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ISCApad Archive  »  2012  »  ISCApad #172  »  Events  »  ISCA Supported Events

ISCApad #172

Sunday, October 07, 2012 by Chris Wellekens

3-2 ISCA Supported Events
3-2-1(2012-11-28) International Workshop on Spoken Dialog Systems (IWSDS 2012) Towards a Natural Interaction with Robots, Knowbots and Smartphones.Paris, France

International Workshop on Spoken Dialog Systems (IWSDS 2012)
Towards a Natural Interaction with Robots, Knowbots and Smartphones.
Paris, France, November 28-30, 2012

www.iwsds.org

** Final Announcement **

Following the success of IWSDS’2009 (Irsee, Germany), IWSDS’2010 (Gotemba Kogen Resort, Japan) and IWSDS’2011 (Granada, Spain), the Fourth International Workshop on Spoken Dialog Systems (IWSDS 2012) will be held in Paris (France) on November 28-30, 2012.

The IWSDS Workshop series provides an international forum for the presentation of research and applications and for lively discussions among researchers as well as industrialists, with a special interest to the practical implementation of Spoken Dialog Systems in everyday applications. Scientific achievements in language processing now results in the development of successful applications such as IBM Watson, Evi, Apple Siri or Google Assistant for access to knowledge and interaction with smartphones, while the coming of domestic robots advocates for the development of powerful communication means with their human users and fellow robots.

We therefore put this year workshop under the theme “Towards a Natural Interaction with Robots, Knowbots and Smartphones”, which covers:
- Dialog for robot interaction (including ethics),
- Dialog for Open Domain knowledge access,
- Dialog for interacting with smartphones,
- Mediated dialog (including multilingual dialog involving Speech Translation),
- Dialog quality evaluation.

We would also like to encourage the discussion of common issues of theories, applications, evaluation, limitations, general tools and techniques, and therefore also invite the submission of original papers in any related area, including but not limited to:
- Speech recognition and understanding,
- Dialog management, Adaptive dialog modeling,
- Recognition of emotions from speech, gestures, facial expressions and physiological data,
- Emotional and interactional dynamic profile of the speaker during dialog, User modeling,
- Planning and reasoning capabilities for coordination and conflict description,
- Conflict resolution in complex multi-level decisions,
- Multi-modality such as graphics, gesture and speech for input and output,
- Fusion, fission and information management, Learning and adaptability,
- Visual processing and recognition for advanced human-computer interaction,
- Spoken Dialog databases and corpora, including methodologies and ethics,
- Objective and subjective Spoken Dialog evaluation methodologies, strategies and paradigms,
- Spoken Dialog prototypes and products, etc.

Invited speakers: Jérôme Bellegarda (Apple Inc. (USA)), Axel Buendia (SpirOps (France)), Jonathan Ginzburg (Univ. Paris-Diderot (France), Alex Waibel (KIT (Germany), CMU (USA) and IMMI (France)), Marilyn Walker (University of California at Santa Cruz (USA))

PAPER SUBMISSION

We particularly welcome papers that can be illustrated by a demonstration, and we will organize the conference in order to best accommodate these papers, whatever their category.

As usual, it is planned that a selection of accepted papers will be published in a book by Springer following the conference.

We distinguish between the following categories of submissions:

Long Research Papers are reserved for reports on mature research results. The expected length of a long paper should be in the range of 8-12 pages.
Short Research Papers should not exceed 6 pages in total. Authors may choose this category if they wish to report on smaller case studies or ongoing but interesting and original research efforts
Demo - System Papers: Authors who wish to demonstrate their system may choose this category and provide a description of their system and demo. System papers should not exceed 6 pages in total.

IMPORTANT DATES
Deadline for submission: July 16, 2012
Notification of acceptance: September 15, 2012
Deadline for final submission of accepted paper: October 8, 2012
Deadline for Early Bird registration: October 8, 2012
Final program available online: November 5, 2012
Workshop: November 28-30, 2012

VENUE: IWSDS 2012 will be held as a two-day residential seminar in the wonderful Castle of Ermenonville (http://www.chateau-ermenonville.com/en) near Paris, France, where attendees will be accommodated.

IWSDS Steering Committee: Gary Geunbae Lee (POSTECH, Pohang, Korea), Ramón López-Cózar (Univ. of Granada, Spain), Joseph Mariani (LIMSI and IMMI-CNRS, Orsay, France), Wolfgang Minker (Ulm Univ., Germany), Satoshi Nakamura (Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan)

IWSDS 2012 Program Committee: Joseph Mariani (LIMSI & IMMI-CNRS, Chair), Laurence Devillers (LIMSI-CNRS & Univ. Paris-Sorbonne 4), Martine Garnier-Rizet (IMMI-CNRS), Sophie Rosset (LIMSI-CNRS).

Organizing Committee: Martine Garnier-Rizet (Chair), Lynn Barreteau, Joseph Mariani (IMMI-CNRS).

Scientific Committee: Jan Alexandersson (DFKI, Saarbrucken, Germany), Masahiro Araki (Interactive Intelligence lab, Kyoto Institute of Technology, Japan), Frédéric Béchet (LIF, Marseille, France), André Berton (Daimler R&D, Ulm, Germany), Axel Buendia (SpirOps, Paris, France), Susanne Burger (Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburg PA, USA), Felix Burkhardt (Deutsche Telecom Laboratories, Berlin, Germany), Zoraida Callejas (University of Granada, Spain), Nick Campbell (Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland), Heriberto Cuayáhuitl (DFKI, Saarbrucken, Germany), Yannick Estève (LIUM, Université du Maine, Le Mans, France), Sadaoki Furui (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan), Jon Ander Gomez (Polytechnic University of Valencia, Spain), David Griol (Carlos III University of Madrid, Spain), Joakim Gustafson (KTH, Stockholm, Sweden), Olivier Hamon (ELDA, Paris, France), Tobias Heinroth (Ulm University, Germany), Paul Heisterkamp (Daimler Research, Ulm, Germany), Luis Alfonso Hernandez (Polytechnic University of Madrid), Dirk Heylen (University of Twente, The Netherlands), Ryuichiro Higashinaka (NTT Cyber Space Laboratories, Yokosuka, Japan), Julia Hirschberg (Columbia University, New York, USA), M. Ehsan Hoque (MIT Media Lab, Cambridge, USA), Chiori Hori (NICT, Kyoto, Japan), Kristiina Jokinen (University of Helsinki, Finland), Tatsuya Kawahara (Kyoto University, Japan), Seokhwan Kim (Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore), Harksoo Kim (Kangwon National University, Korea), Hong Kook Kim (Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, Korea), Lin-Shan Lee (National Taiwan University, Taiwan), Fabrice Lefèvre (LIA, Université d'Avignon et des Paysdu Vaucluse, France), Heizhou Li (Institute for Infocomm Research, Singapore), Michael McTear (University of Ulster, UK), Yasuhiro Minami (NTT Cyber Space Laboratories, Yokosuka, Japan), Teruhisa Misu (NICT, Kyoto, Japan), Mikio Nakano (Honda Research Institute, Japan), Shrikanth S. Narayanan (SAIL (Signal Analysis and Interpretation Laboratory), Los Angeles), USA), Elmar Nöth (University of Erlangen, Germany), Roberto Pieraccini (ICSI - Berkeley, USA) , Olivier Pietquin (Sup'Elec, Metz, France), Sylvia Quarteroni (Politecnico di Milano, Italy), Matthieu Quignard (ICAR, ENS Lyon, France), Norbert Reithinger (DFKI, Berlin, Germany), Alexander Schmitt (Ulm University, Germany), Björn Schuller (Institute for Human-Machine Communication, Technische Universität München, Germany), Elizabeth Shriberg (Microsoft, USA), Gabriel Skantze (KTH, Stockholm, Sweden), Sebastian Stüker (KIT, Karlsruhe, Germany), Kazuya Takeda (University of Nagoya, Japan), Alessandro Vinciarelli (University of Glasgow, United Kingdom), Marilyn Walker (University of California, Santa Cruz, USA), Hsin-min Wang (Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan).

Participating organizations: IMMI-CNRS and LIMSI-CNRS (France), Postech (Korea), University of Granada (Spain), Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST) and National Institute of Information and Communications (NICT) (Japan), Ulm University (Germany).

Sponsors: European Language Resources Association (ELRA), European Language and Speech Network (ELSNET).

Supporting organizations: Association Francophone pour la Communication Parlée (AFCP), Association pour le Traitement Automatique des Langues (ATALA), HUMAINE Emotion Research Network, International Speech Communication Association (ISCA), Korean Society of Speech Sciences (KSSS), Spanish Thematic Network on Advanced Dialogue Systems (RTSDA), SIGdial.

** Please contact iwsds2012@immi-labs.org or visit www.iwsds.org to get more information. **


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3-2-2(2012-12-05) The 8th International Symposium on Chinese Spoken Language Processing, Hong Kong
5-8 December 2012:
 The 8th International Symposium on Chinese Spoken Language Processing, Hong Kong The 8th International Symposium on Chinese Spoken Language Processing will be held in 
Hong Kong on 5-8 December, 2012. ISCSLP is a biennial conference for scientists, researchers, and practitioners to report and 
discuss the latest progress in all theoretical and technological aspects of spoken language 
processing. ISCSLP is also the flagship conference of ISCA Special Interest Group on Chinese 
Spoken Language Processing (SIG-CSLP). While the ISCSLP is focused primarily on Chinese 
languages, works on other languages that may be applied to Chinese speech and language
 are also encouraged. The working language of ISCSLP is English. Details can be found on the conference website http://www.iscslp2012.org/
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