Moses-support Digest, Vol 135, Issue 27

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Today's Topics:

1. Deadline extension to Jan. 30: 11th BUCC Workshop at LREC
with Shared Task on Identifying Parallel Sentences in Comparable
Corpora (Reinhard Rapp)


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Message: 1
Date: Mon, 22 Jan 2018 22:37:34 +0100
From: "Reinhard Rapp" <reinhardrapp@gmx.de>
Subject: [Moses-support] Deadline extension to Jan. 30: 11th BUCC
Workshop at LREC with Shared Task on Identifying Parallel Sentences in
Comparable Corpora
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Cc: listmaster@loria.fr, moses-support@mit.edu, news@multilingual.com,
lr_egroup@mail.iiit.ac.in
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********************************************************************

11th WORKSHOP ON BUILDING AND USING COMPARABLE CORPORA

SHARED TASK: Identifying parallel sentences in comparable corpora

SPECIAL THEME: Comparable Corpora for Asian Languages

Co-located with LREC 2018, Phoenix Seagaia Resort, Miyazaki, Japan

Tuesday, May 8, 2018

Extended submission deadline: January 30, 2018

Submission link: https://www.softconf.com/lrec2018/BUCC2018/

Website: https://comparable.limsi.fr/bucc2018/

********************************************************************

MOTIVATION

In the language engineering and the linguistics communities, research in
comparable corpora has been motivated by two main reasons. In language
engineering, on the one hand, it is chiefly motivated by the need to use
comparable corpora as training data for statistical NLP applications such
as statistical and neural machine translation or cross-lingual retrieval.
In linguistics, on the other hand, comparable corpora are of interest in
themselves by making possible cross-language discoveries and comparisons.
It is generally accepted in both communities that comparable corpora are
documents in one or several languages that are comparable in content and
form in various degrees and dimensions. We believe that the linguistic
definitions and observations related to comparable corpora can improve
methods to mine such corpora for applications of statistical NLP. As such,
it is of great interest to bring together builders and users of such corpora.


TOPICS

Given that LREC takes place for the first time in Asia, this year's
special theme is "Comparable Corpora for Asian Languages". But we
solicit contributions also on all other topics related to comparable
corpora, including but not limited to the following:

Building Comparable Corpora:

? Human translations
? Automatic and semi-automatic methods
? Methods to mine parallel and non-parallel corpora from the Web
? Tools and criteria to evaluate the comparability of corpora
? Parallel vs non-parallel corpora, monolingual corpora
? Rare and minority languages, across language families
? Multi-media/multi-modal comparable corpora

Applications of comparable corpora:

? Human translations
? Language learning
? Cross-language information retrieval & document categorization
? Bilingual projections
? Machine translation
? Writing assistance
? Machine learning techniques using comparable corpora

Mining from Comparable Corpora:

? Induction of morphological, grammatical, and translation rules from comparable corpora
? Extraction of parallel segments or paraphrases from comparable corpora
? Extraction of bilingual and multilingual translations of single words and multi-word expressions, proper names, and named entities from comparable corpora
? Induction of multilingual word classes from comparable corpora
? Cross-language distributional semantics


SUBMISSION INFORMATION

Please follow the style sheet and templates provided for the main conference at http://lrec2018.lrec-conf.org/en/submission/authors-kit/
The submission website is https://www.softconf.com/lrec2018/BUCC2018/
Papers should be submitted as a PDF file. Submissions must describe original and unpublished work and range from four (4) to eight (8) pages including references.
Reviewing will be double blind, so the papers should not reveal the authors? identity. Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings.
Double submission policy: Parallel submission to other meetings or publications is possible but must be immediately notified to the workshop organizers.
For further information, please contact Reinhard Rapp: reinhardrapp (at) gmx (dot) de

For further information see BUCC 2018 website: http://comparable.limsi.fr/bucc2018/


IMPORTANT DATES

Paper submission deadline (extended): 30 January 2018
Notification of acceptance: 10 February, 2018
Early bird registration (reduced rates): 15 February, 2018
Camera ready final papers: 25 February, 2018
Workshop date: May 8, 2018


SHARED TASK: Identifying parallel sentences in comparable corpora

As a continuation of the previous year's shared task, we announce a modified
shared task for 2018. As is well known, a bottleneck in statistical machine
translation is the scarceness of parallel resources for many language pairs
and domains. Previous research has shown that this bottleneck can be
reduced by utilizing parallel portions found within comparable corpora.
These are useful for many purposes, including automatic terminology
extraction and the training of statistical MT systems. The aim of the
shared task is to quantitatively evaluate competing methods for extracting
parallel sentences from comparable monolingual corpora, so as to give an
overview on the state of the art and to identify the best performing
approaches.

Any submission to the shared task is expected to be accompanied by a short
paper (4 pages plus references). This will be accepted for publication in
the workshop proceedings after a basic quality check: hence the submission
will go via Softconf with the standard peer-review process.

SHARED TASK SCHEDULE

Shared task sample and training sets released: 22 December 2017
Shared task test set release: 22 January 2018
Shared task test submission deadline: 29 January 2018
Shared task paper submission deadline: 2 February 2018
Shared task camera ready papers: 25 February 2018

For further information concerning the shared task see https://comparable.limsi.fr/bucc2018/bucc2018-task.html


WORKSHOP ORGANIZERS

Reinhard Rapp (Magdeburg-Stendal University of Applied Sciences and University of Mainz, Germany), Chair
Pierre Zweigenbaum (LIMS, CNRS, Universit? Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France), Shared task organizer
Serge Sharoff (University of Leeds, United Kingdom)


PROGRAMME COMMITTEE

Ahmet Aker (University of Sheffield, UK)
Caroline Barri?re (CRIM, Montr?al, Canada)
Herv? D?jean (Xerox Research Centre Europe, Grenoble, France)
?ric Gaussier (Universit? Joseph Fourier, Grenoble, France)
Silvia Hansen-Schirra (University of Mainz, Germany)
Natalie Kubler (Universit? Paris Diderot USPC, Frtance)
Philippe Langlais (Universit? de Montr?al, Canada)
Michael Mohler (Language Computer Corp., US)
Emmanuel Morin (Universit? de Nantes, France)
Dragos Stefan Munteanu (Language Weaver, Inc., US)
Lene Offersgaard (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
Ted Pedersen (University of Minnesota, Duluth, US)
Reinhard Rapp (Magdeburg-Stendal University of Applied Sciences and University of Mainz, Germany)
Serge Sharoff (University of Leeds, UK)
Michel Simard (National Research Council Canada)
Richard Sproat (OGI School of Science & Technology, US)
Pierre Zweigenbaum (LIMSI, CNRS, Universit? Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France)


IDENTIFY, DESCRIBE AND SHARE YOUR LANGUAGE RESOURCES

Please make sure that your papers take into account the following information from the LREC-organizers about the LRE Map, the "Share your LRs!" initiative and the ISLRN number:

* 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 2018
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.

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