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[ecrea] CFP: Abusive Language Online
Fri Jan 20 17:22:19 GMT 2017
Part of the annual meeting of the Association of Computational
Linguistics 2017 (Vancouver), August 3rd (or) 4th, 2017
https://www.hastac.org/opportunities/cfp-1st-workshop-abusive-language-online
Overview
The last few years have seen a surge in abusive online behavior,
with governments, social media platforms, and individuals struggling
to cope with the consequences. Online forums, comment sections, and
social media interaction in general have become a playground of
bullying, scapegoating, and hate speech. These forms of online
aggression not only poison the social climate of the communities
that experience it, but also lower the inhibition for direct
physical violence, and increasingly even result in it.
As a field that directly works with computing over language, Natural
Language Processing researchers are in a unique position to develop
automated methods to analyse, detect, and filter abusive language.
Additionally, we recognize that addressing abusive language is not
solely the purview of NLP approaches but is a truly
multi-disciplinary problem and thus requires knowledge from other
fields, including but not limited to: psychology, sociology, law,
gender studies, digital communication, and critical race theory.
In this one day workshop, we aim to provide a space for researchers
of various disciplines to meet and discuss approaches to abusive
language. The workshop will include invited speakers and panelists
from fields outside of NLP, as well as solicit papers from
researchers across all areas. In addition, the workshop will host
an “unshared task”.
Paper Topics
We invite long and short papers on any of the following general topics:
*
NLP models and methods for abusive language detection
*
Application of NLP tools to analyze social media content and
other large data sets
*
NLP models for cross-lingual abusive language detection
*
The social and personal consequences of being the target of
abusive language and targeting others with abusive language
*
Assessment of current non-NLP methods of addressing abusive
language
*
Legal ramifications of measures taken against abusive language use
*
Best practices for using NLP techniques in watchdog settings
*
Development of corpora and annotation guidelines
Panel Discussion Topics
Potential panel discussion topics reflect the relevance for industry
and individuals:
*
Responsibility of companies and governments in monitoring speech
*
Privacy and ethical implications of abusive language detection
(false positives)
*
Follow-up: what to do when a community experiences abusive language
*
Personal experiences from individuals who have been threatened
online
*
Best methods for cross-pollination of ideas between fields
Andrew Whitacre
Communications Director
Comparative Media Studies/Writing
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(awhit /at/ mit.edu) <mailto:(awhit /at/ mit.edu)> | cmsw.mit.edu
<http://cmsw.mit.edu/>
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