Difference between revisions of "2020Q3 Reports: SIGLEX"

From Admin Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 40: Line 40:
  
  
The Eight Joint Conference on Lexical and Computational Semantics (* SEM 2019), jointly organised by SIGLEX and SIGSEM, was co-located with NAACL-HLT’2019 in Minneapolis, Minnesota (USA) and took place in June 2019.
+
The 9th Joint Conference on Lexical and Computational Semantics (* SEM 2020), organized by SIGLEX, will be co-located with COLING-2020 in Barcelona, Spain in December 2020.
  
 
Organizers:
 
Organizers:
Line 97: Line 97:
 
Sentiment analysis and argument mining
 
Sentiment analysis and argument mining
 
Saif Mohammad (National Research Council Canada)
 
Saif Mohammad (National Research Council Canada)
Elena Cabrio (Université Côte d’Azur, INRIA, CNRS)
+
Elena Cabrio (Université Côte d'Azur, INRIA, CNRS)
  
Submissions: 96 papers were submitted. Out of these, 36 papers were accepted (19 long, 13 short). The final overall acceptance rate was 33%. The final number of papers in the program is 36 (19 long, 13 short).
 
  
  
'''SemEval 2019'''
+
'''SemEval 2020'''
  
The SIGLEX flagship event took place in coordination with NAACL 2019 and *SEM 2019.
+
The SIGLEX flagship event took place in coordination with COLING 2020 and *SEM 2020.
  
 
Organizers:
 
Organizers:
  
Jonathan May, ISI, University of Southern California
+
Aurelie Herbelot, University of Trento
 +
 
 +
Xiaodan Zhu, Queen's University
  
Ekaterina Shutova, University of Amsterdam
+
Nathan Schneider, Georgetown University
  
Aurelie Herbelot, University of Trento
+
Alexis Palmer, University of North Texas
  
Xiaodan Zhu, Queen's University
+
Jonathan May, ISI, University of Southern California
  
Marianna Apidianaki, CNRS
+
Ekaterina Shutova, University of Amsterdam
  
Saif M. Mohammad, National Research Council Canada
 
  
 +
SemEval 2020 included the following 11 shared tasks organized in five tracks:
  
SemEval 2019 included the following 11 shared tasks organized in five tracks:
 
  
 +
''Lexical semantics''
  
''Frame semantics and semantic parsing''
+
Task 1: Unsupervised Lexical Semantic Change Detection
  
Task 1: Cross-lingual Semantic Parsing with UCCA
+
Task 2: Predicting Multilingual and Cross-Lingual (Graded)
  
Task 2: Unsupervised Lexical Semantic Frame Induction
+
Task 3: Graded Word Similarity in Context (GWSC)
  
  
''Opinion, emotion and abusive language detection''
+
''Common Sense Knowledge and Reasoning, Knowledge Extraction''
  
Task 3: EmoContext: Contextual Emotion Detection in Text
+
Task 4: Commonsense Validation and Explanation
  
Task 4: Hyperpartisan News Detection
+
Task 5: Modelling Causal Reasoning in Language: Detecting Counterfactuals
  
Task 5: HatEval: Multilingual Detection of Hate Speech Against Immigrants and Women in Twitter
+
Task 6: DeftEval: Extracting Definitions from Free Text in Textbooks
  
Task 6: OffensEval: Identifying and Categorizing Offensive Language in Social Media
 
  
 +
''Humour, Emphasis, and Sentiment''
  
''Fact vs fiction''
+
Task 7: Assessing Humor in Edited News Headlines
  
Task 7: RumourEval 2019: Determining Rumour Veracity and Support for Rumours
+
Task 8: Memotion Analysis
 
Task 8: Fact Checking in Community Question Answering Forums
 
  
''Information extraction and question answering''
+
Task 9: Sentiment Analysis for Code-Mixed Social Media Text
  
 +
Task 10: Emphasis Selection for Written Text in Visual Media
  
Task 9: Suggestion Mining from Online Reviews and Forums
 
  
Task 10: Math Question Answering
+
''Societal Applications of NLP''
  
 +
Task 11: Detection of Propaganda Techniques in News Articles
  
''NLP for scientific applications''
+
Task 12: OffensEval 2: Multilingual Offensive Language Identification in Social Media
  
Task 12: Toponym Resolution in Scientific Papers
 
  
 
The proceedings contain both Task Description papers that describe each of the above tasks, and System Description papers that present the systems that participated in these tasks. A total of 11 task description papers and 223 system description papers are included in the proceedings.
 
The proceedings contain both Task Description papers that describe each of the above tasks, and System Description papers that present the systems that participated in these tasks. A total of 11 task description papers and 223 system description papers are included in the proceedings.

Revision as of 15:11, 8 July 2020

The following SIGLEX Executive Board officers are serving until Spring 2022:


President

Preslav Nakov, Qatar Computing Research Institute, HBKU, Qatar

Secretary

Aline Villavicencio, The University of Sheffield, UK

Executive Board

Vice-President Elect: Steven Bethard, The University of Arizona, USA

Vice-Secretary Elect: Ekaterina Shutova, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands


SIGLEX Section Representatives on the Executive Board

MWE section: Carlos Ramisch, Aix Marseille University, France

SemEval section: David Jurgens, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA


We currently have 852 members and we manage membership and mailing lists using the website that was developed by Ken Litkowski and is now managed by Preslav Nakov.


SIGLEX has two sections:

Multiword Expressions (MWE) with 205 members. SemEval with 982 members.


SIGLEX (co-)organises three yearly events: SemEval, *SEM, and MWE:


SEM 2020


The 9th Joint Conference on Lexical and Computational Semantics (* SEM 2020), organized by SIGLEX, will be co-located with COLING-2020 in Barcelona, Spain in December 2020.

Organizers:

General Chair

Iryna Gurevych, Technische Universität Darmstadt


Program Chairs

Marianna Apidianaki, University of Helsinki

Manaal Faruqui, Google Assistant


Publication Chair

Jonathan May, ISI, University of Southern California


Area Chairs

Lexical semantics and word representations Mohammad Taher Pilehvar (Iran University of Science and Technology) Vered Shwartz (Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence (AI2) & University of Washington)

Semantic composition and sentence representations Ivan Vulić (University of Cambridge) Germán Kruszewski (Facebook AI Research)

Discourse, dialogue, and generation Junyi Jessy Li (University of Texas at Austin) Philippe Muller (Université Paul Sabatier, IRIT)

Multilinguality Alessandro Raganato (University of Helsinki) Shyam Upadhyay (Google Assistant)

Psycholinguistics and semantic processing Harm Brouwer (Saarland University) Alessandra Zarcone (Fraunhofer IIS)

Resources and evaluation Darja Fišer (University of Ljubljana) Goran Glavaš (University of Mannheim)

Theoretical and formal semantics Stergios Chatzikyriakidis (University of Gothenburg) Denis Paperno (Utrecht University)

Commonsense reasoning and natural language understanding Ellie Pavlick (Brown University) Rachel Rudinger (University of Maryland)

Sentiment analysis and argument mining Saif Mohammad (National Research Council Canada) Elena Cabrio (Université Côte d'Azur, INRIA, CNRS)


SemEval 2020

The SIGLEX flagship event took place in coordination with COLING 2020 and *SEM 2020.

Organizers:

Aurelie Herbelot, University of Trento

Xiaodan Zhu, Queen's University

Nathan Schneider, Georgetown University

Alexis Palmer, University of North Texas

Jonathan May, ISI, University of Southern California

Ekaterina Shutova, University of Amsterdam


SemEval 2020 included the following 11 shared tasks organized in five tracks:


Lexical semantics

Task 1: Unsupervised Lexical Semantic Change Detection

Task 2: Predicting Multilingual and Cross-Lingual (Graded)

Task 3: Graded Word Similarity in Context (GWSC)


Common Sense Knowledge and Reasoning, Knowledge Extraction

Task 4: Commonsense Validation and Explanation

Task 5: Modelling Causal Reasoning in Language: Detecting Counterfactuals

Task 6: DeftEval: Extracting Definitions from Free Text in Textbooks


Humour, Emphasis, and Sentiment

Task 7: Assessing Humor in Edited News Headlines

Task 8: Memotion Analysis

Task 9: Sentiment Analysis for Code-Mixed Social Media Text

Task 10: Emphasis Selection for Written Text in Visual Media


Societal Applications of NLP

Task 11: Detection of Propaganda Techniques in News Articles

Task 12: OffensEval 2: Multilingual Offensive Language Identification in Social Media


The proceedings contain both Task Description papers that describe each of the above tasks, and System Description papers that present the systems that participated in these tasks. A total of 11 task description papers and 223 system description papers are included in the proceedings.


SemEval 2020

32 task proposals were received and reviewed by 68 external reviewers from the ACL community. 12 of the tasks were selected for SemEval 2020. For more details about the event, check out http://alt.qcri.org/semeval2020/


MWE-WN 2019

The 15th edition of the yearly flagship event of the MWE Section, called Workshop on Multiword Expressions (MWE), was co-located with the ACL 2019 conference in Florence, Italy. In a quest for synergies with related communities, the Section joined forces with the Global Wordnet Association (GWA). Thus, the event was called Joint Workshop on Multiword Expressions and WordNet (MWE-WN 2019).


Invited talk: "When the whole is greater than the sum of its parts: Multiword expressions and idiomaticity", by Aline Villavicencio, University of Essex (UK) and Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil)


Submissions: 37 papers (20 long and 17 short) were submitted. 12 long papers and 8 short ones were selected. 6 papers (1 short and 5 long) were selected as oral presentations and 14 (7 short and 7 long) as posters. The overall acceptance rate was 54%.


Proceedings: to appear in the ACL Anthology.


Community discussion: it will include feedback from this joint event, MWE-related announcements, announcements about the SIGLEX-MWE Steering Committee recruitment, plans for future shared task editions and for collaboration between the Universal Dependencies and the PARSEME communities.


SIGLEX Endorsed Events in 2019:

EUROPHRAS'2019: http://www.lexytrad.es/europhras2019/

MUMTTT'2019: http://www.lexytrad.es/europhras2019/