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[ecrea] 2nd CfP: Computing News Storylines 2016 (CNewsStory 2016) workshop @EMNLP 2016
Fri Jul 08 12:41:17 GMT 2016
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Call for Papers
Computing News Storylines 2016 (CNewsStory 2016)
Workshop in conjunction with EMNLP 2016, Austin, Texas, U.S.A
More info: https://sites.google.com/site/newsstorylines2016/home
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[Apologies for cross-posting]
Submission website: https://www.softconf.com/emnlp2016/CNS/
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Important Dates
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Paper submission: 5 August 2016 23:59 Hawaii time
Notification: 5 September 2016 23:59 Hawaii time
Camera-ready due: 26 September 2016 23:59 Hawaii time
Workshop: 2 or 6 November 2016
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Scope and Topics
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Today’s digital media ecosystem generates massive streams of news,
largely in the form of individual documents (‘articles’) within which
news events and narrative structures are communicated using natural
language text. The increasing quantity of text documents produced by the
ecosystem has presented challenges to those seeking to understand and
contextualize news events and narratives over long periods of time,
leading to demands for new multidimensional, multimodal and distributed
representations of news events and of the narrative structures that are
constructed from them. Currently, most work on cross-document temporal
processing focuses on linear timelines (i.e. representations of
chronologically ordered events), however not every timeline necessarily
forms a good and useful storyline.
Following the success of 1st Workshop on Computing News Storylines
(CNewsStory, ACL 2015), the 2nd edition of the Workshop on Computing
News Storylines (CNewsStory, EMNLP 2016) aims at further exploring,
investigating and understanding the cross-document connections between
news events and stories.
This multidisciplinary workshop aims at gathering researchers in NLP,
AI, knowledge representation and structured journalism together with
journalists, policy makers and stakeholders in the news industry to
discuss how NLP technology can help to deal with the current stream of
information, manage the risks of information overload, identify
different sources and perspectives, and provide unitary and easily
intelligible representations of the larger and long-term storylines
behind news articles.
We invite work on all aspects relating to the computational generation,
representation, analysis or use of news storylines or their components,
and on the relationships between news storylines or their components.
This includes (but is not limited to) the following topics:
• Identifying and filtering relevant events
• Accumulating information from news streams
• Detecting opinions and perspectives on events
• Tracing perspective change through time
• Modelling plot structures
• Storyline stability and completeness
• Annotating storylines
• Crowdsourcing Storylines
• Temporal or causal ordering of events
• Script activation
• Big data for storylines
• Evaluation of storylines
• Discourse structure and storylines
• Visualisation of storylines
• Visualisation of news clusters
• Event factuality profiling
• Multimodal storyline generation
• Event-centred structured journalism
• Event-centered natural language generation
• Event taxonomies and ontologies
• Characteristics of journalistic events and narratives
• Representation of journalistic events and narratives
• Narrative networks
• Pattern detection in news
• Advanced NLP news applications
• Automatic Temporal Processing
• Tools for automatic fact-checking on information extracted from corpora
• News summarisation
• Pattern detection in news reports
• Trend prediction
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Submissions
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This call solicits full papers reporting original and unpublished
research on storylines from news. Full papers should emphasize obtained
results rather than intended work, and should indicate clearly the state
of completion of the reported results. Submission should not exceed a
maximum 8 pages plus two additional pages containing references.
Authors are also invited to submit short papers not exceeding 4 pages
(plus two additional pages for references). Short papers should describe:
• a small, focused contribution;
• work in progress; • a negative result;
• a position paper.
The reviewing process will be double blind and papers should not include
the authors' names and affiliations. Each submission will be reviewed by
at least three members of the program committee. If you do include any
author names on the title page, your submission will be automatically
rejected. In the body of your submission, you should eliminate all
direct references to your own previous work. Accepted papers will be
published in the workshop proceedings and available at the ACL Anthology.
Multiple Submission Policy Papers that have been or will be submitted to
other meetings or publications are acceptable, but authors must indicate
this information at submission time. If accepted, authors must notify
the organizers as to whether the paper will be presented at the workshop
or elsewhere.
Submissions must be in PDF format and formatted following the official
EMNLP 2016 submission styles
Contributions should be submitted in PDF via the submission site:
https://www.softconf.com/emnlp2016/CNS/
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Invited Speaker
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Eduard Hovy, Language Technologies Institute, CMU, [Title to be announced]
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Organizing Committee
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Tommaso Caselli, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (NL)
Ben Miller, Georgia State University (U.S.A)
Marieke van Erp, VU University Amsterdam (NL)
Piek Vossen, VU University Amsterdam (NL)
David Caswell, Reynolds Journalism Institute, University of Missouri (U.S.A)
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Program Committee
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Alexandra Balahur, European Commission Joint Research Centre, Ispra, Italy
Sabine Bergler, Computer Science, Columbia University, Canada Larry,
Birnbaum, Northwestern University, USA
Matje van de Camp, De Taalmonsters, The Netherlands Reginald Chua,
Thomson Reuters, USA
Leon Derczynski, University of Sheffield, UK
Nick Diakopoulos, University of Maryland, USA
Mark Finlayson, Florida International University, USA
Martijn Kleppe, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, Den Haag, The Netherlands
Bernardo Magnini, HLT-FBK, Italy Roser Morante, Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Nasrin Mostafazadeh, University of Rochester, USA
Vivi Nastase, Institut fur Computerlinguistik, University of Heidelberg,
Germany Silvia Pareti, Google Inc. & University of Edinburgh
Octavian Popescu, IBM Watson Research Center, USA Ellen Riloff,
University of Utah, USA
Roser Saurí, Oxford University Press, UK & Pompeu Fabra University,
Catalonia
Jonathan Stray, Columbia University, USA
Simone Teufel, Cambridge University, UK
Xavier Tannier, LIMSI-CNRS, France
Marc Verhagen, Brandeis University, USA
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Computational Lexicology & Terminology Lab (CLTL)
The Network Institute, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
De Boelelaan 1105
1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands
http://www.mariekevanerp.com
http://www.newsreader-project.eu
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