[open-linguistics] 2nd CFP: 3rd Workshop on Linked Data in Linguistics - Multilingual Knowledge Resources and NLP @ LREC-2014
Christian Chiarcos
christian.chiarcos at web.de
Tue Jan 28 09:59:00 UTC 2014
Apologies for cross-posting.
==============================================================================
Second Call for Papers
3rd Workshop on LINKED DATA IN LINGUISTICS (LDL-2014): Multilingual
Knowledge Resources and Natural Language Processing
Tuesday, May 27, 2014, Reykjavik (Iceland)
Collocated with the 9th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
(LREC-2014)
http://ldl2014.org/
================================================================================
The explosion of information technology has led to a substantial growth in
quantity, diversity and complexity of linguistic data accessible on the
Web. The lack of interoperability between linguistic and language
resources represents a major challenge that needs to be addressed, in
particular, if information from different sources is to be combined, such
as machine-readable lexicons, corpus data and terminology repositories.
The Linked Data in Linguistics (LDL) workshop series provides a forum to
discuss these types of resources, strategies to address issues of
interoperability between them, protocols to distribute, access and
integrate this information and technologies and infrastructures developed
on this basis.
The goal of the workshop is twofold. First, we will assemble researchers
from various fields of linguistics, natural language processing, knowledge
management and information technology to present and discuss *principles,
case studies, and best practices* for representing, publishing and linking
mono- and multilingual linguistic and knowledge data collections,
including corpora, grammars, dictionaries, wordnets, translation memories,
domain specific ontologies etc. In this sense, we particularly invite
contributions discussing the application of the *Linked Open Data
paradigm* to linguistic data as it might provide an important step towards
making linguistic data:
i) easily and uniformly queryable,
ii) interoperable and
iii) sharable over the Web using open standards such as the HTTP protocol
and the RDF data model [1].
The adaptation of some processes and best practices to *multilingual
linguistic resources and knowledge bases* acquires also new relevance in
this context. Some processes may need to be modified to accommodate the
publication of resources that contain information in several languages.
Also the linking process between linguistic resources in different
languages poses important research questions, as well as the development
and application of freely available knowledge bases and crowdsourcing to
compensate the lack of publicly accessible language resources for various
languages.
Secondly, we will provide researchers on natural language processing and
semantic web technologies a platform to present case studies and best
practices on the exploitation of linguistic resources exposed on the Web
for *Natural Language Processing* applications, or other content-centered
applications such as content analytics, knowledge extraction, etc. The
availability of massive linked open knowledge resources raises the
question how such data can be suitably employed to facilitate different
NLP tasks and research questions. Following the tradition of earlier LDL
workshops, we encourage contributions to the *Linguistic Linked Open Data
(LLOD) cloud* [2] and research on this basis. In particular, this pertains
to contributions that demonstrate an added value resulting from the
combination of linked datasets and ontologies as a source for semantic
information with linguistic resources published according to as linked
data principles. Another important question to be addressed in the
workshop is how Natural Language Processing techniques can be employed to
further facilitate the growth and enrichment of linguistic resources on
the Web.
The *intended audience* includes linguists, NLP engineers and researchers
from any field of computer science interested in the application of
Semantic Web formalisms and related technologies to language data,
empirically-working linguists and lexicographers interested in the
representation, exchange and interlinking of knowledge resources,
linguistic data and metadata, and developers of infrastructures for
linguistic data and other researchers with an interest in both aspects.
Background and History
======================
This workshop brings together two community efforts, the Open Linguistics
Working Group of the Open Knowledge Foundation (OWLG), and the W3C
Ontology-Lexica Community Group. LDL-2014 is also supported by a recently
started EU Support Action: LIDER (Linked Data as an enabler of cross-media
and multilingual content analytics for enterprises across Europe), which
aims to provide an ecosystem for the establishment of linguistic linked
open data, as well as media resources metadata, for a free and open
exploitation of such resources in multilingual, cross-media content
analytics across Europe.
The workshop is continuing a series of workshops on the application of the
Linked Data paradigm to linguistic data that have been initiated and
organized by the Open Linguistics Working Group: The First Workshop on
Linked Data in Linguistics (LDL-2012) was conducted in March 2012 at the
University of Frankfurt am Main/Germany, and collocated with the 34th
Annual Meeting of the German Linguistics Society (DGfS-2012). The Workshop
on Multilingual Linked Open Data for Enterprises (MLODE-2012) was
conducted in September 2012 at the University of Leipzig/Germany, and
collocated with the 3rd Conference on Software Agents and Services for
Business, Research and E-Science (SABRE-2012). The Second Workshop on
Linked Data in Linguistics (LDL-2013) was conducted in Sep 2013 at CNR in
Pisa/Italy, and collocated with the 6th International Conference on the
Generative Lexicon (GL2013).
Linguistic Linked Data Challenge
================================
There is a data challenge associated to the Linguistic Linked Data
Workshop. In addition to regular workshop papers, we will accept dataset
description of 4-6 pages describing new linguistic dataset published on
the web as linked data. These linguistic datasets include, but are not
limited to, lexica, terminologies, semantic networks, annotated and
parallel corpora, multimodal resources, typological databases and
linguistic metadata. The data challenge committee will review and evaluate
data according to four dimensions, with prizes of up to €700, funded by
the LIDER project, awarded to the highest scoring datasets.
The criteria for the Linguistic Linked Data Challenge include:
* Availability
** Use of Linked Data and RDF.
** Hosted on a publicly accessible server and be available both during the
period of the evaluation and beyond.
** Use of an open license.
* Quality of Resource
** Represents useful linguistically or NLP-relevant information.
** Reuses relevant standards and models.
** Contains complex, non-trivial information, e.g., multiple levels of
annotation.
* Linking
** Links to external resources.
** Reuse of existing properties and categories.
* Impact/usefulness of the resource
** Relevant and likely to be reused by many researchers in NLP and wider
fields.
** Uses linked data to improve the quality of and access to the resource.
* Originality
** Represents a type of resource or a community currently
under-represented in
(L)LOD cloud activities
** Facilitates novel and unforeseen applications or use cases (as
described by
the authors) enabled through Linked Data technology.
Details of the challenge are announced in separate Calls for Datasets, see
http://ldl2014.org/challenge.html for up-to-date information.
Topics of interest
==================
We invite contributions related (but not limited) to the following topics:
1. Use cases and project proposals for the creation, publication or
application of linguistic data collections that are linked with other
resources
2. Modelling linguistic data and metadata with OWL and/or RDF
3. Ontologies for linguistic data and metadata collections as well as
cross-lingual retrieval
4. Descriptions of data sets following Linked Data principles
5. Applications of such data, other ontologies or linked data from any
subdiscipline of linguistics (may include work in progress or project
descriptions)
6. Application and applicability of (Linguistic) Linked Open Data in NLP
7. NLP contributions to (Linguistic) Linked Open Data
8. Challenges of multilinguality and the use of LOD and collaboratively
constructed open resources for knowledge extraction, machine translation
and other NLP tasks.
9. Legal and social aspects of Linguistic Linked Open Data
10. Best practices for the publication and linking of multilingual
knowledge resources
Submission & Publication
========================
We accept submission of both *long (up to 8 pages) and short papers (up to
4 pages)* to be presented as long or short oral presentation at the
workshop to be submitted via http://www.softconf.com/lrec2014/LDL/. The
papers of the workshop will be published as online proceedings. In
addition, we aim for a journal special issue as post-conference
proceedings in which a selected amount of papers presented at the workshop
will be published.
When submitting a paper from the START page, authors will be asked to
provide essential *information about resources* (in a broad sense, i.e.
also technologies, standards, evaluation kits, etc.) that have been used
for the work described in the paper or are a new result of your research.
Moreover, ELRA encourages all LREC authors to *share the described LRs*
(data, tools, services, etc.), to enable their reuse, replicability of
experiments, including evaluation ones, etc. If this data (or parts of it)
are provided as Linked Data, then please also consider to participate in
the *Linguistic Linked Data Challenge* (http://ldl2014.org/challenge.html).
For contact data, stylesheets, up-to-date details on submission and the
workshop itself, please consult our website: http://ldl2014.org.
Timeline
========
Fri, Feb 7, 2014: Submission deadline
Fri, Mar 7, 2014: Notification of acceptance
Fri, Mar 21, 2014: Camera-ready paper
Tue, May 27, 2014: Workshop
Please note that due to synchronization with the main conference, NO
EXTENSIONS can be given.
Organizers
==========
Christian Chiarcos (Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
John McCrae (Universität Bielefeld, Germany)
Elena Montiel (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain)
Kiril Simov (Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia, Bulgaria)
Antonio Branco (University of Lisbon, Portugal)
Nicoletta Calzolari (ILC-CNR, Italy)
Petya Osenova (University of Sofia, Bulgaria),
Milena Slavcheva (JRC-Brussels, Belgium)
Cristina Vertan (University of Hamburg, Germany)
Program Committee
=================
Eneko Agirre (University of the Basque Country, Spain)
Guadalupe Aguado (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain)
Peter Bouda (Interdisciplinary Centre for Social and Language
Documentation, Portugal)
Steve Cassidy (Macquarie University, Australia)
Damir Cavar (Eastern Michigan University)
Eric Charton (Ecole Polytechnique de Montréal, Canada)
Walter Daelemans (University of Antwerp, Belgium)
Ernesto William De Luca (University of Applied Sciences Potsdam, Germany)
Gerard de Melo (University of California at Berkeley)
Thierry Declerck (Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz,
Germany)
Dongpo Deng (Institute of Information Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taiwan)
Alexis Dimitriadis (Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands)
Jeff Good (University at Buffalo)
Asunción Gómez Pérez (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain)
Jorge Gracia (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain)
Walther v. Hahn (University of Hamburg, Germany)
Eva Hajicova (Charles University Prague, Czech Republic)
Harald Hammarström (Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen, The Netherlands)
Yoshihiko Hayashi (Osaka University, Japan)
Sebastian Hellmann (Universität Leipzig, Germany)
Dominic Jones (Trinity College Dublin, Ireland)
Lutz Maicher (Universität Leipzig, Germany)
Pablo Mendes (Open Knowledge Foundation Deutschland, Germany)
Steven Moran (Universität Zürich, Switzerland/Ludwig Maximilian
University, Germany)
Sebastian Nordhoff (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology,
Leipzig, Germany)
Antonio Pareja-Lora (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain)
Maciej Piasecki (Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland)
Adam Przepiorkowski (IPAN, Polish Academy of Sciences)
Laurent Romary (INRIA, France)
Felix Sasaki (Deutsches Forschungszentrum für Künstliche Intelligenz,
Germany)
Andrea Schalley (Griffith University, Australia)
Marco Tadic (University of Zagreb, Croatia)
Marieke van Erp (VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
Daniel Vila (Universidad Politécnica de Madrid, Spain)
Menzo Windhouwer (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen,
The Netherlands)
References
==========
[1] Chiarcos, C., J. McCrae, P. Cimiano, C. Fellbaum (2013), Towards open
data for linguistics: Lexical Linked Data. In: Oltramari et al. (eds.)
New Trends of Research in Ontologies and Lexical Resources. Springer,
Heidelberg.
[2] Chiarcos, C., S. Nordhoff, S. Hellmann (2012, eds.), Linked Data in
Linguistics. Representing and Connecting Language Data and Language
Metadata, Springer, Heidelberg.
[3] Oltramari, A., P. Vossen, L. Qin, L., E. Hovy (2013, eds.), New Trends
of Research in Ontologies and Lexical Resources, Springer, Heidelberg.
--
Christian Chiarcos
Applied Computational Linguistics
Johann Wolfgang Goethe Universität Frankfurt a. M.
60054 Frankfurt am Main, Germany
office: Robert-Mayer-Str. 10, #401b
mail: chiarcos at informatik.uni-frankfurt.de
web: http://acoli.cs.uni-frankfurt.de
tel: +49-(0)69-798-22463
fax: +49-(0)69-798-28931
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