to standards for annotating appropriate levels of discourse, with enhanced accuracy and usefulness.
We invite submissions of long papers that span the range from theory to application, including research on and the practice of manual and automated annotation systems and are interested in discussing questions like the following:
- What correlations can be demonstrated among document structure, argumentation and rhetorical functions?
- What are the text linguistic and philosophical motivations underpinning current efforts to identify discourse structure?
- Are the assumptions made by current text processing tools supported by discourse linguistic research; are there unused opportunities for fruitful cross-fertilization?
- Can we port parallel efforts from neighboring fields, such as motifs in folktale research, to annotate and detect narrative structures?
- Which discourse annotation schemes are the most portable? Can they be applied to both full papers and abstracts?
- Can they be applied to texts in different domains and different genres (research papers, reviews, patents, etc)?
- How can we compare annotations, and how can we decide which features, approaches or techniques work best?
- What are the most topical use cases? How can we evaluate performance and what are the most appropriate tasks?
- What corpora are currently available for comparing and contrasting discourse annotation, and how can we improve and increase these?
- How applicable are these efforts for improving methods of publishing, detecting and correcting author's errors at the discourse level, or summarizing scholarly text?
- How close are we to implementing them at a production scale?
Key dates:
March 25, 2012 Submission Deadline
April 15, 2012 Notification of acceptance
April 30, 2012 Camera-ready papers due
July 12, 2012 Workshop
Organising Committee:
Sophia Ananiadou, School of Computer Science, University of Manchester, UK
Antal van den Bosch, Centre for Language Studies, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Ágnes Sándor, Xerox Research Europe, Grenoble, France
Hagit Shatkay, Dept. of Computer and Information Sciences, University of Delaware, USA
Anita de Waard, Elsevier Labs, USA
Program Committee:
Catherine Blake, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Kevin Cohen, University of Colorado, USA
Nigel Collier, National Institute of Informatics, Japan
Walter Daelemans, University of Antwerp, Belgium
Robert Dale, Macquarie University, Australia
Kjersti Fløttum, University of Bergen, Norway
Rocana Girju, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA
Lynette Hirschman, MITRE, USA
Halil Kilicoglu, Concordia University, Canada
Jin-Dong Kim, The University Of Tokyo, Japan
Anna Korhonen, Cambridge University, UK
Maria Liakata, Aberystwyth University, UK
Roser Morante, University of Antwerp, Belgium
Raheel Nawaz, University of Manchester, UK
Dragomir Radev, University of Michigan, USA
Dietrich Rebholz-Schuhmann, EBI, UK
Andrey Rzhetsky, University of Chicago, USA
Caroline Sporleder, Saarland University, Germany
Padmini Srinivasan, University of Iowa, USA
Simone Teufel, University of Cambridge, UK
Paul Thompson, University of Manchester, UK
Jun'ichi Tsujii, Microsoft Research Asia, China
Lucy Vanderwende, Microsoft Research, USA