- From: Deborah Dahl <dahl@conversational-technologies.com>
- Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2003 10:15:48 -0500
- To: <www-multimodal@w3.org>
This workshop is looking for papers in all areas of dialog research, including multimodal systems. (Apologies if you receive this announcement multiple times) ____________________________________________________________________________ First Announcement 5th SIGdial Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue Boston, April 30 and May 1, 2004 (immediately preceding HLT-NAACL) ____________________________________________________________________________ Continuing with a series of successful workshops in Hong Kong, Aalborg, Philadelphia, and Sapporo this workshop spans the ACL and ISCA SIGdial interest area of discourse and dialogue. This series provides a regular forum for the presentation of research in this area to both the larger SIGdial community as well as researchers outside this community. The workshop is organized by SIGdial, which is sponsored jointly by ACL and ISCA. TOPICS OF INTEREST We welcome formal, corpus-based, implementational or analytical work on discourse and dialogue including but not restricted to the following three themes: (1) Discourse Processing and Dialogue Systems Discourse semantic and pragmatic issues in NLP applications such as text summarization, question answering, information retrieval including topics like: * Discourse structure, temporal structure, information structure; * Discourse markers, cues and particles and their use; * (Co-)Reference and anaphora resolution, metonymy and bridging resolution; * Subjectivity, opinions and semantic orientation. Spoken, multi-modal, and text/web based dialogue systems including topics such as: * Dialogue management models; * Speech and gesture, text and graphics integration; * Strategies for preventing, detecting or handling miscommunication (repair and correction types, clarification and under-specificity, grounding and feedback strategies); * Utilizing prosodic information for understanding and for disambiguation. (2) Corpora, Tools and Methodology Corpus-based work on discourse and spoken, text-based and multi-modal dialogue including its support, in particular: * Annotation tools and coding schemes; * Data resources for discourse and dialogue studies; * Corpus-based techniques and analysis (including machine learning); * Evaluation of systems and components, including methodology, metrics and case studies, * Discovery from corpora. (3) Pragmatic and/or Semantic Modeling The pragmatics and/or semantics of discourse and dialogue (i.e., beyond a single sentence) including the following issues: * The semantics/pragmatics of dialogue acts (including those which are less studied in the semantics/pragmatics framework); * Models of discourse/dialogue structure and their relation to referential and relational structure; * Prosody in discourse and dialogue; * Models of presupposition and accommodation; operational models of conversational implicature. SUBMISSION OF PAPERS AND ABSTRACTS The program committee welcomes the submission of long papers for full plenary presentation as well as short papers and demonstrations. Short papers and demo descriptions will be featured in short plenary presentations, followed by posters and demonstrations. * Long papers must be no longer than 8 pages, including title, examples, references, etc. In addition to this, two additional pages are allowed as an appendix which may include extended example discourses or dialogues, algorithms, graphical representations, etc. * Short papers and demo descriptions should aim to be 4 pages or less (including title, examples, references, etc.) Papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or publications must provide this information (see submission format); in the event of multiple acceptances, authors must notify the program chairs as to the meeting they choose to present their work by February 23, 2004, at the latest in order for their work to be included in the proceedings. SIGdial 04 cannot accept for publication or presentation work that will be (or has been) published elsewhere. Authors are encouraged to make illustrative materials available, on the web or otherwise. For example, excerpts of recorded conversations, recordings of human-computer dialogues, interfaces to working systems, etc. IMPORTANT DATES (subject to change) Submission January 12, 2004 Notification February 16, 2004 Final submissions March 08, 2004 Workshop April 30-May 01, 2004 WEBSITES Workshop website: http://sigdial04.eml-research.de Sigdial website: http://www.sigdial.org HLT-NAACL04 website: http://www.hlt-naacl04.org CONTACT sigdial04@eml-research.de PROGRAM COMMITTEE Michael Strube, EML Research gGmbH, Germany (co-chair) Candy Sidner, MERL, USA (co-chair) Jan Alexandersson, DFKI, Germany Johan Bos, University of Edinburgh, UK Sandra Carberry, University of Delaware, USA Jean Carletta, University of Edinburgh, UK Justine Cassell, Northwestern University, USA Jennifer Chu-Carroll, IBM Research, USA Mark Core, University of Edinburgh, UK Deborah Dahl, Conversational Technologies, USA Renato DeMori, Universite d'Avignon, France Sadaoki Furui, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan Sanda Harabagiu, University of Texas at Dallas, USA Koiti Hasida, Sony/AIST, Japan Beth Ann Hockey, RIACS, USA Amy Isard, University of Edinburgh, UK Masato Ishizaki, University of Tokyo, Japan Michael Johnston, AT&T Research, USA Pamela Jordan, University of Pittsburgh, USA Andrew Kehler, University of California San Diego, USA Staffan Larsson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden Susan Luperfoy, Stottler Henke Associates, USA Erwin Marsi, University of Tilburg, The Netherlands Massimo Poesio, University of Essex, UK Matthew Purver, Kings College London, UK Alex Rudnicky, Carnegie Mellon University, USA David Schlangen, University of Potsdam, Germany Elizabeth Shriberg, SRI and ICSI, USA Ronnie Smith, East Carolina University, USA Manfred Stede, University of Potsdam, Germany Oliviero Stock, ITC-IRST, Italy Richmond Thomason, University of Michigan, USA Syun Tutiya, Chiba University, Japan Renata Vieira, UNISINOS, Brasil Bonnie Webber, University of Edinburgh, UK Janyce Wiebe, University of Pittsburgh, USA Massimo Zancanaro, ITC-IRST, Italy Michelle Zhou, IBM Research, USA
Received on Monday, 17 November 2003 10:15:58 UTC