Return to ACL-03 Home

 ACL2003 NEWS LETTER NO.4
(April 15, 2003)


Hitoshi Isahara (Publicity Chair, CRL) and Masaki Murata (CRL)

Venue:

Sapporo Convention Center, Sapporo, JAPAN

Dates:

Tutorials and Pre-conference Workshops: July 7, 2003

Main Conference: July 8-10, 2003

Post-conference Workshops: July 11-12, 2003

This news letter includes:

1) Reminder: Interactive Poster/Demo Sessions

2) Invited Talks

2-1) From Structure to Meaning: Simple Sentence-Structure Cues Guide Sentence Comprehension by Young Children

2-2) Economics about Language

2-3) Layout in NLP: The Case for Document Structure

3) Registration Fees, Accommodations, and Visa Documents

3-1) Registration Fees

3-2) Accommodations

3-3) Visa Documents

4) Deadlines and Web Sites

4-1) Interactive Poster/Demo Sessions

4-2) Associated Conferences

4-3) ACL Workshops

5) Information on Other Conferences or Workshops Being Held Nearby

6) Important Announcements from Several Workshops


1) Reminder: Interactive Poster/Demo Sessions

Submission deadline: May 1, 2003
The papers must be submitted no later than 12 noon Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) on
May 1, 2003. For further detail, please consult the following site: http://cl.aist-nara.ac.jp/staff/matsu/poster.html.


2) Invited Talks

There will be three invited talks, to be given by leading scientists who will present work and thoughts on different aspects of natural language.

The invited talks will take place in the Main conference. The abstracts of the invited talks and the profiles of the speakers will be described on the ACL-03 web site. For details, see the Web site http://www.ec-inc.co.jp/ACL2003/Invited-talks.html.

The invited talks are:

2-1) From Structure to Meaning: Simple Sentence-Structure Cues Guide Sentence Comprehension by Young Children

Cynthia Fisher (Department of Psychology and the Beckman Institute of Advances Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign.)

Theories of language acquisition have traditionally assumed that children learn to identify syntactic structures in their native language through independent access to word and sentence meanings. If sentence meanings can be derived from world observation, then children begin with a set of form-meaning pairs that should help them to figure out the grammar. But even in the most concrete cases, sentences do not merely label events in some simple and universal way. Instead, they take a perspective on them, focusing on or highlighting different aspects of the events. How, then, is the child to determine a speaker's meaning before learning the language? In this talk I will argue that (a) the syntactic structure of sentences in which a verb is used can provide hints about its meaning, and (b) simple aspects of sentence structures influence sentence interpretation even for very young children. These simple sentence structure cues, including the set of familiar nouns in a sentence and the order in which they occur, bias children toward correct interpretations of sentences even before they know much (if anything) about the syntax of their native language. In this way, the interpretation of sentences can be structure-sensitive nearly from the start, and verb meanings are acquired as a consequence of this process of sentence interpretation, rather than being a prerequisite to it.


2-2) Economics about Language

Ariel Rubinstein (School of Economics, Tel Aviv University and Department of Economic, Princeton University)

I will try to demonstrate what we, economists, can say about linguistics by presenting two short investigations in which we use economic reasoning to address linguistic issues. The first discussion will be an attempt to derive properties of binary relations from considerations of functionality. The second discussion will introduce strategic considerations to explain pragmatic phenomena in debates. Reading: Ariel Rubinstein, Economics and Language, Cambridge University Press, 2000.


2-3) Layout in NLP: The Case for Document Structure

Donia Scott (Information Technology Research Institute (ITRI) at the University of Brighton, U.K.)

This talk will present the case for {\em abstract document structure as a separate descriptive level in the analysis and generation of written texts. The purpose of this representation is to mediate between the message of a text (i.e., its discourse structure) and its physical presentation (i.e., its organization into graphical constituents like sections, paragraphs, sentences, bulleted lists, figures, footnotes and so forth). Abstract document structure can be seen as an extension of Nunberg's `text-grammar'; it is also closely related to `logical' mark-up in languages like HTML and LaTeX. We will argue that by using this intermediate representation, several subtasks in language generation and language understanding can be defined more cleanly.


3) Registration Fees, Accommodation, and Visa Documents

3-1) Registration Fees

3-1-1) Early, Late and On-site Registration

Early Registration

by midnight of June 14, 2003, Eastern Time

Late Registration

June 15 - midnight of June 30, 2003, Eastern Time

On-Site Registration

No on-line registration will be accepted on or after July 1, 2003. You must register on-site.

On-line conference registration site will be open soon. Please keep your eyes on the web site http://www.ec-inc.co.jp/ACL2003/.


3-1-2) Registration Fees

[Main Conference Registration]

Early

Late

On-Site

Regular

$270.00

$320.00

$380.00

Student

$125.00

$145.00

$165.00


[Tutorial Registration]

Early

Late

Regular

$100.00

$120.00

Student

$100.00

$120.00


[Workshop Registration (2 days)]*

Early

Late

Regular

$115.00

$145.00

Student

$90.00

$120.00


[Workshop Registration (1 day)]*

Early

Late

Regular

$70.00

$100.00

Student

$50.00

$70.00
*Note: These fees are for attendees who register the main conference.


"Workshop only" attendees are required to pay additionally the registration fees, which are a half of the registration fees of the main conference.

Early

Late

On-Site

Regular

$135.00

$160.00

$190.00

Student

$63.00

$73.00

$83.00


3-2) Accommodations

(a) For Regular Attendees:

Deadline for reservation:

June 10, 2003

Website:

http://www.knt.co.jp/ec/acl2003/



(b) For Student Attendees:

Name:

Sapporo International Youth Hostel

Address:

5-35 , Toyohira 6-jo, 6-chome, Toyohira-ku, Sapporo 062-0906

TEL:

+81-11-825-3120

Website:

http://www.youthhostel.or.jp/ (Available in Japanese, English, Chinese and Korean)

Prices:

Single: 3,800 yen (one night/per person/no meals)
Twin: 3,300 yen (one night/per person/no meals)
Four-person room:
3,300 yen (one night/per person/no meals)


For more information, please contact Anri Manabe.

TEL: +81-11-706-6823 FAX: +81-11-709-6277

e-mail


3-3) Visa Documents

Participants may need to acquire a visa to attend ACL03.

Those with nationality of European countries (with some exceptions) and North American countries do not need a visa. However, please check with your local Japanese embassy or consulate if you are not sure.

In most countries, to acquire a visa is not complicated and does not take long. However, it may take longer in some countries and if you need help obtaining a visa, please see http://www.ec-inc.co.jp/ACL2003/visa.html and send an e-mail to the Secretariat with necessary information.

The period between the dates of acceptance notification and the actual dates of conference/WSs is shorter than in an ordinary International ACL conference. If you are afraid that you have not enough time in obtaining a visa or official approval of traveling abroad, please contact the Secretariat. If you submitted a paper to the main conference, the WSs, the interactive demo sessions or the student workshop, please also include the Paper ID and the title of your paper in your e-mail.


4) Deadlines and Web Sites

4-1) Interactive Poster/Demo Sessions

Paper submission deadline:

May 1, 2003

Web site: http://cl.aist-nara.ac.jp/staff/matsu/poster.html



4-2) Associated Conferences

AC1 The Eighth Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP2003)

Submission deadline:

April 4, 2003 (Deadline Passed)

Conference date:

July 11-12, 2003

Web site: http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/mcollins/emnlp03.html



AC2 The Sixth International Workshop on Information Retrieval with Asian Languages (IRAL2003)

Submission deadline:

April 15, 2003

Conference date:

July 7, 2003

Web site: http://research.nii.ac.jp/IRAL2003/



4-3) ACL Workshops

The following is a list of the workshops whose deadlines have not passed. Please see http://www.ec-inc.co.jp/ACL2003/workshop2.html for the details.

WS1 Multilingual Summarization and Question Answering - Machine Learning and Beyond

Submission deadline:

April 21, 2003

Web site: http://www.isi.edu/~cyl/msqa-ml-acl2003/



WS3 The Lexicon and Figurative Language

Submission deadline:

April 27, 2003 (Extended)

Web site: http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~amw/ACLWorkshop.html



WS5 The Second International Workshop on Paraphrasing: Paraphrase Acquisition and Applications

Submission deadline:

April 21, 2003

Web site: http://nlp.nagaokaut.ac.jp/IWP2003/



WS6 Second SIGHAN Workshop on Chinese Language Processing

Deadline:

Workshop submission deadline: March 10, 2003

Word segmentation bakeoff: April 22-25, 2003

Web site:

 

Workshop: http://www.sighan.org/swclp2/

Bakeoff: http://www.sighan.org/bakeoff2003/



WS7 Multiword Expressions: Analysis, Acquisition and Treatment

Submission deadline:

April 21, 2003 (Extended)

Web site: http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/alk23/mwe/mwe.html



WS9 Workshop on Patent Corpus Processing

Submission deadline:

April 18, 2003 (Extended)

Web site:

http://www.slis.tsukuba.ac.jp/~fujii/acl2003ws.html



5) Information on Other Conferences or Workshops Being Held Nearby

We would be happy to help those wishing to arrange events in conjunction with ACL03. For information on available venues and local facilities for gatherings and meetings, please contact: Kenji Araki (Hokkaido University, Japan)

The following workshops were newly informed to us. For details, see http://www.ec-inc.co.jp/ACL2003/events.html.

(a) PAPILLON-2003 Workshop on Multilingual Lexical Databases

July 3-5, 2003, Hokkaido University

Organization Chair:
David Thevenin (Invited Researcher, NII, Tokyo, Japan)
Mathieu Mangeot (Invited Researcher, NII, Tokyo, Japan)
Francois Brown de Colstoun (Scientific Attache, French Embassy, Tokyo, Japan)

Program Chair:
Yves Lepage (Senior Researcher, ATR, Keihanna, Japan)
Gilles Serasset (Associate Professor, UJF, Grenoble, France)


(b) Joint ACL-SIGSEM and ISO TC-37/SC-4 Workshop

July 6, Sapporo

Organizers:
Harry Bunt
Key-Sun Choi
Kiyong Lee
Laurent Romary


6) Important Announcements from Several Workshops

WS3 The Lexicon and Figurative Language

Abstract of the Call for Papers

Note the new deadlines.

The lexicon has variously been treated as a list of word senses, a list of hierarchically related senses, and as a structured entity containing rich lexical representations and means to generate novel uses of words. Figurative language, such as metaphor, idioms metonymy, etc, poses problems for all these approaches, and a common claim is that metaphor is a cognitive not a linguistic phenomenon; word senses are related in terms of their underlying conceptual domains. The major theme of this SIGLEX endorsed workshop is to explore and attempt to reconcile these different approaches to figurative language and the lexicon -although papers exploring other aspects of figurative language, including computationally oriented corpus studies, will also be welcome.

Submission deadline:

April 27, 2003 (Extended)

Web site:

http://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~amw/ACLWorkshop.html



WS5 Second International Workshop on Paraphrasing: Paraphrase Acquisition and Applications

We are honored that Graeme Hirst has agreed to give a workshop presentation on "Paraphrasing Paraphrased" as the invited speaker. Furthermore, given a sufficient number of quality workshop papers, we will put together a special issue on paraphrasing for the journal Computational Intelligence after the workshop.

Submission deadline:

April 21, 2003

Web site:

http://nlp.nagaokaut.ac.jp/IWP2003/