfaces and applied systems for telecommunication, robotics, intelligent and cyberphysical environments.

ORGANIZERS

The conference is organized by Budapest University of Technology and Economics (Budapest, Hungary) and Scientific Association for Infocommunications (HTE, Hungary), in cooperation with Moscow State Linguistic University (MSLU, Moscow, Russia), St. Petersburg Institute for Informatics and Automation of the Russian Academy of Science (SPIIRAS, St. Petersburg, Russia) and St. Petersburg National Research University of Information Technologies, Mechanics and Optics (ITMO University, St. Petersburg, Russia

SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE

Etienne Barnard, North-West University, South Africa

Laurent Besacier, Laboratory of Informatics of Grenoble, France

Vlado Delic, University of Novi Sad, Serbia

Olivier Deroo, Acapela Group, Belgium

Christoph Draxler, Institute of Phonetics and Speech Communication, Germany

Thierry Dutoit, University of Mons, Belgium

Nikos Fakotakis, University of Patras, Greece

Peter French, University of York, UK

Hiroya Fujisaki, University of Tokyo, Japan

Todor Ganchev, Technical University of Varna, Bulgaria

Ruediger Hoffmann, Dresden University of Technology, Germany

Oliver Jokisch, Leipzig University of Telecommunication, Germany

Slobodan Jovicic, University of Belgrade, Serbia

Dimitri Kanevsky, IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, USA

Alexey Karpov, SPIIRAS, Saint-Petersburg, Russia

Heysem Kaya, Bogazici University, Turkey

Irina Kipyatkova, SPIIRAS, Russia

Daniil Kocharov, St. Petersburg State University, Russia

George Kokkinakis, University of Patras, Greece

Steven Krauwer, Utrecht University, The Netherlands

Lin-shan Lee, National Taiwan University, Taiwan

Boris Lobanov, United Institute of Informatics Problems, Belarus

Elena Lyakso, St. Petersburg State University, Russia

Konstantin Markov, The University of Aizu, Japan

Yuri Matveev, ITMO University, Russia

Péter Mihajlik, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary

Konstantinos Moustakas, University of Patras, Greece

Iosif Mporas, University of Patras, Greece

Heinrich Niemann, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany

Alexander Petrovsky, Belarusian State University of Informatics and Radioelectronics, Belarus

Dimitar Popov, Bologna University, Italy

Elias Potamitis, University of Patras, Greece

Lawrence Rabiner, Rutgers University, USA

Gerhard Rigoll, Munich University of Technology, Germany

Murat Saraclar, Bogazici University, Turkey

Jesus Savage, University of Mexico, Mexico

Tanja Schultz, University of Karlsruhe, Germany

Milan Secujski, University of Novi Sad, Serbia

Pavel Skrelin, St. Petersburg State University, Russia

Viktor Sorokin, Institute for Information Transmission Problems, Russia

Yannis Stylianou, University of Crete, Greece

György Szaszák, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary

Klára Vicsi, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary

Christian Wellekens, EURECOM, France

Csaba Zainkó, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, Hungary

Milos Zelezny, University of West Bohemia, Czech Republic


TOPICS

The SPECOM conference is devoted to issues of human-machine interaction, particularly:

 

▪ Applications for human-computer interaction

▪ Audio-visual speech processing

▪ Automatic language identification

▪ Corpus linguistics and linguistic processing

▪ Forensic speech investigations and security systems

▪ Multichannel signal processing

▪ Multimedia processing

▪ Multimodal analysis and synthesis

▪ Signal processing and feature extraction

▪ Speaker identification and diarization

▪ Speaker verification systems

▪ Speech and language resources

▪ Speech analytics and audio mining

▪ Speech dereverberation

▪ Speech driving systems in robotics

▪ Speech enhancement

▪ Speech perception and speech disorders

▪ Speech recognition and understanding

▪ Speech translation automatic systems

▪ Spoken dialogue systems

▪ Spoken language processing

▪ Text-to-speech and Speech-to-text systems

▪ Virtual and augmented reality

FORMAT OF THE CONFERENCE

The conference program will include presentation of invited papers, oral presentations, and poster/demonstration sessions. Papers will be presented in plenary or topic oriented sessions.

Details about the social events will be available on the web page.

SUBMISSION OF PAPERS

Authors are invited to submit a full paper not exceeding 8 pages formatted in the LNCS style (see below). Those accepted will be presented either orally or as posters. The decision on the presentation format will be based upon the recommendation of three independent reviewers. The authors are asked to submit their papers using the on-line submission form accessible from the conference web site.

Papers submitted to SPECOM 2016 must not be under review by any other conference or publication during the SPECOM review cycle, and must not be previously published or accepted for publication elsewhere.

The paper format for the review has to be the PDF file with all required fonts included. Upon notification of acceptance, speakers will receive further information on submitting their camera-ready and electronic sources (for detailed instructions on the final paper format see

http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0).

PROCEEDINGS

SPECOM Proceedings will be published by Springer as a book in the Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI) series listed in all major citation databases such as DBLP, SCOPUS, EI, INSPEC, COMPENDEX. SPECOM Proceedings are included in the list of forthcoming proceedings for August 2016.

IMPORTANT DATES

April 8, 2016 Submission of full papers

April 15, 2016 Submission of final papers upload

May 15, 2016 Notification of acceptance

June 01, 2016 Camera-ready papers and registration

August 23-27, 2016 Conference date

The contributions to the conference will be published in proceedings that will be made available to participants at the time of the conference.

VENUE

The conference will be organized in the Aquincum Hotel Budapest, Hungary (http://www.aquincumhotel.com).

Budapest, 'the pearl of the Danube' is one of the truly historic European capitals with its past stretching back over one thousand years. The picturesque bridges spanning the river Danube, the Castle Hill, the churches and architecture, the sculptures, the wooded hills, the Hungarian cuisine and wine, and the warm hospitality of Hungarian people all ensure that no guest can leave here without longing to return.

ACCOMMODATION

The organising committee has arranged accommodation for reasonable prices in hotels, which are situated near the city center. The rooms with sufficient discount are reserved for the conference days.

CONTACT

All correspondence regarding the conference should be addressed to:

SPECOM 2016 Secretariat

Scientific Association for Infocommunications, HTE, Hungary

E-mail: specom@hte.hu

Phone: +36 1 353 1027

SPECOM 2016 conference web site: http://www.hte.hu/specom2016

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3-3-22(2016-08-29) EURASIP/IEEE 2016 European Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO), Budapest, Hungary

 EURASIP/IEEE 2016 European Signal Processing Conference (EUSIPCO) that will be held in  Budapest, Hungary, from August 29 to September 2, 2016.

Accepted papers will be included in IEEEXplore.
http://www.eusipco2016.org
http://www.eusipco2016.org/documents/391615/1433605/EUSIPCO2016_CfP_v3.pdf
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3-3-23(2016-09-06) Aix Summer School on Prosody 2016, Aix-Marseille Université, France

 

Aix Summer School on Prosody 2016: 

Methods in Prosody and Intonation Research: Data, Theories, Transcription

Laboratoire de Parole et Langage, Aix-Marseille Université, CNRS, France.

September 6-9, 2016

 

http://aixprosody2016.weebly.com/



We are pleased to announce the Aix Summer School on Prosody 2016 to be held from September 6-9, 2016 in Aix-en-Provence (France).

 

The Aix Summer School on Prosody 2016 will bring together experts on theoretical and practical aspects of the research on prosody. The school will be organized around morning lectures and afternoon tutorials (where participants will practice concepts and skills discussed in lectures) and data clinics (where participants can bring together their own data and questions for discussion).

 

The school is intended for post-graduate students and researchers interested in all the theoretical and practical aspects of the research on prosody and intonation. The school will be suitable both for researchers already working on intonation and prosody, and wishing to learn more about specific topics, and for researchers who wish to better understand how to incorporate and control prosody in their own work.

Topics will include (but not limited to): theoretical models on prosody and intonation; perception of intonation; prosody and language pathologies; prosody, semantics, and discourse; prosody and L2; prosody and neurolinguistics; transcription of intonation and prosody; statistical methods in prosody research; and preparation of stimuli for perception studies.

 

The confirmed invited speakers are:

  • Amalia Arvaniti (Kent University): Theoretical models of prosody
  • Mariapaola  D'Imperio (Aix-Marseille Université - IUF): Experimental protocols for prosody and perception
  • Laura Dilley (Michigan State University): Prosody and perception methods
  • Janet Fletcher (The University of Melbourne): Transcription of under-described languages
  • James Sneed German (Aix-Marseille Université): Prosody and discourse
  • Kiwako Ito (Ohio State University): Prosody and acquisition, prosody and eye tracking
  • Jelena Krivokapi? (University of Michigan): Prosody and articulatory phonology
  • Oliver Niebuhr (University of Southern Denmark): Prosody and experimental methods in acoustics
  • Bert Remeijsen and Otto Gwado Ayoker (University of Edimburgh): Typology and field methods in prosody research: Shilluk prosody workshop
  • Annie Tremblay (Kansas University): Prosody and L2

 

 

Application deadline: May 31st 2016

 

For more information, please visit http://aixprosody2016.weebly.com/

 

A number of scholarships will be offered for PhD students and postdocs. For more information about registration and scholarships, go to http://aixprosody2016.weebly.com/registration.html

The Aix Summer School on Prosody 2016 is co-organized by:

 

Mariapaola D?Imperio ? AMU & Laboratoire Parole et Langage (UMR 7309 CNRS) ? Institut Universitaire de France
Amalia Arvaniti ? University of Kent (UK)

Tamara Rathcke ? University of Kent (UK)

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3-3-24(2016-09-12) 58th International Symposium ELMAR-2016 , Zagreb, Croatia

 58th International Symposium ELMAR-2016
***********************************
   
                    September 12-14, 2016
                      Zadar, Croatia
 
          Paper submission deadline: March 12, 2016
 
                http://www.elmar-zadar.org/
 
 
                      CALL FOR PAPERS
 
 
 
 TECHNICAL CO-SPONSORS
 
 IEEE Region 8
 IEEE Croatia Section
 IEEE Croatia Section SP, AP and MTT Chapters   
 EURASIP - European Association for Signal Processing
 
 
 
 TOPICS
 
 --> Image and Video Processing
 --> Multimedia Communications
 --> Speech and Audio Processing
 --> Wireless Communications
 --> Telecommunications
 --> Antennas and Propagation
 --> e-Learning and m-Learning
 --> Navigation Systems
 --> Ship Electronic Systems
 --> Power Electronics and Automation
 --> Naval Architecture
 --> Sea Ecology
 
 --> Special Sessions:
     http://www.elmar-zadar.org/2016/special_sessions/
 
 
 
 KEYNOTE SPEAKER
 
 Prof. Borko Furht, Florida Atlantic University, USA
   
 
 SCHEDULE OF IMPORTANT DATES
 
Deadline for submission of full papers: March 12, 2016
Notification of acceptance mailed out by: May 20, 2016
Submission of (final) camera-ready papers: May 27, 2016
Preliminary program available online by: June 10, 2016
Registration forms and payment deadline: June 17, 2016

E-mail: elmar2016@fer.hr
http://www.elmar-zadar.org/

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3-3-25(2016-09-12) Nineteenth International Conference on TEXT, SPEECH and DIALOGUE (TSD 2016), Brno, Czech Republic

             TSD 2016 - LAST CALL FOR PAPERS
         *********************************************************

Nineteenth International Conference on TEXT, SPEECH and DIALOGUE (TSD 2016)
              Brno, Czech Republic, 12-16 September 2016
                    http://www.tsdconference.org/

THE SUBMISSION DEADLINE:

    March 22 2016 ............ Submission of full papers

The submission will be closed during the next working day after the
deadline - for individual extension requirements please contact the
organizers (tsd2016@tsdconference.org).

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

    Hinrich Schuetze, University of Munich, Germany
    Ido Dagan, Bar-Ilan University, Israel


The conference is organized by the Faculty of Informatics, Masaryk
University, Brno, and the Faculty of Applied Sciences, University of
West Bohemia, Pilsen.  The conference is supported by International
Speech Communication Association.

Venue: Brno, Czech Republic


TSD SERIES

TSD series evolved as a prime forum for interaction between researchers in
both spoken and written language processing from all over the world.
Proceedings of TSD form a book published by Springer-Verlag in their
Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence (LNAI) series.  TSD Proceedings
are regularly indexed by Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation
Index.  Moreover, LNAI series are listed in all major citation databases
such as DBLP, SCOPUS, EI, INSPEC or COMPENDEX.


TOPICS

Topics of the conference will include (but are not limited to):

    Corpora and Language Resources (monolingual, multilingual,
    text and spoken corpora, large web corpora, disambiguation,
    specialized lexicons, dictionaries)

    Speech Recognition (multilingual, continuous, emotional
    speech, handicapped speaker, out-of-vocabulary words,
    alternative way of feature extraction, new models for
    acoustic and language modelling)

    Tagging, Classification and Parsing of Text and Speech
    (morphological and syntactic analysis, synthesis and
    disambiguation, multilingual processing, sentiment analysis,
    credibility analysis, automatic text labeling, summarization,
    authorship attribution)

    Speech and Spoken Language Generation (multilingual, high
    fidelity speech synthesis, computer singing)

    Semantic Processing of Text and Speech (information
    extraction, information retrieval, data mining, semantic web,
    knowledge representation, inference, ontologies, sense
    disambiguation, plagiarism detection)

    Integrating Applications of Text and Speech Processing
    (machine translation, natural language understanding,
    question-answering strategies, assistive technologies)

    Automatic Dialogue Systems (self-learning, multilingual,
    question-answering systems, dialogue strategies, prosody in
    dialogues)

    Multimodal Techniques and Modelling (video processing, facial
    animation, visual speech synthesis, user modelling, emotions
    and personality modelling)

Papers on processing of languages other than English are strongly
encouraged.


PROGRAM COMMITTEE

    Elmar Noeth, Germany (general chair)
    Eneko Agirre, Spain
    Genevieve Baudoin, France
    Vladimir Benko, Slovakia
    Paul Cook, Australia
    Jan Cernocky, Czech Republic
    Simon Dobrisek, Slovenia
    Kamil Ekstein, Czech Republic
    Karina Evgrafova, Russia
    Darja Fiser, Slovenia
    Eleni Galiotou, Greece
    Radovan Garabik, Slovakia
    Alexander Gelbukh, Mexico
    Louise Guthrie, United Kingdom
    Tino Haderlein, Germany
    Jan Hajic, Czech Republic
    Eva Hajicova, Czech Republic
    Yannis Haralambous, France
    Hynek Hermansky, USA
    Jaroslava Hlavacova, Czech Republic
    Ales Horak, Czech Republic
    Eduard Hovy, USA
    Maria Khokhlova, Russia
    Daniil Kocharov, Russia
    Miloslav Konopik, Czech Republic
    Ivan Kopecek, Czech Republic
    Valia Kordoni, Germany
    Pavel Kral, Czech Republic
    Siegfried Kunzmann, Germany
    Natalija Loukachevitch, Russia
    Bernardo Magnini, Italy
    Vaclav Matousek, Czech Republic
    France Mihelic, Slovenia
    Roman Moucek, Czech Republic
    Agnieszka Mykowiecka, Poland
    Hermann Ney, Germany
    Karel Oliva, Czech Republic
    Karel Pala, Czech Republic
    Nikola Pavesic, Slovenia
    Maciej Piasecki, Poland
    Josef Psutka, Czech Republic
    James Pustejovsky, USA
    German Rigau, Spain
    Leon Rothkrantz, The Netherlands
    Anna Rumshisky, USA
    Milan Rusko, Slovakia
    Mykola Sazhok, Ukraine
    Pavel Skrelin, Russia
    Pavel Smrz, Czech Republic
    Petr Sojka, Czech Republic
    Stefan Steidl, Germany
    Georg Stemmer, Germany
    Marko Tadic, Croatia
    Tamas Varadi, Hungary
    Zygmunt Vetulani, Poland
    Pascal Wiggers, The Netherlands
    Yorick Wilks, United Kingdom
    Marcin Wolinski, Poland
    Victor Zakharov, Russia


FORMAT OF THE CONFERENCE

The conference program will include presentation of invited papers,
oral presentations, and poster/demonstration sessions. Papers will
be presented in plenary or topic oriented sessions.

Social events including a trip in the vicinity of Brno will allow
for additional informal interactions.


SUBMISSION OF PAPERS

Authors are invited to submit a full paper not exceeding 8 pages
formatted in the LNCS style (see below). Those accepted will be
presented either orally or as posters. The decision about the
presentation format will be based on the recommendation of the
reviewers. The authors are asked to submit their papers using the
on-line form accessible from the conference website.

Papers submitted to TSD 2016 must not be under review by any other
conference or publication during the TSD review cycle, and must not be
previously published or accepted for publication elsewhere.

As reviewing will be blind, the paper should not include the authors'
names and affiliations. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the
author's identity, e.g., 'We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...',
should be avoided. Instead, use citations such as 'Smith previously
showed (Smith, 1991) ...'.  Papers that do not conform to the
requirements above are subject to be rejected without review.

The authors are strongly encouraged to write their papers in TeX or
LaTeX formats. These formats are necessary for the final versions of
the papers that will be published in the Springer Lecture Notes.
Authors using a WORD compatible software for the final version must
use the LNCS template for WORD and within the submit process ask the
Proceedings Editors to convert the paper to LaTeX format.  For this
service a service-and-license fee of CZK 2000 will be levied
automatically.

The paper format for review has to be either PDF or PostScript file
with all required fonts included. Upon notification of acceptance,
presenters will receive further information on submitting their
camera-ready and electronic sources (for detailed instructions on the
final paper format see
http://www.springer.de/comp/lncs/authors.html#Proceedings, Sample File
typeinst.zip).

Authors are also invited to present actual projects, developed
software or interesting material relevant to the topics of the
conference.  The presenters of demonstrations should provide an
abstract not exceeding one page. The demonstration abstracts will not
appear in the conference proceedings.


IMPORTANT DATES

March 22 2016 ............ Submission of full papers
May 15 2016 .............. Notification of acceptance
May 31 2016 .............. Final papers (camera ready) and registration
August 8 2016 ............ Submission of demonstration abstracts
August 15 2016 ........... Notification of acceptance for
                           demonstrations sent to the authors
September 12-16 2016 ..... Conference date

Submission of abstracts serves for better organization of the review
process only - for the actual review a full paper submission is
necessary.

The accepted conference contributions will be published in Springer
proceedings that will be made available to participants at the time
of the conference.


OFFICIAL LANGUAGE

The official language of the conference is English.


ACCOMMODATION

The organizing committee will arrange discounts on accommodation in
the 4-star hotel at the conference venue. The current prices of the
accommodation will be available at the conference website.


ADDRESS

All correspondence regarding the conference should be
addressed to
   
    Ales Horak, TSD 2016
    Faculty of Informatics, Masaryk University
    Botanicka 68a, 602 00 Brno, Czech Republic
    phone: +420-5-49 49 18 63
    fax: +420-5-49 49 18 20
    email: tsd2016@tsdconference.org

The official TSD 2016 homepage is: http://www.tsdconference.org/


LOCATION

Brno is the second largest city in the Czech Republic with a
population of almost 400.000 and is the country's judiciary and
trade-fair center. Brno is the capital of South Moravia, which is
located in the south-east part of the Czech Republic and is known
for a wide range of cultural, natural, and technical sights.
South Moravia is a traditional wine region. Brno had been a Royal
City since 1347 and with its six universities it forms a cultural
center of the region.

Brno can be reached easily by direct flights from London, Munich,
or Eindhoven and by trains or buses from Prague (200 km) or
Vienna (130 km).

For the participants with some extra time, nearby places may
also be of interest.  Local ones include: Brno Castle now called
Spilberk, Veveri Castle, the Old and New City Halls, the
Augustine Monastery with St. Thomas Church and crypt of Moravian
Margraves, Church of St.  James, Cathedral of St. Peter & Paul,
Cartesian Monastery in Kralovo Pole, the famous Villa Tugendhat
designed by Mies van der Rohe along with other important
buildings of between-war Czech architecture.

For those willing to venture out of Brno, Moravian Karst with
Macocha Chasm and Punkva caves, battlefield of the Battle of
three emperors (Napoleon, Russian Alexander and Austrian Franz
- Battle by Austerlitz), Chateau of Slavkov (Austerlitz),
Pernstejn Castle, Buchlov Castle, Lednice Chateau, Buchlovice
Chateau, Letovice Chateau, Mikulov with one of the largest Jewish
cemeteries in Central Europe, Telc - a town on the UNESCO
heritage list, and many others are all within easy reach.

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3-3-26(2016-09-13) 4th CHiME Speech Separation and Recognition Workshop, Google, CA, USA

 4th CHiME Speech Separation and Recognition
                 Challenge and Workshop

                 Launch: April 18, 2016
                Deadline: August 19, 2016

           Workshop: Google, CA, Sep 13, 2016

      http://spandh.dcs.shef.ac.uk/chime_challenge/
      ----------------------------------------------


Dear colleague,

Following the success of the CHiME-3 challenge which attracted 25 international teams, it
gives us great pleasure to announce the CHiME-4 Challenge and Workshop.

CHiME-4 will revisit the CHiME-3 data, i.e., Wall Street Journal sentences spoken by
talkers in challenging noisy environments recorded using a 6-microphone tablet device. It
will increase the difficulty by reducing the number of microphones and introducing
mismatches between training and testing microphone configurations.

Participants will be able to rely on updated baselines for speech enhancement and ASR,
which would now score among the best techniques in CHiME-3.

The results will be presented at a dedicated workshop to be held on September 13th at
Google's offices in conjunction with Interspeech 2016.


STATEMENT OF INTEREST

If you are considering participating, please email chimechallenge@gmail.com with the
subject CHiME-4 and you will be added to the email list for receiving further updates.


IMPORTANT DATES

18th April, 2016  ?  Launch - Training/dev data + baselines released
27th June, 2016   ?  Test data released
19th Aug, 2016    ?  Challenge abstract/paper submission deadline
24th Aug, 2016    ?  Paper notification & registration open
13th Sept, 2016   ?  CHiME-4 Workshop
14th Oct, 2016    ?  Final paper (2 to 6 pages)


CHALLENGE ORGANISERS

Emmanuel Vincent, Inria
Shinji Watanabe, MERL
Jon Barker & Ricard Marxer, University of Sheffield


LOCAL ORGANISER

Kean Chin, Google


SPONSORS

Google
Mitsubishi Electric Research Labs

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3-3-27(2016-09-13) Workshop on Speech and Language Processing for Assistive Technologies (SLPAT 2016)

SLPAT 2016

Workshop on Speech and Language Processing for Assistive Technologies (SLPAT)

13 September 2016, co-located with Interspeech 2016, San Francisco, California

Submission deadline:  17 June 2016
     http://www.slpat.org/slpat2016

=====================================================================
 
We are pleased to announce the first call for papers for the seventh Workshop on Speech and Language Processing for Assistive Technologies (SLPAT) on Tuesday 13 September 2016 to be co-located with Interspeech 2016 in San Francisco, California. Full details on the workshop, topics of interest, timeline, and formatting of regular papers are here:
           
     http://www.slpat.org/slpat2016
 
This workshop will bring together researchers from all areas of speech and language technology with a common interest in making everyday life more accessible for people with physical, cognitive, sensory, emotional, or developmental disabilities. The workshop will provide an opportunity for individuals from both research communities, and the individuals with whom they are working, to assist to share research findings, and to discuss present and future challenges and the potential for collaboration and progress. General topics include but are not limited to:
              
         ? Speech synthesis and speech recognition for physical or cognitive impairments
         ? Speech transformation for improved intelligibility
         ? Speech and language technologies for daily assisted living and Ambient Assisted Living (AAL)
         ? Translation systems; to and from speech, text, symbols and sign language
         ? Novel modeling and machine learning approaches for Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) / Assistive Technologies (AT) applications

 ? Personalized voices for ACC based on limited data (e.g., nearly nonverbal)
 ? Biofeedback for therapy in neurological disorders.
         ? Text processing for improved comprehension, e.g., sentence simplification or TTS
         ? Silent speech: speech technology based on sensors without audio
         ? Symbol languages, sign languages, nonverbal communication
         ? Dialogue systems and natural language generation for assistive technologies
         ? Multimodal user interfaces and dialogue systems adapted to assistive technologies
         ? NLP for cognitive assistance applications
         ? Presentation of graphical information for people with visual impairments
         ? Speech and NLP applied to typing interface applications
         ? Brain-computer interfaces for language processing applications
         ? Speech, natural language and multimodal interfaces to assistive technologies
         ? Assessment of speech and language processing within the context of AT
         ? Web accessibility; text simplification, summarization, and adapted presentation modes such as speech, signs or symbols
         ? Deployment of speech and NLP tools in the clinic or in the field
         ? Linguistic resources; corpora and annotation schemes
         ? Evaluation of systems and components, including methodology
         ? Other topics in AAC and AT
 
Please contact the conference organizers at slpat-workshop@googlegroups.com  with any questions.
 
Important dates:
? 17 June: Deadline for papers and demos
? 11 July: Notification of acceptance
? 1 August: Camera-ready deadline
? 5 August: Early registration deadline
? 13 September 2016: SLPAT workshop
 
 
Frank Rudzicz, PhD
  Scientist, Toronto Rehabilitation Institute;
  Assistant professor (status only), Department of Computer Science,
        University of Toronto;
  Founder and Chief Science Officer, WinterLight Labs Incorporated
  Director, SPOClab (signal processing and oral communications)
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3-3-28(2016-09-29) Call for papers: 12th PAC conference, Laboratoire Parole et Langage, Aix-en-Provence, France, Extended deadline

 

Call for papers: 12th PAC conference

(Phonologie de l’Anglais Contemporain / Phonology of Contemporary English)

 

 

PAC 2016: English Melodies

Laboratoire Parole et Langage, Aix-en-Provence, France

Sept 29-Oct 1 2016

 

We are pleased to announce the 2016 edition of the annual PAC conference, English Melodies’, due to take place from Thursday September 29 to Saturday October 1 2016,  hosted by the Laboratoire Parole et Langage and Aix-Marseille University in Aix-en-Provence. We shall welcome as invited guest speaker Professor Francis Nolan, from the University of Cambridge.

 

The PAC Project, ‘La Phonologie de l’Anglais Contemporain: usages, variétés et structure; The Phonology of Contemporary English: usage, varieties and structure’ is a project coordinated by Anne Prezwozny, Philip Carr, Jacques Durand and Sophie Herment. Among other things it aims at:

ü     giving a better picture of spoken English in its unity and diversity (geographical, social and stylistic);

ü     testing phonological and phonetic models from a synchronic and diachronic point of view, making room for the systematic study of variation,

ü     favouring communication between specialists in speech and in phonological theory,

ü     providing data and analyses which will help improve the teaching of English as a foreign language.

 

Several sessions will be organised, following the development of a variety of thematic research groups with dedicated interests within the PAC program:

  • PAC-Research with a workshop on tools and annotation: Brigitte Bigi and Daniel Hirst will present the latest functions of SPPAS, a tool producing automatic phonetic annotations from a recorded speech sound and its transcription, including Momel and Intsint which are now implemented.
  • PAC-Prosody
  • ICE-PAC (interphonologies of contemporary English)
  • LVTI (Langue Ville Travail Identité), the study of English in urban contexts and its link with the concept of identity.

 

Papers from a wide range of theoretical perspectives addressing the above issues and related topics are welcome. Other things being equal, we will give priority to papers focusing on the relationship between corpus studies and the phonological/phonetic modelling of spoken English. A special emphasis will be given this year to English melodies, in the broadest sense, from intonation to segmental primes. We will welcome proposals on the use of automatic tools for the study of very large data sets as well, in connection with the workshop.

 

The deadline for sending a title with a one-page abstract (excluding references) is March 15,2016 (extended deadline). Please send your proposal in 2 pdf files, one with name and affiliation, the other anonymous to:

gabor.turcsan@univ-amu.fr  & sophie.herment@univ-amu.fr

 

Notification of acceptance will be sent by the end of March.

 

Organising committee:

Gabor Turcsan, AMU, LPL

Sophie Herment, AMU, LPL

Anne Tortel, AMU, LPL

Stéphanie Desous, CNRS-AMU, LPL

Joëlle Lavaud, CNRS-AMU, LPL

Catherine Perrot, CNRS-AMU, LPL

Claudia Pichon-Starke, CNRS-AMU, LPL

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3-3-29(2016-10-11) 4th Int.Conf. on Statistical Language and Speech Processing, Pilsen, Czech Republic

4th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON
STATISTICAL LANGUAGE AND SPEECH PROCESSING

 
SLSP 2016
 
Pilsen, Czech Republic
 
October 11-13, 2016
 
Organized by:
 
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Department of Cybernetics
University of West Bohemia
 
Research Group on Mathematical Linguistics (GRLMC)
Rovira i Virgili University
 
http://grammars.grlmc.com/SLSP2016/
 
**********************************************************************************
 
AIMS:
 
SLSP is a yearly conference series aimed at promoting and displaying excellent research on the wide spectrum of statistical methods that are currently in use in computational language or speech processing. It aims at attracting contributions from both fields. Though there exist large, well-known conferences and workshops hosting contributions to any of these areas, SLSP is a more focused meeting where synergies between subdomains and people will hopefully happen. In SLSP 2016, significant room will be reserved to young scholars at the beginning of their career and particular focus will be put on methodology.
 
VENUE:
 
SLSP 2016 will take place in Pilsen, nominated one of the two European Capitals of Culture in 2015. The venue will be the the NTIS research centre at the Faculty of Applied Sciences of the University of West Bohemia.
 
SCOPE:
 
The conference invites submissions discussing the employment of statistical models (including machine learning) within language and speech processing. Topics of either theoretical or applied interest include, but are not limited to:
 
anaphora and coreference resolution
authorship identification, plagiarism and spam filtering
computer-aided translation
corpora and language resources
data mining and semantic web
information extraction
information retrieval
knowledge representation and ontologies
lexicons and dictionaries
machine translation
multimodal technologies
natural language understanding
neural representation of speech and language
opinion mining and sentiment analysis
parsing
part-of-speech tagging
question-answering systems
semantic role labelling
speaker identification and verification
speech and language generation
speech recognition
speech synthesis
speech transcription
spelling correction
spoken dialogue systems
term extraction
text categorisation
text summarisation
user modeling
 
STRUCTURE:
 
SLSP 2016 will consist of:
 
invited talks
peer-reviewed contributions
 
INVITED SPEAKERS:
 
Walter Daelemans (University of Antwerp), Advances in Statistical Approaches to Personality Prediction from Text
 
Julia Hirschberg (Columbia University), tba
 
Mari Ostendorf (University of Washington), tba
 
PROGRAMME COMMITTEE:
 
Srinivas Bangalore (Interactions LLC, Murray Hill, USA)
Roberto Basili (University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy)
Jean-François Bonastre (University of Avignon, France)
Nicoletta Calzolari (National Research Council, Pisa, Italy)
Marcello Federico (Bruno Kessler Foundation, Trento, Italy)
Guillaume Gravier (IRISA, Rennes, France)
Gregory Grefenstette (INRIA, Saclay, France)
Udo Hahn (University of Jena, Germany)
Thomas Hain (University of Sheffield, United Kingdom)
Dilek Hakkani-Tür (Microsoft Research, Mountain View, USA)
Mark Hasegawa-Johnson (University of Illinois, Urbana, USA)
Xiaodong He (Microsoft Research, Redmond, USA)
Graeme Hirst (University of Toronto, Canada)
Gareth Jones (Dublin City University, Ireland)
Tracy Holloway King (A9.com, Palo Alto, USA)
Tomi Kinnunen (University of Eastern Finland, Joensuu, Finland)
Philipp Koehn (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)
Pavel Král (University of West Bohemia, Pilsen, Czech Republic)
Claudia Leacock (McGraw-Hill Education CTB, Monterey, USA)
Mark Liberman (University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA)
Qun Liu (Dublin City University, Ireland)
Carlos Martín-Vide (Rovira i Virgili University, Tarragona, Spain, chair)
Alessandro Moschitti (University of Trento, Italy)
Preslav Nakov (Qatar Computing Research Institute, Doha, Qatar)
John Nerbonne (University of Groningen, The Netherlands)
Hermann Ney (RWTH Aachen University, Germany)
Vincent Ng (University of Texas, Dallas, USA)
Jian-Yun Nie (University of Montréal, Canada)
Kemal Oflazer (Carnegie Mellon University ? Qatar, Doha, Qatar)
Adam Pease (Articulate Software, San Francisco, USA)
Massimo Poesio (University of Essex, United Kingdom)
James Pustejovsky (Brandeis University, Waltham, USA)
Manny Rayner (University of Geneva, Switzerland)
Paul Rayson (Lancaster University, United Kingdom)
Douglas A. Reynolds (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Lexington, USA)
Erik Tjong Kim Sang (Meertens Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Murat Saraçlar (Bo?aziçi University, ?stanbul, Turkey)
Björn W. Schuller (University of Passau, Germany)
Richard Sproat (Google, New York, USA)
Efstathios Stamatatos (University of the Aegean, Karlovassi, Greece)
Yannis Stylianou (Toshiba Research Europe Ltd., Cambridge, United Kingdom)
Marc Swerts (Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
Tomoki Toda (Nagoya University, Japan)
Xiaojun Wan (Peking University, Beijing, China)
Andy Way (Dublin City University, Ireland)
Phil Woodland (University of Cambridge, United Kingdom)
Junichi Yamagishi (University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom)
Heiga Zen (Google, Mountain View, USA)
Min Zhang (Soochow University, Suzhou, China)
Pierre Zweigenbaum (LIMSI, Orsay, France)
 
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE:
 
Tomá? Hercig (Pilsen)
Carlos Martín-Vide (Tarragona, co-chair)
Manuel J. Parra (Granada)
Daniel Soutner (Pilsen)
Florentina Lilica Voicu (Tarragona)
Jan Zelinka (Pilsen, co-chair)
 
SUBMISSIONS:
 
Authors are invited to submit non-anonymized papers in English presenting original and unpublished research. Papers should not exceed 12 single-spaced pages (including eventual appendices, references, proofs, etc.) and should be prepared according to the standard format for Springer Verlag's LNCS series (see http://www.springer.com/computer/lncs?SGWID=0-164-6-793341-0).
 
Submissions have to be uploaded to:
 
https://www.easychair.org/conferences/?conf=slsp2016
 
PUBLICATIONS:
 
A volume of proceedings published by Springer in the LNCS/LNAI series will be available by the time of the conference.
 
A special issue of Computer Speech and Language (Elsevier, JCR 2014 impact factor: 1.753) will be later published containing peer-reviewed substantially extended versions of some of the papers contributed to the conference. Submissions to it will be by invitation.
 
REGISTRATION:
 
The registration form can be found at:
 
http://grammars.grlmc.com/SLSP2016/Registration.php
 
DEADLINES:
 
Paper submission: May 17, 2016 (23:59 CET)
Notification of paper acceptance or rejection: June 21, 2016
Final version of the paper for the LNCS/LNAI proceedings: July 1, 2016
Early registration: July 1, 2016
Late registration: September 27, 2016
Submission to the journal special issue: January 13, 2017
 
QUESTIONS AND FURTHER INFORMATION:
 
florentinalilica.voicu (at) urv.cat
 
POSTAL ADDRESS:
 
SLSP 2016
Research Group on Mathematical Linguistics (GRLMC)
Rovira i Virgili University
Av. Catalunya, 35
43002 Tarragona, Spain
 
Phone: +34 977 559 543
Fax: +34 977 558 386
 
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS:
 
Západo?eská univerzita v Plzni
Universitat Rovira i Virgili

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3-3-30(2016-10-20) MediaEval 2016 Multimedia Benchmark: Call for Feedback and Participation

MediaEval 2016 Multimedia Benchmark: Call for Feedback and Participation

Each year, the Benchmarking Initiative for Multimedia Evaluation
(MediaEval) offers challenges to the multimedia research community in
the form of shared tasks. MediaEval tasks place their focus on the
human and social aspects of multimedia. We are interested in how
multimedia content can be used to produce knowledge and to create
algorithms that support people in their daily lives. Many tasks are
related to how people understand multimedia content, how they react to
it, and how they use it. We emphasize the 'multi' in multimedia:
speech, audio, music, visual content, tags, users, and context.
MediaEval attracts researchers with backgrounds in diverse areas,
including multimedia content analysis, information retrieval, speech
technology, computer vision, music information retrieval, social
computing, recommender systems.

We invite you to contribute your ideas and opinions by filling out the
MediaEval 2016 survey during the month of March:
http://goo.gl/forms/Tcl1BhkBeQ

The survey asks you for feedback on tasks planned for 2016, and also
for input on task design decisions. It will take you 5-30 minutes
depending on the level of detail in which you would like to answer.

Early registration for participation in MediaEval 2016 tasks is now open at:
https://www.aanmelder.nl/mediaeval2016

The MediaEval 2016 Workshop will take place 20-21 October 2016 right
after ACM Multimedia 2016 in Amsterdam.

For further information on MediaEval 2016, visit
http://www.multimediaeval.org or contact Martha Larson at
m.a.larson@tudelft.nl

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3-3-31(2016-10-31) 2nd Workshop on Psycholinguistic Approaches to Speech Recognition in Adverse Conditions

=== Announcement for 2nd Workshop on Psycholinguistic Approaches to Speech
Recognition in Adverse Conditions  ===

31 October 2016 -1 November 2016
Nijmegen, the Netherlands
Website: http://odettescharenborg.ruhosting.nl/pasrac2016/

The second workshop on Psycholinguistic Approaches to Speech Recognition
in Adverse Conditions (PASRAC) will be held in Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
The workshop is a follow-up on the first workshop organised in Bristol in
March 2010.

The aim of the two-day workshop is to bring together scientists from
different disciplines, including psychology, linguistics, computer
science, neuroscience, and cognitive science, working on the topic of
speech recognition in adverse conditions.

Basic themes will be, but are not limited to:
- Sensory degradation
    * Extrinsic: Noise and other distortions, such as atypical speech,
accented speech, conversational speech
    * Intrinsic: Hearing impairments and cochlear implants
- Incomplete knowledge (L1-L2, adults-children)
- Limited processing resources (dual tasking, divided attention, etc).

We are inviting abstracts (maximum length is 500 words, excluding
references) for oral or poster presentations.

*  IMPORTANT DATES:
1 May 2016: Submission portal opens
1 June 2016: Registration opens
30 June 2016: Abstract submission deadline
31 July 2016: Notification of abstract acceptance

* KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Ann Bradlow (Northwestern University, IL)
Sophie Scott (University College London, UK)

* INVITED SPEAKERS:
Helen Blank (MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, UK)
Maria Chait (University College London, UK)
Antje Heinrich (MRC Institute of Hearing Research, UK)
Bob McMurray (University of Iowa, IA)
Bernd Meyer (Johns Hopkins University, MD / University of Oldenburg,
Germany)
Kevin Munro (University of Manchester, UK)
Kathy Pichora-Fuller (University of Toronto, Canada)
Adriana Zekveld (VU University Medical Centre, the Netherlands)

* ORGANISERS:
Polina Drozdova (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
Florian Hintz (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
Sven Mattys (University of York, UK)
Odette Scharenborg (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)

* PROGRAMME COMMITTEE:
Helen Blank
Florian Hintz
Sven Mattys
Bernd Meyer
Kathy Pichora-Fuller
Odette Scharenborg
Adriana Zekveld

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3-3-32(2016-10-31) XVème Colloque International des Etudes Créoles, Baie Mahault - Guadeloupe

APPEL A COMMUNICATIONS

XVème Colloque International des Etudes Créoles

« Pourquoi étudier les langues, cultures et sociétés créoles aujourd?hui ? »

31 octobre 2016 - 4 novembre 2016, Baie Mahault - Guadeloupe

 

  Le Comité International des Etudes Créoles réalise depuis presqu?une cinquantaine d?années, à intervalle régulier, le colloque des études créoles. En 2016, le XVème colloque International des Etudes Créoles se tiendra à Baie Mahault - Guadeloupe. L?organisation du XVème colloque du CIEC a été confiée au CRENEL en collaboration avec l?Université des Antilles, l?ESPE de Guadeloupe, le CREF et le CRILLASH. Le colloque sera organisé avec le soutien de l?association Haïti Monde et de la Mairie de Baie Mahault, Guadeloupe.

 

Présentation

 

     Les études sur les langues, cultures et sociétés créoles s?inscrivent dans plusieurs perspectives définies comme majeures aussi bien par la communauté internationale (UNESCO, PNUD, Objectifs du Millenium, etc.), que par l?Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie (OIF). Cette dernière Organisation regroupe une dizaine d?Etats ou de pays créolophones : France et ses Départements d?Outre-Mer (Guadeloupe, Guyane, Martinique, Réunion), Haïti, La Dominique, Maurice, Sainte Lucie, Seychelles ; Cap-Vert, Guinée Bissau, San Tome et Principe.

 

     L?importance des études créoles pour les sciences humaines et sociales n?est plus à démontrer. Cette importance tient d?abord à la jeunesse de ces systèmes sociaux, linguistiques et culturels (quatre à cinq siècles d?existence au maximum), mais plus encore, sans doute, à ce que ces langues, cultures et sociétés ont, en quelque sorte, fait rarissime, un « état-civil » (Chaudenson). Il est constitué, comme tout état-civil, d?un lieu de naissance (le plus souvent une île, souvent déserte ou vidée de ses premiers habitants, ce qui dispense de se poser les épineuses questions des limites territoriales de l?investigation comme des substrats indigènes), d?une date de naissance (ou en tout cas de conception que détermine le début de la colonisation européenne) et d?ascendants (des populations introduites pour l?exploitation coloniale de ces terres, dont on connaît souvent avec précision l?importance et l?origine, car on compte, on pèse et on enregistre sur les navires).

 

Argumentaire

 

     Etudier les langues, cultures et sociétés créoles suscite de nombreuses interrogations scientifiques. Ce XVème colloque se demandera :

 

« Pourquoi étudier les langues, cultures et sociétés créoles aujourd?hui ? »

 

     Cette thématique invite les universitaires, les spécialistes et les intellectuels à réfléchir et à présenter leurs travaux autour des sociétés créoles d?aujourd?hui dans leurs trajectoires historiques, linguistiques, sociales, politiques, économiques et culturelles. Comment l?évolution linguistique de ces sociétés a-t-elle influencé leur devenir social ? Qu?est-ce que le monde créole d?aujourd?hui a à dire aux autres aires géographiques et culturelles ?

 

     Philosophes, historiens, anthropologues, sociologues et linguistes sont conviés à contribuer aux questions relatives  à l?oralité, à l?interculturalité, aux phénomènes de migration et aux répertoires artistiques qui se développent au sein des sociétés créoles.

Où en est l?étude de la genèse et du développement des langues créoles ? Qu?en est-il de l?intercompréhension des langues créoles ? Quels sont les cheminements de l?institution des langues créoles dans leurs zones d?influences respectives (voir la question des académies de langue créole) ? Les pratiques militantes en créole pourront également être évoquées.

 

     Les communications et conférences plénières de ce colloque tenteront d?une part de faire avancer les travaux linguistiques (linguistique théorique, descriptive, sociolinguistique et didactiques), littéraires et anthropologiques consacrés aux langues et cultures créoles, et d?autre part, de dégager des perspectives pour des recherches futures.

Un des axes majeurs devrait être le développement des politiques concertées de coopération entre les trois espaces francophone, lusophone et hispanophone, dans le prolongement de propositions faites lors des colloques du Cap-Vert (2005), de Haïti (2008), de Maurice (2012), d?Aix-en-Provence (2014). Cet axe s?inscrit dans la volonté, clairement manifestée au sein de l?OIF.

 

Organisation et calendrier

Les communications et propositions d?ateliers pourront s?inscrire dans l?un des thèmes du colloque et / ou dans une thématique transversale.

Parmi les sujets qui pourraient être abordées, citons, à titre illustratif, les questions suivantes :

  • Les diasporas « créoles » et leurs pratiques linguistiques
  • Les variétés créoles développées hors des territoires d?origine
  • Les variétés des néo-apprenants de langues créoles
  • Le développement des programmes de littéracie en créole
  • Les programmes d?éducation bilingue intégrant la langue créole
  • Les littératures des pays de langue créole
  • L?état des recherches sur les corpus de langue créole
  • L?aménagement du créole à l?école
  • Morphologie, Syntaxe etc. des langues créoles
  • Les études diachroniques des langues créoles
  • Les rapports entre les langues créoles et les langues africaines
  • Histoire, paysage et société créoles à travers les ans.
  • Créolisation et devenir des sociétés créoles
  • Philosophie et histoire des idées dans les sociétés créoles.

     Les propositions de communications rédigées en langue française, en anglais ou dans une langue créole française avec l?adresse et l?appartenance institutionnelle du ou des communiquant(e)s devront parvenir à l?adresse suivante : colloqueciec2016@gmail.com avant le 15 mars 2016. Elles indiqueront le thème, les données traités, les résultats escomptés et ne dépasseront pas 3 000 caractères ou 500 mots (bibliographie incluse).

      Après évaluation, l?acceptation ou le refus de la proposition de communication sera notifiée dans la semaine du 15 avril 2016.

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3-3-33(2016-11-12) CfP 18th International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2016), Tokyo, Japan

ICMI 2016 call for Long and Short Papers

 

ICMI 2016, Tokyo, Japan (November 12-16, 2016)

http://icmi.acm.org/2016/

 

The 18th International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2016) will be held in Tokyo, Japan.  ICMI is the premier international forum for multidisciplinary research on multimodal human-human and human-computer interaction, interfaces, and system development. The conference focuses on theoretical and empirical foundations, component technologies, and combined multimodal processing techniques that define the field of multimodal interaction analysis, interface design, and system development.

 

This year, ICMI welcomes contributions on machine learning for multimodal interaction as a special topic of interest. ICMI 2016 will feature a single-track main conference which includes: keynote speakers, technical full and short papers (including oral and poster presentations), demonstrations, exhibits and doctoral spotlight papers. The conference will also feature workshops and grand challenges. The proceedings of ICMI'2016 will be published by ACM as part of their series of International Conference Proceedings and Digital Library. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:

 

- Affective Computing and interaction

- Cognitive modeling and multimodal interaction

- Gesture, touch and haptics

- Healthcare, assistive technologies

- Human communication dynamics

- Human-robot/agent multimodal interaction

- Interaction with smart environment

- Machine learning for multimodal interaction

- Mobile multimodal systems

- Multimodal behavior generation

- Multimodal datasets and validation

- Multimodal dialogue modeling

- Multimodal fusion and representation

- Multimodal interactive applications

- Speech behaviors in social interaction

- System components and multimodal platforms

- Visual behaviors in social interaction

- Virtual/augmented reality and multimodal interaction

 

Important dates

Long and short paper submission: May 6th, 2016

Reviews available for rebuttal: July 21st, 2016

Paper notification: August 24th, 2016

Main Conference: November 13-15, 2016

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3-3-34(2017-06-21) International Conference Subsidia: Tools and Resources for Speech Sciences, Málaga (Costa del Sol, Spain).

The Phonetics Laboratory of the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and the University of Málaga are happy to announce the upcoming celebration of the International Conference SubsidiaTools and Resources for Speech Sciences, which will take place on June 21-23, 2017, in the city of Málaga (Costa del Sol, Spain).
During this quarter of 2016 we will be sending further information concerning the Conference, as well as its website address.
If you have any questions, please contact Juana Gil: 
juana.gil@cchs.csic.es, or José Villa:jovillavilla@hotmail.com

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