CALL FOR PAPERS - ANLP-97 (Revised)

Priscilla Rasmussen (rasmusse@cs.rutgers.edu)
Fri, 20 Sep 96 10:26:04 EDT

Call for Papers

Fifth Conference on Applied Natural Language Processing
Washington Marriott Hotel
Washington, DC
March 31 - April 3, 1997

sponsored by the
Association for Computational Linguistics

The conference is intended to bring together researchers, system
implementers, and managers from around the world to exchange
information on the application of natural language processing to
real-world problems. Through technical presentations, case studies,
tutorials, and demonstrations, it will examine how specific
approaches, techniques, and resources have proven valuable for
particular applications in text and speech processing.

AREAS OF INTEREST

Original contributions are solicited in all areas of applied natural
language processing, including but not limited to: text and message
processing; spoken language understanding; machine translation;
information retrieval; computer-aided language learning; grammar and
style checking; instructional systems; help systems; text and spoken
language generation; database retrieval systems; multilanguage systems
and multimedia systems. Contributions may address applications, novel
characteristics of implemented systems, tools and methods for system
development (for example, for corpus analysis, knowledge acquisition,
and system customization and maintenance), resources (such as corpora
and lexicons), implementation techniques, and evaluation methods.
Papers that critically evaluate an approach or language processing
strategy are especially welcome.

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

Sessions will be organized and contributions will be reviewed by the
program committee:

Ralph Grishman (chair), New York University
Chinatsu Aone, SRA Corp.
Rusty Bobrow, BBN
Martha Evens, Illinois Institute of Technology
Lynette Hirschman, MITRE Corp.
Eduard Hovy, Univ of Southern California/Information Sciences Institute

Yuji Matsumoto, Nara Institute of Science and Technology
Boyan Onyshkevych, U. S. Dept. of Defense
Tomek Strzalkowski, General Electric Corporate Res. and Dev.
Henry Thompson, Univ. of Edinburgh
Hans Uszkoreit, DFKI Saarbruecken
Marc Vilain, MITRE Corp.

and by other reviewers selected by the program committee.

REQUIREMENTS FOR SUBMISSION

A paper accepted for presentation at this meeting cannot be presented
or have been presented at any other meeting with publically available
proceedings. Papers that are being submitted to other conferences
must indicate this on the submission (on the identification page).

Papers may be submitted to both the ANLP 97 and ACL 97 conferences, so
long as this is indicated on the submission, and a paper accepted for
ANLP 97 is subsequently withdrawn from ACL 97 (the submission deadline
for ACL 97 is shortly before the notification date for ANLP 97).

TYPES OF PRESENTATIONS

* Full technical papers (a maximum of 8 proceedings pages)

* Briefer technical notes (a maximum of 4 proceedings pages) focussing
on a single technical or implementation issue

* System presentations with demos: demo sessions will be organized
as part of the conference, consisting of presentations of novel
system features followed by system demos. Full support for demos
will be provided. Submissions for demo sessions should include
a technical paper or note describing the system, emphasizing its
novel characteristics and relating it to other work described in
the literature. System descriptions will normally be the length
of a technical note (4 pages maximum) but technical papers (8 pages
maximum) will be considered if warranted by the novel technical
material. Each paper must be accompanied by a set of printed
graphics or, if possible, a video of the system to be presented,
in order to judge its value as a demo presentation. These
submissions will be reviewed on the same schedule as technical papers.

* Videos (maximum 15 minutes) that display interesting research on
NLP applications to real-world problems. Promotional videos are
acceptable so long as their main focus is on giving a clear and
realistic idea of how natural language processing is being used,
rather than on advertising a company or product. Videos will be
reviewed on the same schedule as technical papers. Accepted videos
will be organized into an ongoing video presentation.

Authors should submit one copy of their videotape, accompanied by
a submission letter granting permission to copy the tape to a
standard format, along with two copies of a one to two page
abstract that includes the title, the name, address, and email
of the authors, the tape format of the submitted tape (VHS
(preferred), NTSC, PAL, or SECAM), and the duration. Tape
submissions should be sent to the same address as hard-copy
papers (see below).

* Student posters describing ongoing student research work
(a maximum of 3 proceedings pages).

SUBMISSION FORMAT

The submission should consist of an identification page plus the
actual paper. Because reviewing will be blind, the actual paper
should not contain the authors' names or addresses. Furthermore,
self-references that reveal the authors' identity (e.g., "We
previously showed (Smith, 1991)...") should be avoided. Instead use
references like "Smith previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...".

The identification page should include the title, the paper type
(paper, note, demo paper, student), the name, full address and
affiliation, and email address of each author, the indication
"student: yes" if an author is an ACL student member, and a brief
abstract, in the following format:

title: A Really Universal Semantic Representation
type: paper
author: Ralph Grishman
address: Computer Science Department
New York University
715 Broadway, Room 703
New York, NY 10003
email: grishman@cs.nyu.edu
author: Know One Atoll
address: Computer Science Department
New York University
715 Broadway, Room 701
New York, NY 10003
email: atoll@cs.nyu.edu
student: yes
abstract: This paper describes a new universal semantic
representation, based on the recently decoded conversations of
humpback whales. Using interviews with several species, we present
evidence of its efficacy as an interlingua for inter-species machine
translation, and its advantages over previous, anthropocentric
representations.

The paper should be prepared in the format of an ACL proceedings paper
(two column, single spaced, but with no author information) and must
conform to the length requirements for the type of submission. Please
do not submit double-spaced papers.

Electronic Submissions

Electronic submissions should consist of the material of the
identification page, as a simple ASCII file, followed by a single
self-contained LaTeX file for the paper itself. This should be sent
as a single mail message to anlp97@cs.nyu.edu, with the subject line
"submission", on or before November 7, 1996.

Electronic submissions must use the ACL proceedings style (aclap.sty)
which can be obtained by ftp (as described below). A model paper,
model.tex, is also available from the ftp site.

Hard Copy Submissions

Five copies of the paper and one copy of the identification page
should be sent to

ANLP 97
Computer Science Department
New York University
715 Broadway, 7th Floor
New York, NY 10003

In the case of hard-copy submissions, an email message with the
information on the identification page and the subject line "hard copy
submission" should be sent to anlp97@cs.nyu.edu. Hard copy
submissions must be received by November 7, 1996; late papers will be
returned unopened.

DEMOS

In addition to the demo sessions, there will be booths for
the presentation of demos throughout the conference. All demo
presenters will be asked to provide brief system descriptions;
these will be included in a demo proceedings volume, which will
complement the volume of technical papers. Sites interested in
presenting a demo at the conference should send a note by
email to anlp97@cs.nyu.edu by December 6, 1996 with the subject
line "demo", giving a brief description of the demo, and
indicating whether there will be a requirement for any equipment
beyond that which will be provided by the demonstrator.

VENUE

The meeting will be held at the Washington Marriott Hotel, in
downtown Washington, D.C. from March 31 (Monday) through April 3,
1997. Tutorials are scheduled for Monday, with technical sessions
on Tuesday through Thursday.

Early April is usually one of the nicest times in Washington, with the
cherry blossoms just starting to come out. We have planned the
location, in combination with a wide-ranging technical program, to
encourage participation from government and industry.

Local arrangements are being handled by John White of PRC,
white_john@po.gis.prc.com.

SCHEDULE

Nov. 7, 1996 Submissions due

Jan. 22, 1997 Notification of acceptance / rejection

Feb. 12, 1997 Final papers due

March 31-Apr. 3, 1997 Conference

TUTORIALS

The conference will include a set of tutorials on the first day, March
31. Proposals for tutorials should be sent to the program chair.

FEEDBACK

We're looking to develop a broad conference program with multiple
"tracks" to meet the needs of a wide range of attendees. Send queries
and comments to the program chair, Ralph Grishman, New York University,
grishman@cs.nyu.edu.

FTP and WWW SITE

We have placed the ACL style file (aclap.sty) and a model LaTeX paper
(model.tex) at the New York University FTP site. To obtain the style
file,

$ ftp cs.nyu.edu
Name: anonymous
Password: grishman@cs.nyu.edu [not echoed]
ftp> cd pub/nlp/anlp97
ftp> get aclap.sty
ftp> quit
$

These files can also be accessed through the WWW page we have set up
for the conference, http://cs.nyu.edu/cs/projects/proteus/anlp97