MESSAGE from Eva Hajicova, Board Member in charge of SIG's
Dear Members,
The role of the SIG coordinator (Special Interest Groups) is to take care of the needs and initiatives of SIGs in the period between the INTERSPEECH
conferences and to serve as a link between the SIGs and the ISCA Board. There are 12 special interest groups active at present, and I am happy to say
that the number is growing (among the relatively recently established groups there is a SIG-IL on Iberian languages, SIG-ILSP on Indian language and
speech processing, SIG-CSLP on Chinese spoken language processing and SLATE on speech and language technology in education). Main activities of SIGs
consist in organizing workshops and meetings on specific issues which are of interest for their members. To make the SIGs more visible on the ISCA scene, we
regularly organize a SIG-breakfast at INTERSPEECH, for which the conference participants interested in joining a SIG will be invited to come
and where the SIGs coordinators will be present and prepared to answer questions and accept suggestions for their further activities.
Eva Hajicova, Professor of Linguistics at Charles University, Prague
Editorial
Dear Members,
This month I would recommend that you have a close look at the call for applications for the Christian Benoit Award.
Many of us personally knew this excellent and friendly colleague who passed away at an age when others are just starting
their career. Among his outstanding results, we remember the excellent approach for audio visual speech and the development
of graphical dynamic lip models. To honour his memory, this award is presented to the best young researchers involved
in speech and multimedia techniques. I hope this call will attract plenty of young researchers, as Christian liked to work with
young, promising and devoted scientists.
I invite you to read not only announcements for conferences and jobs but also important information concerning future special
issues, evaluation campaigns, and new books.
Please send the information you want to advertise by the last week of each month for publication in the next ISCApad…
And please don't forget to inform the ISCA secretariat if you move or change your e-mail address so that you can continue benefiting from your ISCA membership.br>
Christian Wellekens
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- ISCA News
- SIG's activities
- Courses, internships
- Books, databases,
softwares
- Job openings
- Journals
- Future Interspeech Conferences
- Future ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshops (ITRW)
- Forthcoming Events supported (but not organized) by ISCA
- Future Speech Science and technology events
ISCA NEWS
top
Call for applications to the Christian Benoit Award
The Christian Benoit Award is delivered periodically by the Association
Christian Benoit (**). It is given to promising young scientists in the
domain of Speech Communication. The Award provides financial support for
the development of a multi-media project promoting the work of these
young scientists, and is valued at 7,622 Euros.
The first award was delivered to Tony Ezzat from MIT in June 2000,
for his research in Audiovisual Speech Synthesis, the second award to
Johanna Barry from University of Melbourne in September 2002 for
her work on the acquisition of lexical tones in profoundly
hearing-impaired speakers using a cochlear implant, and the third award
to Olov Engwal from KTH in Stockholm in October 2004 for the
elaboration of ARTUR, a multi-modal articulation tutor able to give
automatic feedback to real users.
The fourth award will be delivered this year to ANY PROJECT IN THE FIELD
OF SPEECH COMMUNICATION. Candidates should be in the final stages of
their doctoral research or within the five years following the obtention
of their PhD.
The Christian Benoit award will offer financial support to develop a
multi-media project which (a) demonstrates the candidate's research in a
way that helps launching that candidate's career, and (b) leverages
electronic publishing technologies intelligently so as to facilitate the
widest possible dissemination of this content.
In the application, the candidate should provide
-- a statement of research interest,
-- a detailed curriculum vitae, and
-- a description of the proposed multi-media project.
If the project already exists, a copy or link should be provided along
with the application.
Applications should be sent to Pascal Perrier and
received by Friday April 20th, 2007. Electronic submissions are
mandatory.
The successful candidate will be notified by June 1st and invited to make
a brief presentation of his/her work at the Interspeech 2007 Conference
in Antwerp (Belgium).
Travel expenses for attendance at the Award ceremony will be provided by
the Christian Benoit Association. For further information, please contact
Pascal Perrier.
** The Christian Benoit Association is a nonprofit organization, whose
purpose is to facilitate the development of research projects in the
field of speech communication. Established in honor of Christian Benoit,
French CNRS researcher in the field of speech communication who died on
the 26th of April, 1998, at the age of 41, the Award places special
emphasis on multimedia representations of ongoing research.
Distinguished Lecturer Program
Our first Distinguished Lecturers will be Professor Mark Swerts and Professor Chin-Hui Lee: we congratulate them
for having been selected and are proud to welcome them as our first
DL's.
Professor Marc Swerts
Tilburg University
Faculty of Arts
Communication & Cognition
P.O. Box 90153
NL - 5000 LE Tilburg
The Netherlands
tel: +31 13 4662922
fax: +31 13 4663110
Website:Website
Marc Swerts (1966) is full professor in Discourse Studies at Tilburg University (The
Netherlands). He obtained a PhD in 1994 at the Eindhoven University of Technology (The
Netherlands) on the results of research conducted at the Institute for Perception Research
(IPO), which consisted of an experimental-phonetic approach to discourse prosody in
spontaneous speech materials. After that, he has worked and published on various other
research topics, related to (1) the evaluation of various components of spoken dialogue
systems, (2) the variability in the phonetic structure of spoken Dutch, (3) crosslinguistic
analyses of prosodic cues to information structure, and (4) audiovisual correlates of various
pragmatic functions (which is currently his main research interest). He has served on the
editorial board of Language & Speech, Computational Linguistics and Speech
Communication, and a considerable number of scientific committees of major international
conferences, and he was a guest co-editor for 2 special issues of Speech Communication and 1
of Language and Speech. He has also been a visiting researcher at various academic and
industrial research institutes in the USA (Boston University, AT&T Laboratories), Japan
(ATR, Doshisha University), Sweden (KTH, Umea University), Italy (Padova University) and
Romania (University of Bucharest). He currently teaches different BA and MA courses in the
Communication & Cognition programme of Tilburg University, and for the postgraduate
research master programme between Tilburg and Nijmegen. Marc Swerts has also been an
invited lecturer for a bullit course on “Prosody and information status” at the KTH institute
in Stockholm (Sweden), and was previously invited to teach at the 2002 European
Postgraduate College, organised by Saarland University and the University of Edinburgh, in
Saarbruecken (Germany), and at the 2006 Lot Summer school in Amsterdam (The
Netherlands). He also yearly teaches for the international User-System Interaction
postgraduate programme of the Technical University in Eindhoven (The Netherlands).
He is the author of many publications listed on the University web
Possible topics/titles for lectures
1. Phonetic correlates of dialogue and discourse structure
2. Functions of audiovisual prosody
3. Error-handling in human-human and human-machine interactions
Professor Chin-Hui Lee
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Georgia Institute of Technology
Atlanta, GA 30332, USA
EDUCATION
National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan Electrical Engineering B.S. 1973
Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut Engineering and Applied Science M.S. 1977
University of Washington, Seattle, Washington Electrical Engineering Ph.D.1981
APPOINTMENTS
Georgia Institute of Technology, Professor 2002-present
National University of Singapore, IDA Distinguished Visiting Professor 2001-2002
Lucent Technologies, Bell Laboratories
Distinguished Member of Technical Staff 1996-2001
Director, Dialogue Systems Research 1997-2001
AT&T, Bell Laboratories, Member of Technical Staff 1986-1996
Digital Sound Corporation, Principal Research Scientist, Manager, DSP Group 1984-1986
Verbex Corporation, Senior Research Scientist 1981-1983
PUBLICATONS: From a total of 75 journal publications, 25 patents, 300 papers
SIG's activities A list of Speech Interest
Groups can be found on our
web.
top
COURSES, INTERNSHIPS
Studentships available for 2006/7 at the Department of Computer
Science The University of Sheffield - UK One-Year MSc in HUMAN
LANGUAGE TECHNOLOGY The Sheffield MSc in Human Language Technology has
been carefully tailored to meet the demand for graduates with the
highly-specialised multi-disciplinary skills that are required in HLT,
both as practitioners in the development of HLT applications and as
researchers into the advanced capabilities required for next-generation
HLT systems. The course provides a balanced programme of instruction
across a range of relevant disciplines including speech technology,
natural language processing and dialogue systems. The programme is
taught in a research-led environment. This means that you will study the
most advanced theories and techniques in the field, and also have the
opportunity to use state- of-the-art software tools. You will also have
opportunities to engage in research-level activity through in-depth
exploration of chosen topics and through your dissertation. Graduates
from this course are highly valued in industry, commerce and academia. The
programme is also an excellent introduction to the substantial research
opportunities for doctoral-level study in HLT. A number of studentships
are available, on a competitive basis, to suitably qualified applicants.
These awards pay a stipend in addition to the course fees. See further details
of the course Information on
how to apply
top
BOOKS, DATABASES, SOFTWARES
The Blizzard Challenge 2007
Evaluating corpus-based speech synthesis on common databases
Website
Alan W Black, Keiichi Tokuda, Simon King,
Michael Picheny, and Shinsuke Sakai
January 23, 2007
In order to better understand and compare research techniques in
building corpus-based speech synthesizers on the same data, Blizzard
Challenge 2005 and 2006 were held. We will now have the third
challenge as the Blizzard Challenge 2007.
The basic challenge is to take the released speech database, build
synthetic voices from the data and synthesize a prescribed set of test
sentences. The sentences from each synthesizer will then be evaluated
through listening tests.
For the Blizzard Challenge 2007, ATR-SLC (http://www.slc.atr.jp/) will
release an eight-hour American English speech database. We would ask
each participant to build three voices using a) the whole set of the
database, b) the ARCTIC subset of the database, and c) a
limited-amount of sentences chosen by each participant, respectively.
Unknown sentences from an independent source will be generated and
each participant will synthesize them with their system. The speech
will then be put on the web for evaluation.
The results will be presented at a satellite event at ISCA Speech
Synthesis Workshop, in Bonn, Germany. Participants will be expected
to submit 4 page papers describing their entries for review. Accepted
papers will be presented at the workshop, and published on the
Blizzard website.
Call for participation
The Blizzard Challenge: Registration
Interested parties should register their intentions to participate by
mailing. They should identify a contact person
in their team, as well as provide email and real mail addresses.
Registration
A registration fee of 500 USD is due at time of submission (March 30)
to offset the costs of paying undergraduate listeners. There is a
mailing list for discussion and announcements for the challenge.
To join the list send a message with the
following line in the body of the message
subscribe blizzard-discuss
The Blizzard Challenge 2007: Timeline
Jan 23 2007 Blizzard Challenge 2007 Announcement
Feb 2 2007 Participant registration deadline (but later
registrations may be possible - please contact the organisers)
Feb 16 2007 Deadline for agreement for the use of the corpus
Feb 23 2007 Database released
(one month for training)
Mar 23 2007 Test sentences released
(one week for synthesis)
Mar 30 2007 Deadline for the synthesized speech
(two weeks for preparation of the evaluation web site)
Apr 16 2007 Evaluation system goes live
(one month for evaluation)
May 14 2007 End of Evaluation
(two weeks for gathering the scores)
May 28 2007 Results distributed to teams
(one month for writing paper)
June 29 2007 Satellite workshop papers due
(two weeks for review)
July 16 2007 Notification of acceptance
Aug 22-24 2007 6th ISCA Workshop on Speech Synthesis in Bonn
Aug 25 2007 Presentation of results at the satellite
workshop in Bonn
Further Information
For further information please contact
Further description of the Challenge itself was published in
Interspeech 2005 Eurospeech in Lisbon.
Books
Human Communication Disorders/ Speech therapy
This interesting series can be listed on Wiley website
Incurses em torno do ritmo da fala
Author: ( Plinio A. Barbosa
Publisher: Pontes Editores (city: Campinas)
Year: 2006 (released 11/24/2006)
(In Portuguese, abstract attached.)
Website
Speech Quality of VoIP: Assessment and Prediction
Author: Alexander Raake
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, UK-Chichester, September 2006
Website
Self-Organization in the Evolution of Speech, Studies in the Evolution
of Language Author: Pierre-Yves Oudeyer Publisher:Oxford University Press
Website
Speech Recognition Over Digital Channels Authors: Antonio M.
Peinado and Jose C. Segura Publisher: Wiley, July 2006 Website
Multilingual Speech Processing Editors: Tanja Schultz and
Katrin Kirchhoff , Elsevier Academic Press, April 2006 Website
Reconnaissance automatique de la parole: Du signal a
l'interpretation Authors: Jean-Paul Haton Christophe
Cerisara Dominique Fohr Yves Laprie Kamel Smaili 392 Pages
Publisher: Dunod
top
JOB OPENINGS
We invite all laboratories and industrial companies which have job
offers to send them to the ISCApad
editor: they will appear in the newsletter and on our website for
free. (also have a look at http://www.isca-speech.org/jobs.html
as well as http://www.elsnet.org/
Jobs)
Research scientist- Speech Technology- Princeton, NJ, USA
Company
Profile: Headquartered in Princeton, NJ, ETS (Educational Testing Service)is the world's premier educational measurement institution and a
leader in educational research. As an innovator in developing achievement and occupational tests for clients in business,
education, and government, we are determined to advance educational excellence for the communities we serve.
Job Description: ETS Research & Development has a Research Scientist opening in the Automated Scoring and
Natural Language Processing Group. This group conducts research focusing on the development of new capabilities
in automated scoring and NLP-based analysis and evaluation systems, which are used to improve assessments, learning tools
and test development practices for diverse groups of users that include K-12 students, college students,
English Language Learners and lifelong learners. The Research Scientist position involves applying scientific,
technical and software engineering skills to designing and conducting research studies and developing capabilities
in support of educational products and services. The job is a full-time job.
Required qualifications
· A Ph.D. in Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, Computer Science, or Electrical Engineering with a
focus on speech technology, particularly speech recognition. Knowledge of linguistics is a plus.
· Evidence of at least three years of independent substantive research experience and/or experience in developing
and deploying speech technology capabilities, preferably in educational environments.
· Demonstrable contributions to new and/or modified theories of speech processing and their implementation in
automated systems.
· Practical expertise with speech recognition systems and fluency in at least one major programming language (e.g.,
Java, Perl, C/C++, Python).
· Three years of independent substantive research experience and/or experience in developing and deploying speech
technology capabilities, preferably in educational environments.
How to apply Please send copy of your resume, along with cover letter stating salary requirements and job #2965,
to e-mail
ETS offers competitive salaries, outstanding benefits, a stimulating work environment, and attractive growth potential.
ETS is an Equal Opportunity, Affirmative Action Employer.
Web site
PhD position available in project computational modelling in European FET project Acquisition of Communication and Recognition Skills (ACORNS), Nijmegen,
the Netherlands
Research area:
End of last year, the Radboud University of Nijmegen (the Netherlands) received a grant for a Future and Emergent Technology project. This project, Acquisition of Communication and Recognition Skills (ACORNS), is a highly ambitious project financed by the European Commission. It aims to develop a computational model of the way in which young children acquire their native language.
For this project we are looking for a PhD candidate who will be based at the Centre for Language and Speech Technology at the Radboud University Nijmegen. The task of the PhD student will be to perform research on autonomous language acquisition using a computational model based on integrating software modules that are built by other partners of the project consortium. Further s/he will conduct experiments with the system in order to evoke adequate reactions from the system to audio-visual input. On the basis of the feedback to the reactions, the system should learn to recognize words and their meaning from multimodal input (including speech).
The PhD student will have the opportunity to conduct part of the research in the laboratories of one of the ACORNS Consortium members in Belgium,
Great Britain, Sweden, Finland, or the USA.
Requirements:
A successful candidate must have a strong background in informatics (computer science), cognitive sciences, AI, and preferably signal processing and pattern recognition. Due to the international context of the project, excellent communication skills in English are essential, as well as a good record of collaboration in teams. Candidates must already be authorized to work in the EU.
Informal enquiries should be made to Dr Els den Os or prof. dr L.Boves .
Tel. +31- 24 361 5559 or +31- 24 361 2902.
Duration of contract:
3.5 years.
Formal applications with a detailed CV and the names of at least two references should be sent to the personnel department referring to vacancy number 23.97.06,
preferably by e-mail.
Postal address:
Personnel department of the Faculty of Arts,
Radboud University Nijmegen
P.O. Box 9103
NL-6500 HD Nijmegen,
the Netherlands
Closing date: End Feb 2007, but responses soon after this date will be taken into account as well.
An elaborate description of the project plan can be found at
http://www.ru.nl/clst/projects/speech/ > ACORNS
Research Fellow in Speech Synthesis-
Centre for Speech Technology Research/
University of Edinburgh
The Centre for Speech Technology Research at the University of Edinburgh
is seeking a research fellow to work on the speech synthesis project
"Automatically-determined inventories for speech synthesis". This
project uses machine learning techniques to automatically discover, from
speech data, a set of units for speech synthesis - that is, an
alternative to manually-specified phoneme-based units such as diphones.
This research is currently being conducted within a concatenative (i.e.
unit selection) framework, but we now seek to extend this to the other
major synthesis technique: statistical parametric synthesis, based on
Hidden Markov Models (i.e., trajectory HMMs). The successful candidate
will be expected to contribute, plan and execute new research, as well
as extend our existing techniques.
You ideally will have a PhD in speech synthesis and experience of
trajectory Hidden Markov Models. You will have very good programming
skills, preferably in C++, and experience with one or more of:
concatenative speech synthesis techniques; statistical models of speech;
perceptual evaluations; Festival. An automatic speech recognition
background is also appropriate for this position. This post is fixed
term for 15 months.
For more information and application instructions, consult our website and enter vacancy number 3006866.
A European Commission-Funded
Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in:
The Evolutionary Anatomy of Speech
Applications are invited for the position of Postdoctoral Research Fellow, based in the
AHRC Centre for the Evolution of Cultural Diversity , at the
Institute of Archaeology, UCL, London.
The post-holder will work with Dr James Steele on the European Commission-funded
project HANDTOMOUTH, to investigate hard tissue markers of vocal tract form in
living primates and extinct hominins. Applicants should have a PhD in a relevant
discipline and be experienced in speech physiology and/or comparative skeletal
anatomy. The post is tenable for a period of 2 years starting 1st March 2007, or as
soon as possible thereafter. There are no nationality or residence restrictions on
eligibility.
Salary Scale: Grade 7. (from £25,889 to £31,840 plus London Allowance of £2497,
according to previous experience).
Informal enquiries may be addressed to Dr James Steele on Tel: +44 (0)20 7679
4773 or by email.
For details of how to apply please download an application form and job
description/person specification from the News page of the AHRC CECD web
site
or contact:
HANDTOMOUTH Project Manager
c/o Manu Davies , Administrator,
AHRC Centre for the Evolution of Cultural Diversity,
Institute of Archaeology,
University College London,
31-34 Gordon Square,
London WC1H 0PY
Tel: +44 (0)20 7679 4607
Fax: +44 (0)20 7383 2572
The closing date for applications is 9th February 2007
Software Engineer Position at Be Vocal, Mountain View, CA,USA
We are currently looking for a Software Engineer with previous exposure to Speech, to work in our Speech and Natural Language Technology group.
This group’s mission is to be the center of excellence for speech and natural language technologies within BeVocal. Responsibilities include assisting in the
development of internal tools and processes for building Natural Language based speech applications as well as on ongoing infrastructure/product improvements.
The successful candidate must be able to take direction from senior members of the team and will also be given the opportunity to make original contributions to
new and existing technologies during the application development process. As such, you must be highly motivated and have the ability to work well independently
in addition to working as a team.
Responsibilities
* Develop and maintain speech recognition/NLP tools and supporting infrastructure
* Develop and enhance component speech grammars
* Work on innovative solutions to improve overall Speech/NL performance across BeVocal’s deployments.
Requirements
* BS in Computer Science, Electrical Engineering or Linguistics, an MS is a preferred.
* 2-5 years of software development experience in Perl, Java, C/C++. A willingness and ability to pick up additional software languages as needed is essential.
* Exposure or experience with speech recognition/pattern recognition either from an academic environment or directly related work experience.
* Experience working as part of a world-class speech and language group is highly desirable.
* Experience building natural language applications is preferred.
* Experience building LVCSR speech recognition systems is a plus.
For immediate consideration, please send your resume by email and include
"Software Engineer, Speech" in the subject
line of your email. Principals only please (no 3rd parties or agencies). Contact
for details
BeVocal's policy is to comply with all applicable laws and to provide equal employment opportunity for all applicants and employees without regard to
non-job-related factors such as race, color, religion, sex, national origin, ancestry, age, disability, veteran status, marital status or sexual orientation.
This policy applies to all areas of employment, including recruitment, hiring, training, promotion, compensation, benefits, transfer, and social and recreational
programs.
Postdoctoral Fellow -- Speech Synthesis- Alfred I. Dupont Hospital for Children, Wilmington, DE
The Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children in Wilmington, DE has an
immediate opening for a Postdoctoral Fellow in Speech Synthesis in the
Speech Research Laboratory, within the Department of Biomedical
Research. The ideal candidate will have a Ph.D. in Computer Science,
Linguistics, Psychology, or a related field, demonstrated experience in
data-based speech synthesis techniques, and an interest in modeling
prosody, particularly intonation, in speech synthesis systems. The
primary responsibilities for this position include: Developing a model
for intonation that can be trained on and capture the important
talker-specific features of an individual's speech while also
representing phonologically motivated f0 characteristics; implementing
the intonation model for the ModelTalker TTS system; and assisting in
the creation of unit concatenation voices for the ModelTalker TTS
system. A Ph.D. in Linguistics, Computer Science, Psychology, or closely
related field with demonstrated knowledge of and experience in
concatenative speech synthesis techniques, speech analysis techniques,
and acoustic phonetics is required. Computer programming experience
with C or C++, knowledge of additional languages is a plus. Experience
with Unix/Linux and Windows operating systems is essential.
This is a two-year grant-funded position. For more information, email
Dr Timothy Bunnel or call at (302) 651-6835. Applicants may also
post their resume on-line at www.nemours.org or send resume with salary
requirements to Dr. Timothy Bunnell, Department of Biomedical Research,
Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children, P.O. Box 269, Wilmington, DE 19899.
Position at Saybot in China
Job title: Speech Scientist
Location: China (Beijing or Shanghai)
Saybot develops software technology and curricula for learning spoken english. Since 2005, we have been
building software which features state-of-the-art speech technologies and innovative interactive lessons to
help users practice speaking English. We are currently looking for talented speech scientists to help strengthen
our R&D team and to develop our next-generation products. Successful candidates would have proven excellence
and good work ethics in academic or industry context and demonstrated creativity in building speech systems
with revolutionary designs.
* MS/PhD degree in speech technology (or related).
* Expertise in at least one of the following areas and basic knowledge of the others:
o acoustic model training,
o speaker adaptation,
o natural language understanding,
o prosody analysis,
o embedded recognizers.
* Excellent programming skills in both object-oriented languages (C++, C# or Java) and scripting (Perl or Python).
* Good knowledge and experience in at least one commonly used recognizer (HTK, Sphinx, Nuance...).
* Excellent communication skills in written and oral English.
* Experience in machine translation is a plus.
* Experience in VoIP integration is a plus.
* Experience in language teaching is a plus.
Contact: Sylvain Chevalier
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT POSITION IN "AUDIO CONTENT ACCESS" at IRCAM (Paris)
PRESENTATION OF THE MUSICDISCOVER PROJECT :
The goal of the MusicDiscover project is to give access to the contents of
musical audios recordings (as it is the case, for example, for texts),
i.e. to a structured description, as complete as possible, of the recordings:
melody, genre/style, rate/rhythm, instrumentation, musical structure,
harmony, etc. The principal objective is thus to develop and evaluate means
directed towards the contents, which include techniques and tools for
analysis, indexing, representation and search for information. These means
will make it possible to build and use such a structured description.
This project of the ACI "Masses of Data" is carried out in collaboration
between Ircam (Paris), Get-Telecom (Paris) and the LIRIS (Lyon) since
October 2004. The principal lines of research are :
- Rhythmic analysis and detection of ruptures
- Recognition of musical instruments and indexing
- Source Separation
- Structured Description
- Research of music by similarity
- Recognition of musical titles
- Classification of musical titles in genre and emotion.
The available position relates to the construction and the use of the
Structured Description in collaboration with the other lines of research.
DEVELOPMENTS TASKS:
A position is available from December 1st 2006 within the "Equipe
Analyse/Synthese" of Ircam for a 9 months total duration.
The contents of work are as follows:
- Participation in the design of a Structured Description
- Software development for construction and use of Structured Descriptions
- Participation in the definition and development of the graphic interface
- Participation in the evaluations
REQUIRED EXPERIENCE AND COMPETENCE:
- Experience of research in Audio Indexing and signal processing
- Experience in Flash, C and C++ and Matlab programming.
- High productivity, methodical work, excellent programming style.
- Good knowledge of UNIX and Windows environments.
AVAILABILITY :
- The position is available in the "Analysis/Synthesis" team in the R&D
department from November 1st 2006 for a duration of 9 months.
EEC WORKING PAPERS :
- In order to start immediately, the candidate should preferably have EEC
citizenship or already own valid EEC working papers.
SALARY:
- According to background and experience.
TO APPLY:
- Please send your resume with qualifications and informations adressing the
above issues, preferably by email to
Xavier Rodet, Analyse/Synthese team manager.
or by fax at:
(33 1) 44 78 15 40, care of Xavier.Rodet
or by surface mail to:
Xavier Rodet, IRCAM, 1 Place Stravinsky, 75004 Paris.
Introducing IRCAM
IRCAM is a leading non-profit organization dedicated to musical
production, R&D and education in acoustics and music, located in the center
of Paris (France), next to the Pompidou Center. It hosts composers,
researchers and students from many countries cooperating in contemporary
music production, scientific and applied research. The main topics
addressed in its R&D departement are acoustics, psychoacoustics, audio
synthesis and processing, computer aided composition, user interfaces, real
time systems.
Detailed activities of IRCAM and its groups are presented on our
WWW
server
top
JOURNALS
CfP:
IEEE SIGNAL PROCESSING MAGAZINE-
Special Issue on Spoken Language Technology
The evolution of speech and language technologies over the past decade
has spawned an exciting new research area known as Spoken Language Tech
nology (SLT). Technological advances in SLT promise to provide ubiquit
ous and personalized access to information, communication, and entertai
nment services. For example, advances in natural language understanding
and large vocabulary continuous speech recognition have resulted in a
new generation of automated contact center services that offer callers
the flexibility to speak their request naturally using their own words
as opposed to the words dictated to them by the machine. Advances in ma
chine translation technology have resulted in speech-to-speech translat
ion products that offer multi-party multi-lingual communication. Advanc
es in information search and data mining are providing the means to ext
ract intelligence information from large corpora of speech data (e.g.,
TV programs, call center data) to help improve business operation and s
earch for information rapidly without having to listen to conversations
.
This special issue on Spoken Language Technology is motivated by the fi
rst SLT workshop, Aruba, December 2006, jointly sponsored by IEEE and A
CL (www.slt2006.org). The goal is to solicit tutorial articles with com
prehensive surveys of important theories, algorithms, tools, and applic
ations of SLT on existing and new commercial, academic and government a
pplications. Prospective authors should submit a white paper summarizin
g the motivation, the significance of the topic, brief history, and an
outline of the content. Authors with accepted proposals will be invited
to write a full manuscript.
Scope of topics:
Publications in the following areas are strongly encouraged
Spoken language understanding
Dialog management
Spoken language generation
Spoken document retrieval
Information extraction from speech
Question answering from speech
Spoken document summarization
Machine translation of spoken language
Speech data mining and search
Voice-based human computer interfaces
Spoken dialog systems, applications and standards
Multimodal processing, systems and standards
Machine learning for spoken language processing
Speech and language processing in the world wide web
Submission Procedure:
Prospective authors should submit their white papers to the web submiss
ion system at http://www.ee.columbia.edu/spm according to the following
timetable. The white papers should be three pages maximum
Important dates
White paper due: June 1, 2007
Invitation notification: July 1, 2007
Manuscript due: October 1, 2007
Acceptance Notification: December 1, 2007
Final Manuscript due: January 15, 2008
Publication date: May, 2008
Guest Editors:
Mazin Gilbert
AT&T Labs - Research
180 Park Avenue
Florham Park, NJ, 07932
Kevin Knight
University of Southern California
4676 Admiralty Way
Marina del Rey, CA 90292
Steve Young
Cambridge University
Trumpington Street
Cambridge, CB2 1PZ
Call for Papers- Special Issue of the
IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech and Language Processing
on New Approaches to Statistical Speech and Text Processing
Dramatic advances in automatic speech recognition (ASR) technology in
recent years has enabled serious growth in spoken language processing
research, both for human-computer interaction and spoken document
processing. The challenges of working with spoken language, including
ASR errors and disfluencies, were major factors in the adoption of
statistical techniques in the language processing community. Statistical
methods now dominate many areas of text processing as well, enabled by
growing collections of linguistic data resources and developments in
machine learning. While transfer of methods from spoken- to written-
language processing continues, advances in written-language processing
also now have a significant impact on spoken-language processing.
This issue seeks to highlight the cross-fertilization in speech and text
processing by publishing novel statistical modeling and learning methods
that span a variety of language processing applications.
We invite papers describing new approaches to statistical language
processing of both spoken and written language. Submissions must not
have been previously published, with the exception that substantial
extensions of conference papers will be considered. Of particular
interest are methods that transfer recent developments from text
processing to speech processing and vice versa, but new methods in one
domain are also welcome. Papers describing new strategies for
integrating acoustic and linguistic cues in spoken language processing
are also encouraged.
Topics of interest include:
- Unsupervised and semi-supervised learning
- Discriminative learning
- Transfer or adaptation to new domains
- Active learning
- Reinforcement learning
- Memory-based learning and neighborhood methods
- Novel statistical models
- Statistical methods for feature selection or transformation
Specific applications of interest include information extraction,
question answering, text segmentation and classification, summarization,
translation, language generation and spoken language dialogs. Papers
that address component problems of these larger applications are also
encouraged, including parsing, discourse analysis, and talker
interaction analysis. The issue aims to cover a variety of applications
as well as different statistical methods.
Submission procedure:
Prospective authors should prepare manuscripts according to the
Information for Authors as published in any recent issue of the
Transactions.
Note that all rules will apply with regard to submission lengths,
mandatory overlength page charges, and color charges. Manuscripts should
be submitted electronically through the online
IEEE manuscript
submission system.
When selecting a manuscript type, authors must click on "Special Issue
of TASLP on New Approaches to Statistical Speech and Text Processing".
Authors should follow the instructions for the IEEE Transactions Audio,
Speech and Language Processing and indicate in the Comments to the
Editor-in-Chief that the manuscript is submitted for publication in the
Special Issue on New Approaches to Statistical Speech and Text
Processing. We require a completed copyright form to be signed and faxed
to +1-732-562-8905 at the time of submission. Please indicate the
manuscript number on the top of the page.
Schedule:
Submission deadline: 15 June 2007
Notification of final acceptance: 15 December 2008
Final manuscript due: 1 February 2008
Publication date: May 2008
Guest Editors:
Dr. Bill Byrne Cambridge University, UK
Dr. Mark Johnson Brown University, USA
Dr. Lillian Lee Cornell University, USA
Dr. Steve Renals University of Edinburgh, UK
Call for papers for a special issue of Speech Communication on
Iberian Languages
Iberian languages (henceforth IL) are amongst the most widely spoken languages in the world.
Nowadays, 628 million people on virtually all continents have Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, Basque,
Galician, etc. as their official language. Consequently, important speech research centers and companies,
both public and private, are focusing their interest on those languages. This effort has resulted in novel
and generic approaches applicable to any language, as well as in the optimization of existing techniques
or systems. It is worth highlighting that the community working on speech science and technology in IL
speaking countries has already reached world-class level in many areas and has continuously increased in
size in the last 15 years.
Speech technology proposed in the context of a non-Iberian language (e.g., English) may not be directly
applicable to IL. All linguistic and paralinguistic dimensions, from phonetics to pragmatics, are amongst
the features that certainly distinguish IL from others considered in speech science and technology
research. As a result, original work and optimization of existing techniques and systems may be necessary
in many areas of Iberian spoken language research.
The purpose of this Special Issue is to present recent progress and significant advances in all areas of
speech science and technology research in the context of IL. Submitted papers must address topics
specific to IL and/or issues raised by analyses of spoken data that shed light on speech science and
linguistic theories regarding these languages. Research which deals with IL data, but makes use of
standard techniques should not be submitted for this Special Issue. However, both research presenting
relevant optimization of current technology and systems, and work exploring specific features of IL
spoken corpora will be considered for submission.
This Special Issue is one of the first initiatives proposed by the recently created SIG-IL (ISCA Special
Interest Group on Iberian Languages, URL http://www.il-sig.org). The purposes of the SIG-IL are to
promote research activities on IL, to sponsor and/or organise meetings, workshops and other events on
related topics, and to make speech corpora publicly available by promoting joint evaluation efforts.
Furthermore, the SIG-IL is also strongly committed to encouraging world-class research within its
community in order to contribute with new ideas to the field of speech science and technology.
Original, previously unpublished submissions for the following areas, involving IL and detailing
the language-specific aspects, are encouraged:
Topics
o Linguistics, Phonology and Phonetics
o Prosody
o Paralinguistic & Nonlinguistic Information in
Speech
o Discourse & Dialogue
o Speech Production
o Speech Perception
o Physiology & Pathology
o Spoken Language Acquisition, Development
and Learning
o Spoken Language Generation & Synthesis
o Language/Dialect Identification
o Speech and Speaker Recognition: acoustic,
language and pronunciation modeling.
o Spoken Language Understanding
o Multi-modal / Multi-lingual Processing
o Spoken Language Extraction/Retrieval
o Spoken Language Translation
o Spoken/Multi-modal Dialogue Systems
o Spoken Language Resources and Annotation
o Evaluation and Standardization
o Spoken Language Technology for the Aged
and Disabled (e-inclusion)
o Spoken Language Technology for Education
(e-learning)
o Interdisciplinary Topics in Speech and
Language
o New Applications
Guest Editors
Isabel Trancoso INESC-ID, Portugal
Nestor Becerra-Yoma Univ. de Chile, Chile
Plinio A. Barbosa Univ. of Campinas, Brazil
Rubén San-Segundo UPM, Spain
Kuldip Plaiwal Griffith University, Australia
Important Dates
Submission deadline: May 31st, 2007
Notification of acceptance: October 31st, 2007
Final manuscript due: December 30th, 2007
Tentative publication date: March, 2008
Submission Procedure
Prospective authors should follow the regular guidelines of the Speech Communication Journal for
electronic submission (http://ees.elsevier.com/specom). During submission authors must select the
Section “Special Issue Paper”, not “Regular Paper”, and the title of the special issue should be referenced
in the “Comments” (Special Issue on Iberian Languages) page along with any other information.
Papers accepted for FUTURE PUBLICATION in Speech
Communication Full text available on http://www.sciencedirect.com/ for
Speech Communication subscribers and subscribing institutions. Free
access for all to the titles and abstracts of all volumes and even by
clicking on Articles in
press and then Selected papers.
top
FUTURE CONFERENCES
Publication policy: Hereunder, you will find very short announcements
of future events. The full call for participation can be accessed on the
conference websites See also our Web pages (http://www.isca-speech.org/) on
conferences and workshops.
FUTURE INTERSPEECH CONFERENCES
INTERSPEECH 2007-EUROSPEECHAugust 27-31,2007,Antwerp,
Belgium Chair: Dirk van Compernolle, K.U.Leuven and Lou Boves,
K.U.Nijmegen Website
INTERSPEECH 2007 is the eighth conference in the annual series of
INTERSPEECH events and also the tenth biennial EUROSPEECH conference. The
conference is jointly organized by scientists from the Netherlands and
Belgium, and will be held in Antwerp, Belgium, August 27-31, 2007, under the
sponsorship of the International Speech Communication Association (ISCA).
The INTERSPEECH meetings are considered to be the top international
conferences in spoken language processing, with more than 1000 attendees
from universities, industry, and government agencies. The conference offers
the prospect of meeting the future leaders of our field, exchanging ideas,
and exploring opportunities for collaboration, employment, and sales through
keynote talks, tutorials, technical sessions, exhibits, and poster sessions.
In recent years the INTERSPEECH meetings have taken place in a number of
exciting venues including most recently Pittsburgh, Lisbon, Jeju Island
(Korea), Geneva, Denver, Aalborg (Denmark), and Beijing.
CALL FOR PAPERS
AREAS AND TOPICS OF INTEREST:
Interspeech is the world's largest and most comprehensive conference
on Speech Science and Speech Technology and it solicits papers in the
following areas and topics:
A.Human speech production, perception and communication
Phonology and phonetics
Discourse and dialogue
Prosody (production, perception, prosodic structure)
Paralinguistic and nonlinguistic cues (e.g. emotion and expression)
Speech production
Speech perception
Physiology and pathology
Spoken language acquisition, development and learning
B.Speech and Language technology
Speech and audio processing
Speech enhancement
Speech coding and transmission
Spoken language generation and synthesis
Speech recognition
Spoken language understanding
Accent and language identification
Cross-lingual and multi-lingual processing
Multimodal/multimedia signal processing
Speaker characterization and recognition
C.Spoken language systems and applications
Dialogue systems
Systems for information retrieval
Systems for translation
Applications for aged and handicapped persons
Applications for learning and education
Other applications
D.Resources, standardization and evaluation
Spoken language resources and annotation
Evaluation and standardization
PAPER SUBMISSION
Prospective authors are invited to submit full-length, four-page
papers (including figures and references) via the conference
website by March 23, 2007 midnight at the International Date
Line West. Since the conference takes place early this year, the
paper submission deadline will not be postponed by any significant
amount of time.
The paper preparation guidelines can be found on the conference
website. They stipulate that authors may submit multimedia files
to illustrate their contribution. These multimedia files will
have to be incorporated in one ZIP archive.
The conference will host several Special Sessions (see conference
website). If authors want their paper to be considered for one
of these Sessions, they can specify that during paper submission.
Irrespective of this specification, all papers will follow the same
electronic review procedure.
Authors will have to declare that their contribution is original
and not being submitted for publication elsewhere (e.g., another
conference, workshop, or journal).
Each corresponding author will be notified by e-mail of the acceptance
or rejection of his paper by May 25, 2007. Minor updates of accepted
papers will be allowed during May 25 - June 3, 2007.
More information is available on
the conference website a>
IMPORTANT DATES
Full paper submission deadline: March 23, 2007
Notification of paper acceptance/rejection May 25, 2007
Early registration deadline: June 22, 2007
Further information via website or
email.
ORGANIZERS
Professor Dirk Van Compernolle (General Chair)
Professor Lou Boves (General Co-Chair)
c/o
Annitta De Messemaeker
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
Department of Electrical Engineering
Kasteelpark Arenberg 10
B3001 Heverlee
Belgium
Fax: +32 16 321723
Email
Website
INTERSPEECH 2008-ICSLP September 22-26, 2008, Brisbane,
Queensland, Australia Chairman: Denis Burnham, MARCS, University of West Sydney.
INTERSPEECH 2009-EUROSPEECH Brighton, UK, Chairman:
Prof. Roger Moore,
University of Sheffield.
top
FUTURE ISCA TUTORIAL AND RESEARCH WORKSHOP (ITRW)
Third ITRW on NON-LINEAR SPEECH PROCESSING (NOLISP'07) May 22-25,
2007 , Paris, France
Website
Many specifics of the speech signal are not well addressed by the conventional models currently used in the field
of speech processing. The purpose of the workshop is to present and discuss novel ideas, work and results related
to alternative techniques for speech processing, which depart from mainstream approaches.
SUBMISSION
Prospective authors are invited to submit a 3 to 4-page paper proposal in English, which will
be evaluated by the Scientific Committee. Final papers will be due 1 month after the workshop,
for inclusion in the CD-ROM proceedings. A special issue in Speech Communication (Elsevier) will follows.
KEY DATES
Submission (full paper): 15 January 2007
Notification of acceptance: 23 February 2007
Workshop: 22-25 May 2007
Final (revised) paper: 25 June
6th ISCA Speech Synthesis Research Workshop (SSW-6)
(SSW-6) University of Bonn (Germany), August 22-24, 2007 A satellite of
INTERSPEECH 2007 (Antwerp)in collaboration with SynSIG and IfK (University of Bonn)
Organized shortly after the 16th International Congress on Phonetic Sciences (Saarbrücken, Germany, August 6-10, 2007).
Like its predecessors in Autrans (France) 1990, New Paltz (NY, USA) 1994, Jenolan (Australia) 1998, Pitlochry (UK) 2001, and Pittsburgh (PA, USA) 2004, SSW-6 will cover all aspects of speech synthesis
and adjacent fields, such as
Text Analysis and Symbolic Proprocessing
Text-to-Speech and Content-to-Speech
Signal Manipulation and Concatenation
New Technologies and Methods
Synthesis of Emotions and Attitudes; Personal Speech Synthesis
Multilingual and Multimodal Speech Synthesis
Prosody Generation for Speech Synthesis
Systems and Applications
New Developments in Parametric and Articulatory Synthesis
etc., etc.
There will be invited keynote talks and regular papers. We also strongly encourage special sessions on new and emerging topics.
Important dates (prospective)
Full-paper submission (up to 6 pages) - April 15, 2007
Notification of acceptance - June 15, 2007
Deadline for paper modification - July 10, 2007
Further information can soon be obtained from the < a href="http://www.isca-speech.org/ssw6">
website of the workshop,
Contact Prof. Wolfgang Hess
8th Workshop on Discourse and Dialogue (SIGdial), Antwerp, Belgium
Antwerp, September 2-3, 2007
Held immediately following Interspeech 2007
Continuing with a series of successful workshops in Sydney, Lisbon, Boston, Sapporo, Philadelphia, Aalborg,
and Hong Kong, 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, implementation 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;
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.
Submissions
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.).
Please use the official ACL style files.
Submission/Reviewing will be managed by the START system. Link to follow.
Papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or publications must provide this information
(see submission format). SIGdial 07 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 May 2, 2007
Notification June 13, 2007
Final submissions July 6, 2007
Workshop September 2-3, 2007
Websites
Workshop website:To be announced
Submission website:To be announced
Sigdial website
Interspeech 2007 website
Email
Program Committee (confirmed)
Harry Bunt, Tilburg University, Netherlands (co-chair) Tim Paek, Microsoft Research, USA (co-chair)
Simon Keizer, Tilburg University, Netherlands (local chair) Wolfgang Minker, University of Ulm, Germany
David Traum, USC/ICT, USA
CfP-
SLaTE Workshop on Speech and Language Technology in Education
ISCA Tutorial and Research Workshop
The Summit Inn, Farmington, Pennsylvania USA October 1-3, 2007.
Website
Speech and natural language processing technologies have evolved from being emerging new technologies to being reliable techniques
that can be used in real applications. One worthwhile application is Computer-Assisted Language Learning. This is not only helpful to
the end user, the language learner, but also to the researcher who can learn more about the technology from observing its use in a real setting.
This workshop will include presentations of both research projects and real applications in the domain of speech and language technology
in education.
IMPORTANT DATES
Full paper deadline: May 1, 2007.
Notification of acceptance: July 1, 2007.
Early registration deadline: August 1, 2007.
Preliminary programme available: September 1, 2007.
Workshop will take place: October 1-3, 2007.
LOCATION
The workshop will be held in the beautiful Laurel Highlands. In early October the vegetation in the Highlands puts on a beautiful show of colors
and the weather is still not too chilly. The event will take place at the Summit Inn, situated on one of the Laurel Ridges. It is close to the Laurel Caverns
where amateur spelunkers can visit the underground caverns. The first night event will be a hayride and dinner at a local winery and the banquet will take
place at Frank Lloyd Wright’s wonderful Fallingwater.
TOPICS
The workshop will cover all topics which come under the purlieu of speech and language technology for education.
In accordance with the spirit of the ITRWs, the upcoming workshop will focus on research and results,
give information on tools and welcome prototype demons
trations of potential future applications.
The workshop will focus on research issues, applications, development tools and collaboration. It will be
concerned with all topics which fit under the purview of speech and language technology for education.
Papers will discuss theories, applications, evaluation, limitations, persistent difficulties, general research
tools and techniques. Papers that critically evaluate approaches or processing strategies will be especially
welcome, as will prototype demonstrations of real-world applications.
The scope of acceptable topic interests includes but is not limited to:
- Use of speech recognition for CALL
- Use of natural language processing for CALL
- Use of spoken language dialogue for CALL
- Applications using speech and/or natural language processing for CALL
- CALL tutoring systems
- Assessment of CALL tutors
ORGANIZATION-CONTACT
The workshop is being organized by the new ISCA Special Interest Group, SLaTE.
The general chair is Dr. Maxine Eskenazi from Carnegie Mellon University .
PROGRAMME
As per the spirit of ITRWs, the format of the workshop will consist of a non-overlapping mixture of oral, poster
and demo sessions. Internationally recognized experts from pertinent areas will deliver several keynote lectures
on topics of particular interest.
All poster sessions will be opened by an oral summary by the session chair.
A number of poster sessions will be succeeded by a discussion session focussing on the subject of the session.
The aim of this structure is to ensure a lively and valuable workshop for all involved.
Furthermore, the organizers would like to encourage researchers and industrialists to bring along
their applications, as well as prototype demonstrations and design tools where appropriate.
The official language of the workshop is English. This is to help guarantee the highest degree of
international accessibility to the workshop. At the opening of the workshop hardcopies and CD-ROM of the
abstracts and proceedings will be available.
CALL FOR PAPERS
We seek outstanding technical articles in the vein discussed above. For those who intend to submit papers,
the deadline is May 1, 2007. Following preliminary review by the committee,
notification will be sent regarding acceptance/rejection. Interested authors should send full 4 page camera-ready
papers.
REGISTRATION FEE
The fee for the workshop, including a booklet of Abstracts, the Proceedings on CD-ROM is:
- $325 for ISCA members and
- $225 for ISCA student members with valid identification
Registrations after August 1, 2007 cannot be guaranteed.
ADDITIONAL REGISTRATION INFORMATION
All meals except breakfast for the two and a half days as well as the two special events are included in this price.
Hotel accommodations are $119 per night , and breakfast is about $10. Upon request we will furnish bus transport
from the Greater Pittsburgh Airport and from Pittsburgh to Farmington at a cost of about $30. ISCA membership
is 55 Euros. You must be a member of ISCA to attend this workshop.
ITRW on Evidence-based Voice and Speech Rehabilitation in Head & Neck Oncology
May 2008, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 2008
Cancer in the head and neck area and its treatment can have debilitating effects on communication. Currently available treatment options such as radiotherapy,
surgery, chemo-radiation, or a combination of these can often be curative. However, each of these options affects parts of the vocal tract and/or voice to a more
or lesser degree. When the vocal tract or voice no longer functions optimally, this affects communication. For example, radiotherapy can result in poor voice quality,
limiting the speaker’s vocal performance (fatigue from speaking, avoidance of certain communicative situations, etc.). Surgical removal of the larynx necessitates
an alternative voicing source, which generally results in a poor voice quality, but further affects intelligibility and the prosodic structure of speech. Similarly, a
commando procedure (resection involving portions of the mandible / floor of the mouth / mobile tongue) can have a negative effect on speech intelligibility.
This 2 day tutorial and research workshop will focus on evidence-based rehabilitation of voice and speech in head and neck oncology. There will be 4 half day
sessions, 3 of which will deal with issues concerning total laryngectomy. One session will be devoted to research on rehabilitation of other head and neck cancer
sites. The chairpersons of each session will prepare a work document on the specific topic at hand (together with the two keynote lecturers assigned), which will
be discussed in a subsequent round table session. After this there will be a 30’ poster session, allowing 9-10 short presentations. Each presentation consists of
maximally 4 slides, and is meant to highlight the poster’s key points. Posters will be visited in the subsequent poster visit session. The final work document will
refer to all research presently available, discuss its (clinical) relevance, and will attempt to provide directions for future research. The combined work document,
keynote lectures and poster abstracts/papers will be published under the auspices of ISCA.
Organizers Prof. dr. Frans JM Hilgers
Prof. dr. Louis CW Pols, PhD
dr. Maya van Rossum.
Sponsoring institutions:
Institute of Phonetic Sciences - Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication,
The Netherlands Cancer Institute – Antoni van Leeuwenhoek Hospital
Dates and submission details as well as a website address will be announced in a later issue.
top
FORTHCOMING EVENTS SUPPORTED (but not organized) by ISCA
CFP-
ETSI Workshop: Speech and Noise in Wideband Communication
22nd & 23rd May 2007, at ETSI Headquarters in Sophia Antipolis, France.
As new types of voice coders, noise cancellation algorithms, transmission technologies and
consequently transmission impairments enter the scene and convergence becomes ever more a
reality, the standardization community faces new challenges.
Being organised by TC STQ, STF 294 and Mesaqin, under contract to ETSI,
the main objectives of the workshop are to:
* Discuss the status, latest advances and trends in wideband speech and audio coding, in
particular in the presence of interfering sounds and noise
* Present the results of STF 294: Improving the quality of eEurope wideband speech
applications by developing a standardised performance testing and evaluation methodology
for background noise transmission
* Exchange information and establish relationships between research, state and industrial
organizations involved in the topic
Topics that will be addressed will include speech and audio wideband coding, noise suppression and
its artefacts, and quality assessment.
A round table discussion will permit participants to offer views on the current issues and challenges
that we will be facing in the future.
Participation in the workshop is free of charge, and open to everyone.
Candidate speakers are invited to send an abstract of their presentation to Jan Holub
by Friday 16th March 2007.
For further details, consult the workshop Website
For registration please see our web
CfP-Special session at Interspeech 2007:
Novel techniques for the NATO non-native military air traffic
controller database (nn-matc)
Following a series of special interest sessions and (satellite)
workshops, at Lisbon (1995), Leusden (NL, 1999) and Aalborg (2001),
the NATO research task group on speech and language technology, RTO
IST031-RTG013, organizes a special session at Interspeech 2007. After
having studied various aspects of speech in noise, speech under
stress, and non-native speech, the research task group has been
studying the effects of all of these factors on various speech
technologies.
To this end, the task group has collected a corpus of military Air
Traffic Control communication in Belgian air space. This speech
material consists predominantly of non-native English speech, under
varying noise and channel conditions. The database has been annotated
at several levels:
* word transcriptions, which allow research to be conducted on
automatic speech recognition and named entity extraction,
* Speaker turns, identified by call signs, allowing for research
in speaker recognition and clustering and tracking of
conversations.
The database consists of 16 hours of training speech, plus one hour of
development and evaluation test sets.
The NATO research task group is making this annotated speech database
available for speech researchers, who want to develop novel algorithms
for this challenging material. These new algorithms could include
noise-robust speaker recognition, robust speaker and accent adaptation
for ASR, and context driven named entity detection. In order to
facilitate a common task, we have written a suggested test and
evaluation plan to guide researchers. At the special session we will
discuss research results on this common data set.
More information on the special session, the database and the
evaluation plan can be found on the web-site
Submission
Researchers who are interested in contributing to this special session
are invited to submit a paper according to the regular submission
procedure of INTERSPEECH 2007, and to select `Novel techniques for the
NATO non-native Air Traffic Control database' in the special session
field of the paper submission form. The paper submission deadline is
March 23, 2007.
Contact
Session organizer:
David van Leeuwen
TNO Human Factors
P. O. Box 23
3769 ZG Soesterberg
The Netherlands
CfP SPECOM 2007
The 12th International Conference on Speech and Computer
October 15-18, 2007
Organized by Moscow State Linguistic University
General Chair:
Prof. Irina Khaleeva
(Moscow State Linguistic University)
Chair:
Prof. Rodmonga Potapova
(Moscow State Linguistic University)
SPECOM'07 is the twelfth conference in the annual series of SPECOM events. It is organized by Moscow State
Linguistic University and will be held in Moscow, Russia, under the sponsorship of Russian Foundation for Basic
Research (RFBR), Ministry of Education and Science of Russian Federation, the International Speech Communication
Association (ISCA) and others.
SPECOM'07 will cover various aspects of speech science and technology. The program of the conference will
include keynote lectures by internationally renowned scientists, parallel oral and poster sessions and an
exhibition. The sci-tech exhibition that will be held during the conference will be open to companies and
research institutions.
The official language of the Conference will be English.
Important Dates
Paper submission opening
February 1, 2007
Full paper deadline
April 25, 2007
Notification of paper acceptance
May 25, 2007
Conference
October 15-18, 2007
Topics
· Speech recognition
· Speech coding and transmission
· Spoken language understanding
· Cross-lingual and multi-lingual processing
· Multimodal and multimedia signal processing
· Speaker identification and verification
· Emotional state identification
· Accent and language identification
· Speech discourse analysis and modeling
· Forensic phonetics systems
· Language and speech systems in industry
· Speech production and perception
· Spontaneous speech perception modeling
· TTS systems
· Speech dialog systems
· Conceptual models for natural spoken language
· Linguistic and paralinguistic communication strategies
· Automatic speech translation systems
· New technologies in linguadidactics
· Speech and language resources
· Perspectives of evolution of speech technologies
PAPER SUBMISSION
The deadline for full paper submission (4-6 pages) is April 25, 2007. Papers are to be sent by e-mail to
specom2007@mail.ru. All manuscripts must be in English. Please note that the size of a single letter must not
exceed 10 Megabytes (that is, the total size of all the attached files should not be greater than 7 Megabytes to
leave room for recoding operations performed by the e-mail software). In case the paper files are larger than 7
Megabytes, it is recommended to pack them into a split WinRar or WinZip archive and send part by part in a
series of letter.
All the papers will be reviewed by an international scientific committee. Each author will be notified by
e-mail of the acceptance or rejection of her/his paper by May 30, 2007. Minor updates of accepted papers will be
allowed during May 30 - June 15, 2007.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
Submission of a paper or poster is more likely to be accepted if it is original, innovative, and contributes to
the practice of worldwide scientific communication. Quality of work, clarity and completeness of the submitted
materials will be considered.
REGISTRATION
Registration will be available at the Conference on arrival.
The registration fees are planned to be approximately as follows:
Regular
500 EUR
Students/PG Students
200 EUR
NIS (New Independent States), Regular
300 EUR
NIS, Students/PG Students
100 EUR
Russia, Regular
150 EUR
Russia, Students/PG Students (no Proceedings)
Free
Extra Copy of Proceedings (hard copy)
20 EUR
Extra Proceedings CD/DVD
10 EUR
Information regarding accommodation costs will be available later.
All the registration and accommodation payments will be accepted in cash during the registration procedure on
arrival.
PAPER PREPARATION GUIDELINES
In the following you will find guidelines for preparing your full paper to SPECOM'07 electronically.
· To achieve the best viewing experience both for the Proceedings and the CD (or DVD), we strongly
encourage you to use Times Roman font. This is needed in order to give the Proceedings a uniform look. Please
use the attached printable version of this newsletter as a model.
· Authors are requested to submit PDF files of their manuscripts, generated from the original Microsoft
Word sources. PDF files can be generated with commercially available tools or with free software such as
PDFCreator.
· Paper Title - The paper title must be in boldface. All non-function words must be capitalized, and all
other words in the title must be lower case. The paper title is centered.
· Authors' Names - The authors' names (italicized) and affiliations (not italicized) appear centered
below the paper title.
· Abstract - Each paper must contain an abstract that appears at the beginning of the paper.
· Major Headings - Major headings are in boldface.
· Sub Headings - Sub headings appear like major headings, except that they are in italics and not bold
face.
· References - Number and list all references at the end of the paper. The references are numbered in
order of appearance in the document. When referring to them in the text, type the corresponding reference number
in square brackets as shown at the end of this sentence [1].
· Illustrations - Illustrations must appear within the designated margins, and must be positioned within
the paper margins. Caption and number every illustration. All half-tone or color illustrations must be clear
when printed in black and white. Line drawings must be made in black ink on white paper.
· Do NOT include headers and footers. The page numbers, session numbers and conference identification
will be inserted automatically in a post processing step, at the time of printing the Proceedings.
· Apart from the paper in PDF format, authors can upload multimedia files to illustrate their submission.
Multimedia files can be used to include materials such as sound files or movies. The proceedings CD (DVD) will
NOT contain readers or players, so only widely accepted file formats should be used, such as MPEG, Windows WAVE
PCM (.wav) or Windows Media Video (.wmv), using only standard codecs to maximize compatibility. Authors must
ensure that they have sufficient author rights to the material that they submit for publication. Archives (RAR,
ZIP or ARJ format) are allowed. The archives will be unpacked on the CD (DVD), so that authors can refer to the
file name of the multimedia illustration from within their paper. The submitted files will be accessible from
the abstract card on the CD (DVD) and via a bookmark in the manuscript. We advise to use SHORT but meaningful
file names. The total unzipped size of the multimedia files should be reasonable. It is recommended that they do
not exceed 32 Megabytes.
· Although no copyright forms are required, the authors must agree that their contribution, when
accepted, will be archived by the Organizing Committee.
· Authors must proofread their manuscripts before submission and they must proofread the exact files
which they submit.
POSTERS AND PRESENTATIONS
Only electronic presentations are accepted. PowerPoint presentations can be supplied on CD, DVD, FD or USB
Flash drives.
Designated poster space will be wooden or felt boards. The space allotted to one speaker will measure 100 cm
(width) x 122 cm (height). Posters will be attached to the boards using pushpins. Pins will be provided.
Thanks for following all of these instructions carefully!
If you have any questions or comments concerning the submission, please don't hesitate to contact the
conference organizers.
Please address all technical issues or questions regarding paper submission or presentation to our technical
assistant < a href="mailto:specomtech@yandex.ru">Nikolay Bobrov .
CFP IEEE ASRU 2007
Automatic Speech Recognition and Understanding Workshop
The Westin Miyako Kyoto, Japan
December 9 -13, 2007
Conference website
The tenth biannual IEEE workshop on Automatic Speech Recognition and
Understanding (ASRU) cooperated by ISCA will be held during December
9-13, 2007. The ASRU workshops have a tradition of bringing together
researchers from academia and industry in an intimate and collegial
setting to discuss problems of common interest in automatic speech
recognition and understanding.
WORKSHOP TOPICS
Papers in all areas of human language technology are encouraged to be
submitted, with emphasis placed on:
- automatic speech recognition and understanding technology
- speech to text systems
- spoken dialog systems
- multilingual language processing
- robustness in ASR
- spoken document retrieval
- speech-to-speech translation
- spontaneous speech processing
- speech summarization,
- new applications of ASR.
SUBMISSIONS FOR THE TECHNICAL PROGRAM
The workshop program will consist of invited lectures, oral and poster
presentations, and panel discussions. Prospective authors are invited to
submit full-length, 4-6 page papers, including figures and references,
to the ASRU 2007 website . All papers will be
handled and reviewed electronically. The website will provide you with
further details. Please note that the submission dates for papers are
strict deadlines.
TENTATIVE DATES
July, 2007 Camera-ready submission deadline
August, 2007 Paper acceptance/rejection notices emailed
September, 2007 Demonstration proposal deadline
October, 2007 Workshop advance registration deadline
December 9-13, 2007 Workshop
REGISTRATION AND INFORMATION
Registration will be handled via the ASRU 2007 website .
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
General Chairs:
Sadaoki Furui (Tokyo Inst. Tech.)
Tatsuya Kawahara (Kyoto Univ.)
Technical Chairs:
Jean-Claude Junqua (Panasonic)
Helen Meng (Chinese Univ. Hong Kong)
Satoshi Nakamura (ATR)
Publication Chair:
Timothy Hazen, MIT, USA
Publicity Chair:
Tomoko Matsui, ISM, Japan
Demonstration Chair:
Kazuya Takeda, Nagoya U, Japan
Call for Papers (Preliminary version)
Speech Prosody 2008 Campinas, Brazil,
May 6-9, 2008
Speech Prosody 2008 will be the fourth conference of a series of international events of the Special Interest Groups on Speech Prosody (ISCA), starting by the one held in Aix-en Provence, France, in 2002. The conferences in Nara, Japan (2004), and in Dresden, Germany (2006) followed the proposal of biennial meetings, and now is the time of changing place and hemisphere by trying the challenge of offering a non-stereotypical view of Brazil. It is a great pleasure for our labs to host the fourth International Conference on Speech Prosody in Campinas, Brazil, the second major city of the State of São Paulo.
It is worth highlighting that prosody covers a multidisciplinary area of research involving scientists from very different backgrounds and traditions, including linguistics and phonetics, conversation analysis, semantics and pragmatics, sociolinguistics, acoustics, speech synthesis and recognition, cognitive psychology, neuroscience, speech therapy, language teaching, and related fields. Information: sp2008_info@iel.unicamp.br. Web site: http://sp2008.org.
We invite all participants to contribute with papers presenting original research from all areas of speech prosody, especially, but nor limited to the following.
Scientific Topics
Prosody and the Brain
Long-Term Voice Quality
Intonation and Rhythm Analysis and Modelling
Syntax, Semantics, Pragmatics and Prosody
Cross-linguistic Studies of Prosody
Prosodic variability
Prosody in Discourse
Dialogues and Spontaneous Speech
Prosody of Expressive Speech
Perception of Prosody
Prosody in Speech Synthesis
Prosody in Speech Recognition and Understanding
Prosody in Language Learning and Acquisition
Pathology of Prosody and Aids for the Impaired
Prosody Annotation in Speech Corpora
Others (please, specify)
Organising institutions
Speech Prosody Studies Group, IEL/Unicamp | Lab. de Fonética, FALE/UFMG | LIACC, LAEL, PUC-SP
Important Dates
Call for Papers: May 15, 2007
Full Paper Submission: Sept. 30, 2007
Notif. of Acceptance: Nov. 30, 2007
Early Registration: Dec. 20, 2007
Conference: May 6-9, 2008
top
FUTURE SPEECH SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY EVENTS
International Conference on Information Sciences, Signal
Processing and their Applications (ISSPA 2007) ISSPA 2007 marks
the 20th anniversary of launching the first ISSPA in 1987 in Brisbane,
Australia. Since its inception, ISSPA has provided, through a series of 8
symposia, a high quality forum for engineers and scientists engaged in
research and development of Signal and Image Processing theory and
applications. Effective 2007, ISSPA will extend its scope to add the new
track of information sciences. Hence, the intention that the previous full
name of ISSPA is replaced after 2007 by the following new full name:
International Conference on Information Sciences, Signal Processing and
their Applications. ISSPA is an IEEE indexed conference. ISSPA 2007
will be organized between February 12 to 15, 2007 in Sharjah, United Arab
Emirates (UAE) by three prominent institutions located in Sharjah in the
United Arab Emirates: University of Sharjah, American University of
Sharjah, and Etisalat University College. The regular technical program
will run for three days along with an exhibition of signal processing and
information sciences products. In addition, tutorial sessions will be held
on the first day of the symposium. Topics Papers are invited
in, but not limited to, the following topics: 1.Filter Design Theory
and Methods 2. Multirate Filtering & Wavelets 3.Adaptive Signal
Processing 4.Time-Frequency/Time-Scale Analysis 5.Statistical Signal
& Array Processing 6.Radar & Sonar Processing 7.Speech
Processing & Recognition 8.Fractals and Chaos Signal
Processing 9.Signal Processing in Communications 10.Signal
processing in Networking 11. Multimedia Signal Processing 12.
Nonlinear signal processing 13.Biomedical Signal and Image
Processing 14.Image and Video Processing 15.Image Segmentation and
Scene Analysis 16. VLSI for Signal and Image
Processing 17.Cryptology, Steganography, and Digital
Watermarking 18. Image indexing & retrieval 19.Soft Computing
& Pattern Recognition 20. Natural Language Processing 21.Signal
Processing for Bioinformatics 22. Signal Processing for
Geoinformatics 23.Biometric Systems and Security 24.Machine
Vision 25.Data visualization 26. Data mining 27. Sensor Networks
and Sensor Fusion 28.Signal Processing and Information Sciences
Education 29.Others How to submit? Prospective authors are
invited to submit full length (four pages) papers for presentation in any
of the areas listed above (indicate area in your submission). We also
encourage the submission of proposal for student session, tutorial and
sessions on special topics. All articles submitted to ISSPA 2007 will be
peer-reviewed using a blind review process. For more details and
submission of papers please see : conference website Important
Dates Full Paper Submission: September 15, 2006
Tutorials/Special Sessions Proposals: September 15,
2006 Notification of Paper Acceptance: November 15, 2006 Final
Accepted Paper Submission: December 1, 2006 Conference: February 12 to
15, 2007 Contact person: Dr Mohammed Al-Mualla ISSPA07
Publicity Chair
ICASSP 2007 2007 IEEE International Conference on
Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing April 15-20, 2007 Honolulu,
Hawaii, U.S.A. conference
website Tutorial Proposals Due August 4, 2006 Special Session
and Panel Proposals Due August 4, 2006 Notification of Special Session
& Tutorial Acceptance September 8, 2006 TOPICS * Audio
and electroacoustics * Bio imaging and signal processing * Design and
implementation of signal processing systems * Image and
multidimensional signal processing * Industry technology tracks *
Information forensics and security * Machine learning for signal
processing * Multimedia signal processing * Sensor array and
multichannel systems * Signal processing education * Signal
processing for communications * Signal processing theory and
methods * Speech processing * Spoken language
processing Submission of Papers Prospective authors are
invited to submit full-length, four-page papers , including figures and
references, to the ICASSP Technical Committee. All ICASSP papers will be
handled and reviewed electronically. Please note that the submission dates
for papers are strict deadlines. Tutorial, Special Session, and
Panel Proposals Tutorials will be held on April 15 and 16, 2007.
Brief proposals should be submitted by August 4, 2006, to Hideaki Sakai by
email and must include
title, outline, contact information for the presenter, and a description
of the tutorial and material to be distributed to participants together
with a short biography of the presenter and a list of publications related
to the proposal. Special session and panel proposals should be submitted
by August 4, 2006, to Phil Chou through the the ICASSP 2007 website and
must include a topical title, rationale, session outline, contact
information, and a list of invited speakers. Important
Deadlines Tutorial Proposals Due: August 4, 2006 Special
Session and Panel Proposals Due: August 4, 2006 Notification of Special
Session & Tutorial Acceptance: September 8, 2006 Submission of
Camera-Ready Papers: September 29, 2006 Notification of Acceptance (by
email): December 15, 2006 Author's Registration Deadline: February 2,
2007 Chairs General Chairs K. J. Ray Liu, University of
Maryland, College Park Todd Reed, University of Hawaii Technical
Program Chairs Anthony Kuh, University of Hawaii Yih-Fang Huang,
University of Notre Dame
NAACL HLT 2007 Preliminary Call for Papers
Human Language Technologies:
The Conference of the North American Chapter of
the Association for Computational Linguistics
April 22-27, 2007, Rochester, New York
Conference website
General Conference Chair: Candace Sidner (Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories)
Program Co-Chairs:
Tanja Schultz (Carnegie Mellon University)
Matthew Stone (Rutgers University)
ChengXiang Zhai (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Local Arrangements: James Allen, Len Schubert, and Dan Gildea (University of Rochester)
NAACL HLT 2007 continues the tradition of the combined Human Language Technology
Conferences (HLT) and North American Chapter of the Association for Computational
Linguistics (NAACL) Annual Meetings begun in 2003. The conference covers a broad
spectrum of disciplines working towards enabling intelligent systems to interact
with humans using natural language, and towards enhancing human-human communication
through services such as speech recognition, automatic translation, information retrieval,
text summarization, and information extraction. NAACL HLT 2007 will feature full papers,
late-breaking (short) papers, demonstrations, and a doctoral consortium, as well as
pre- and post-conference tutorials and workshops. The conference is organized by
the North American Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (NAACL),
who is advised by a board representing the IR and speech communities and North American
HLT funding agencies.
Topics of Interest:
The conference invites the submission of papers on substantial, original, and unpublished
research in disciplines that could impact human language processing systems, with a
special focus on theories and methods that enable compelling combinations of human
language technologies (e.g., Speech with Information Retrieval, Machine Translation
with Speech, Question Answering with Natural Language Processing, etc.). Topics of interest
include but are not limited to:
- Computational analysis of language
Phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, dialogue, discourse, style
- Speech processing, including:
Speech recognition and speech generation
Rich transcription: automatic annotation of information structure and sources in speech
- Information retrieval, text classification, and information filtering/recommendation
Text data mining, information extraction, text summarization, and question answering
- Multimodal representations and processing
- Statistical and learning techniques for language, including
Corpus-based language modeling
Lexical and knowledge acquisition
- Development of language resources, including
Lexicons and ontologies
Treebanks, proposition banks, and frame banks
- Language generation and text planning
- Multilingual processing, including
Machine translation of speech and text
Cross-language information retrieval
Multi-lingual speech recognition and language identification
- Intelligent systems for natural language interaction, including
Conversational systems for collaboration, tutoring and behavioral intervention
Embodied conversational agents, virtual humans and human-robot conversation
Language-enhanced platforms for interactive narrative and digital entertainment
- Evaluation, including
Glass-box evaluation of HLT systems and system components
Black-box evaluation of HLT systems in application settings
Submission information:
Full papers: Submissions must describe original, completed, unpublished work and
should follow the two-column format of ACL proceedings without exceeding eight pages,
including references. Each submission will be judged chiefly on the strength of
the argument it provides in support of its contribution, through e.g. experimental
evaluation, theoretical analysis, or critical engagement with HLT. Reviewing will
be double-blind; each submission will be reviewed by at least three program
committee members.
Late-breaking (short) papers: Submissions describing original, unpublished work
can be submitted as short papers with a later deadline. The submissions should
follow the two-column format of ACL proceedings without exceeding four pages,
including references. Reviewing will be double-blind; each submission will be
reviewed by at least two program committee members. Short paper submissions
may be accepted for oral presentation in plenary OR for presentation in a poster session.
Demonstration, doctoral consortium, tutorial, and workshop proposals: Submission
instructions will be available later.
Multiple-submission policy: Papers that have been or will be submitted to other
meetings or publications must provide this information at submission time. In the
event of multiple acceptances, authors must notify the program chairs by
January 5, 2007, indicating which meeting they choose for presentation of their work.
HLT-NAACL 2007 cannot accept for publication work that will be (or has been)
published elsewhere.
Important Dates
Oct 13, 2006 Full paper submissions due
Dec 22, 2006 Full paper notification of acceptance
Jan 18, 2007 Short paper submissions due
Feb 22, 2007 Short Paper notification of acceptance
Mar 5, 2007 Camera-ready full/short papers due
Apr 22-28, 2007 Conference
For more information.
Rochester:
NAACL-HLT 2007 - Call for Doctoral Consortium
Web info
April 22, 2007
Rochester, NY
Application Deadline: Jan 18, 2007
1. Call for Participation
Following the success of last year, the Doctoral Consortium at
NAACL-HLT 2007 will provide an opportunity for a group of senior
Ph.D. students to discuss and explore their research and career
objectives with a panel of established researchers in the fields of
natural language processing, speech technology, and information
retrieval. The event is also an opportunity for students to develop
the skills necessary to effectively communicate one's research in
preparation for future job talks.
The Doctoral Consortium will be held as a workshop on April 22, 2007,
immediately before the start of the main conference. Students will
present their work and get feedback from a panel of experienced
researchers. The event will also include a panel presentation on
professional development topics relevant to students pursuing research
careers in academia or industry.
Students will participate in a poster session held during the main
conference and will have a short paper discussing their research
published in the companion volume of the proceedings. Each student's
professional biography, research abstract, and photograph will also be
included in a face book to be distributed to all attendees of the
main NAACL-HLT 2007 conference.
The consortium has the following objectives: (1) to provide feedback
on participants' research and on the presentation of their work to
others; (2) to develop a supportive community of scholars; (3) to
support a new generation of researchers with information and advice on
academic, research, industrial, and non-traditional career paths; and
(4) to contribute to the NAACL-HLT conference goals through
interaction with other researchers and participation in conference
events.
There is a possibility that students who participate in the Doctoral
Consortium may be able to receive an allowance for basic conference
registration, travel, and hotel. The Doctoral Consortium organizers
are currently applying for funding for such travel support. Updates
will be available on the
Doctoral Consortium website.
NAACL-HLT 2007 continues the combination of the Human Language
Technology Conferences (HLT) and North American Chapter of the
Association for Computational Linguistics (NAACL) Annual Meetings
begun in 2003. Human language technology incorporates a broad spectrum
of disciplines working to enable natural language human-computer
interaction, and providing services such as speech recognition,
automatic translation, information retrieval, text summarization, and
information extraction. For
further information on the main
conference.
2. Eligibility for Participation
The event is designed for senior Ph.D. students who are in the last
few years of their doctoral program (who have already settled on a
research direction and who have likely already submitted a thesis
proposal). Students who are conducting research on all aspects of
human language processing are invited to apply. Topics include (but
are not limited to):
+ Computational analysis of language
- Phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, dialogue,
discourse, and style
+ Speech processing, including:
- Speech recognition and speech generation
- Rich transcription: automatic annotation of information structure
and sources in speech
+ Information retrieval, text classification, and information
filtering/recommendation
- Text data mining, information extraction, text summarization, and
question answering
+ Multimodal representations and processing
+ Statistical and learning techniques for language, including
- Corpus-based language modeling
- Lexical and knowledge acquisition
+ Development of language resources, including
- Lexicons and ontologies
- Treebanks, proposition banks, and frame banks
+ Language generation and text planning
+ Multilingual processing, including
- Machine translation of speech and text
- Cross-language information retrieval
- Multi-lingual speech recognition and language identification
+ Intelligent systems for natural language interaction, including
- Conversational systems for collaboration, tutoring and behavioral
intervention
- Embodied conversational agents, virtual humans and human-robot
conversation
- Language-enhanced platforms for interactive narrative and digital
entertainment
+ Evaluation, including
- Glass-box evaluation of HLT systems and system components
- Black-box evaluation of HLT systems in application settings
As part of the application process, students will submit a short paper
summarizing their research goals, completed work, and future
directions. This paper should be the basis for the student's
presentation at the Doctoral Consortium event, which should follow the
format of an abbreviated job talk. Thus, the paper should give an
overview of the student's research and highlight his or her
contributions; the paper may include citations to previous
publications that describe more specific aspects of the student's
research.
The short papers accepted for presentation at the Doctoral Consortium
cannot be presented or have been presented at any other meeting with
publicly available proceedings. Papers that are being submitted to
other conferences must indicate this immediately after the title
material on the first page.
Students who are submitting papers on specific portions of their work
to the main conference are also invited to apply to the Doctoral
Consortium. In this case, the short paper for the Doctoral Consortium
must give an overview of the student's dissertation research, and the
paper for the main conference should focus on a specific piece of this
work.
3. Application Procedure
Applications should contain the following four elements:
(1) A cover letter (under 2-pages) describing the student's progress
in his or her degree program, expected date of graduation, plans after
graduation, and what he or she hopes to gain from the Doctoral
Consortium. The letter should contain the student's name, department,
school, contact information, name of advisor, advisor's e-mail
address, and a short statement affirming that the student meets the
eligibility requirements specified in Section 2 of this Call for
Participation.
(2) The student's Curriculum Vitae (including a list of publications).
(3) A short paper written by the student summarizing his or her
research goals, completed work, and future directions. This paper
should be the basis for the student's presentation at the Doctoral
Consortium event, and it should give an overview of the student's
research and highlight his or her major contributions.
(4) A letter of recommendation from the student's advisor. The
student's advisor should produce a PDF file of the recommendation
letter and e-mail it by
Jan 18, 2007.
The student should send email by
Jan 18, 2007, with three attachments in PDF format: the cover letter,
the Curriculum Vitae, and the short paper.
The short paper should follow the format of "short papers" submitted
to the main NAACL-HLT 2007 conference. It should follow the
two-column format of NAACL/ACL proceedings and should not exceed four
(4) pages, including references. We strongly recommend the use of ACL
LaTeX or Microsoft Word style files tailored for this year's
conference. They will be available through the Doctoral Consortium
homepage (listed below). A description of the format will also be
available in case you are unable to use the style files directly.
Papers must conform to the official NAACL-HLT 2007 style guidelines,
and we reserve the right to reject submissions that do not conform to
these styles including font size restrictions. Submissions should be
in PDF format and must include all fonts, so that the paper will print
(not just view) anywhere.
Further details on the submission procedure and formatting
instructions may be found at the
Doctoral Consortium homepage.
If students are accepted to the Doctoral Consortium, they will also be
asked to submit a short professional biography, research abstract, and
photograph to be included in the face book to be distributed to all
participants at the NAACL-HLT 2007 conference. Detailed formatting
guidelines for the preparation of the final camera-ready copy will be
provided to authors with their acceptance notice.
4. Important Dates
All application materials must be received by 11:59pm (23:59) PST
(Pacific Standard Time) on Jan 18, 2007. Late submissions will be
automatically disqualified. Acknowledgment will be e-mailed soon
after receipt.
Application deadline: Jan 18, 2007
Notification of acceptance: Feb 22, 2007
Camera-ready papers due: Mar 5, 2007
Doctoral Consortium Event: April 22, 2007
NAACL-HLT 2007 Conference: April 22-27, 2007
5. Contact Information
Doctoral Consortium Co-chairs:
Jackson Liscombe (Columbia University)
Phil Michalak (University of Rochester)
Contact the co-chairs of the Doctoral Consortium.
Faculty Advisor:
Julia Hirschberg (Columbia University)
NAACL HLT 2007-
CALL FOR DEMONSTRATIONS
Rochester, New York, USA
Conference: April 22-27, 2007
Submission deadline: Jan 18, 2007
http://www.cs.rochester.edu/meetings/hlt-naacl07/
Demo Co-Chairs:
Bob Carpenter, Alias I, Inc.
Amanda Stent, Stony Brook University
Jason D. Williams, AT&T Labs - Research
Proposals are invited for the NAACL HLT 2007 Demonstrations Program.
This program is aimed at offering first-hand experience with new
systems, providing opportunities to exchange ideas gained from creating
systems, and collecting feedback from expert users. It is primarily
intended to encourage the early exhibition of research prototypes, but
interesting mature systems are also eligible.
Accepted proposals will be presented during the NAACL HLT 2007
Demonstrations Program. In addition, a plenary session in the NAACL HLT
main conference will be reserved for proposals of exceptional quality
and of broad interest.
Submission of a demonstration proposal on a particular topic does not
preclude or require a separate submission of a paper on that topic; it
is possible that some but not all of the demonstrations will illustrate
concepts that are described in companion papers.
AREAS OF INTEREST
We encourage the submission of proposals for demonstrations of
software and hardware related to all areas of human language technology.
Areas of interest include, but are not limited to, natural language,
speech, and retrieval systems for:
- Speech recognition and generation;
- Speech retrieval and summarization;
- Rich transcription of speech;
- Interactive dialogue;
- Information retrieval, filtering, and extraction;
- Document classification, clustering, and summarization;
- Language modeling, text mining, and question answering;
- Machine translation;
- Multilingual and cross-lingual processing;
- Multimodal user interface;
- Mobile language-enabled devices;
- Tools for Ontology, Lexicon, or other NLP resource development;
- Methods for evaluation;
- Unusual techniques, or applications to other domains.
Please refer to the NAACL HLT 2007 CFP
for
a more detailed but not necessarily an exhaustive list of relevant
topics. (also above in this ISCApad)
SUBMISSION FORMAT
A demo proposal should consist of the following parts:
- An extended abstract of up to two pages, including the title,
authors, full contact information, and technical content to be
demonstrated. It should give an overview of what the demonstration is
aimed to achieve, how the demonstration illustrates novel ideas or
late-breaking results, and how it relates to other systems or projects
described in the context of other research (i.e., references to related
literature).
- A detailed requirement description of hardware, software, and
network access expected to be provided by the local organizer.
Demonstrators are encouraged to be flexible in their requirements
(possibly preparing different demos for different logistical
situations). Please state what you can bring yourself and what you
absolutely must be provided with. We will do our best to provide
equipment and resources but at this point we cannot guarantee anything
beyond the space and power supply.
- A concise outline of the demo script, including the accompanying
narrative, and either a web address to access the demo or visual aids
(e.g., screen-shots, snapshots, or sketches). The demo script should be
no more than 6 pages.
The demo abstract must be submitted electronically in the Portable
Document Format (PDF). It should follow the format guidelines for the
main conference papers. Authors are encouraged to use the style files
provided on the NAACL HLT 2007 website.
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE
Demo proposals should be submitted electronically to the demo ]
co-chairs at naaclhlt2007demos@gmail.com.
REVIEWING
Demo proposals will be evaluated on the basis of their relevance to
the conference, innovation, presentation, and potential logistical
constraints. Demonstrations will also be evaluated on the underlying
techniques or science they illustrate, but will not be expected to
contribute new approaches.
PUBLICATION
The accepted demo abstracts will be published in the Companion Volume
to the Proceedings of the NAACL HLT 2007 Conference.
FURTHER DETAILS
Further details on the date, time, and format of the demonstration
session(s) will be determined and provided at a later date. Please send
any inquiries to the demo co-chairs at naaclhlt2007demos@gmail.com.
Please check
for latest
updates.
IMPORTANT DATES
Jan 18, 2007 Submission deadline
Feb 22, 2007 Notification of acceptance
Mar 1, 2007 Submission of final demo related literature
Apr 22-27, 2007 Conference
All submissions or camera-ready copies are due by 11:59pm EST on the =
date specified above.
Colloque parole-Laboratoire des sciences de la
parole- Charleroi - Parentville (Belgique)
A l'occasion de l'inauguration de leur "Laboratoire des sciences de la
parole" Didier Demolin et Bernard Harmegnies organisent les 30 et 31
mars 2007 les premières "Journées des sciences de la parole", à
Charleroi - Parentville (Belgique).
Date limite pour la soumission des contributions : 12 février 2007.
Thèmes: synthèse de parole, origine des langues, imagerie et parole,
phonétique, phonologie, méthodes et techniques d'étude de la production
et de la perception de la parole, didactique de l'oral, développement du
langage, sociolinguistique, etc.
Informations: Website .
Contacts:Email
Bourses AFCP disponibles.
2nd CFP 1st INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON LANGUAGE AND AUTOMATA THEORY AND APPLICATIONS (LATA 2007)
Tarragona Spain March 29 - April 4 2007
Website
Extended submission deadline: December 7th, 2006
AIMS
2007 intends to become a major conference in theoretical computer s
cience and its applications. As linked to the International PhD School
in Formal Languages and Applications that is being developed at the hos
t institute since 2001, it will reserve significant room for young com
puter scientists at the beginning of their career. LATA 2007 will aim
at attracting scholars from both classical theory fields and application
areas (bioinformatics,systems biology,language technology,arti
ficial intelligence, etc)
SCOPE
Topics of either theoretical or applied interest include but are not
limited to
- words, languages and automata
- grammars (Chomsky hierarchy contextual, multidimensional, unifi
cation, categorial, etc)
- grammars and automata architectures
- combinatorics on words
- language varieties and semigroups
- algebraic language theory
- computability
- computational,descriptional, communication and parameterized comp
lexity
- patterns and codes
- regulated rewriting
- trees, tree languages and tree machines
- term rewriting
- graphs and graph transformation
- power series
- fuzzy and rough languages
- cellular automata
- DNA and other models of bio-inspired computing
- quantum=2C chemical and optical computing
- biomolecular nanotechnology
- automata and logic
- automata for verification
- automata, concurrency and Petri nets
- parsing
- weighted machines
- foundations of finite state technology
- grammatical inference and learning
- symbolic neural networks
- text retrieval and pattern recognition
- string and combinatorial issues in computational biology and bioinform
atics
- mathematical evolutionary genomics
- language-based cryptography
- compression
- circuit theory and applications
- language theoretic foundations of artificial intelligence and artifici
al life
STRUCTURE
LATA 2007 will consist of
- 2 invited tutorials
- refereed contributions
- open sessions for discussion in specific subfields
- young sessions on professional issues
INVITED SPEAKERS
Volker Diekert (UStuttgart), Equations: From Words to Graph Products
(tutorial)
Nissim Francez and Michael Kaminski (Technion) ,Extensions of Pregroup
Grammars and Their Correlated Automata
Eric Graedel (RWTH Aachen), Infinite Games (tutorial)
Neil Immerman (UMass.Amherst),Nested Words
Helmut Jorgensen (UWestern Ontario), Synchronization and Codes (tent
ative title)
SUBMISSIONS
Authors are invited to submit papers presenting original and unpublished
research. Papers should not exceed 12 pages and should be formatted a
ccording to the usual LNCS article style=2E Submissions have to be sent
through the webpage
IMPORTANT DATES
Paper submission: extended to December 7th, 2006
Application for funding (PhD students):December 15 2006
Notification of funding acceptance or rejection: December 31,2006
Notification of paper acceptance or rejection: January 31 2007
Early registration: February 15 2007
Final version of the paper for the pre-proceedings: February 28 2007
Starting of the conference: March 29 2007
Submission to the proceedings volume: May 15 2007
Bridging the Gap: Academic and Industrial Research in Dialog Technology
April 26, 2007
Rochester, NY
Call for Papers
In the recent years, we have seen rapid adoption of dialog systems in commercial applications. They range from
telephone-based services, in-car interactive systems, to online conversational service agents and talking
characters in computer games. Open-standard platforms such as VoiceXML have been adopted by the industry, and
become the driving force for the faster adoption of dialog applications.
The widespread dialog applications in industry setting pose challenges for researchers in both industrial and
academic worlds. Progress from academic world has not benefited the real world applications to a satisfactory extent.
This is partly due to different research interests and priorities from the two camps: one is heavily driven by
imminent daily needs from the end customers; the other is largely driven by academic curiosity towards understanding
the nature of human-human and human-machine dialogs. The two research agenda lead to somewhat different performance
and evaluation metrics.
The purpose of this one day workshop is to provide a forum to bring industrial and academic researchers
together to share their experiences and visions in the dialog technology development, and to identify topics that are
of interest to both camps.
Topics
We invite submissions of papers covering the full range of dialog systems. Topics of interest include (but are
not limited to):
Robustness and error handling in dialog systems
Adaptive dialog systems
Scalability of dialog systems
Domain portability issues
Methodology and tools for use case and dialog flow design
Performance evaluation methods and metrics
Comparison of statistical and non-statistical approaches in terms of effort and performance
Challenging issues for the future research
The application and limitations of open standards such as VoiceXML and SALT
In depth discussion of dialog systems successfully deployed in industrial applications,
which include but are not limited to:
Call centers
Internet service
Automotive
Mobile devices
Computer games
Desktop applications
Other topics
Submissions
We invite academic and industrial researchers and practitioners to submit original research papers,
well-written surveys, or papers describing deployed systems to the workshop. The papers must not exceed
8 pages in length including references and should be prepared using the HLT-NAACL format. The reviewing process
will be blind, so authors' names, affiliations, and all self-references should not be included in the paper.
Submissions should be sent through the HLT submission page (http://www.softconf.com/hlt/wsdialog/).
Important Dates:
Submission Deadline: January 15, 2007
Acceptance Notification: February 17, 2007
Camera-ready Copy: February 24, 2007
Workshop Date: April 26, 2007
Organizing Committee
Fuliang Weng, Bosch Research
Ye-Yi Wang, Microsoft Corporation
Gokhan Tur, SRI International
Junling Hu, Bosch Research
Program Committee
James Allen, University of Rochester
Mark Fanty, Nuance Communications
Sadaoki Furui, Tokyo Institute of Technology
Dilek Hakkani-Tur, ICSI, UC Berkeley
Juan Huerta, T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM
Michael Johnston, AT&T Labs
Yun-Cheng Ju, Microsoft Research, Microsoft
Dekang Lin, Google Labs, Google
Helen Meng, CUHK
Tim Peak, Microsoft Research, Microsoft
Stanley Peters, Stanford University
Roberto Pieracini, SpeechCycle
Stephanie Seneff, MIT
Lenhart Schubert, University of Rochester
Steve Young, Cambridge University
Question and Comments: Please contact Fuliang Weng
CALL FOR PAPERS AND INTERACTIVE DEMONSTRATIONS--
A C[H]ORD: VOCAL INTERACTION IN ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGIES,
GAMES, AND MORE
to be held as an official part of the CHI 2007 conference on Sunday,
29 April 2007 in San Jose, California, and we cordially invite you
to take part in it.
Website
The research on vocal interaction has primarily been focused on the
use of systems for speech recognition and synthesis. While speech
recognition and synthesis can be successfully used in various
domains, they can be unsuitable for certain scenarios such as in
applications requiring immediate and continuous control and those
involving users with speech impairments.
This workshop aims to discuss the state-of-the-art in vocal
interaction methods that go beyond word recognition by exploiting
the information within non-verbal vocalizations. Among others, we
will discuss different ways in which non-verbal vocal parameters
(e.g. pitch, volume, timbre, etc.) may be used as either primary or
additional source of input into interactive systems.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* Demonstration of systems or interaction techniques incorporating
non-verbal vocal interaction
* Augmentation or emulation of conventional input devices
* Applications in assistive technologies, education, entertainment, and art
* Speech and language therapy and disability compensation
* Psychological aspects of non-verbal interaction
* Physiological limitations, such as resolution of vocal parameters
or fatigue that may occur when producing the sounds
* Social and cross-cultural issues
Short, 4-page position papers addressing topics of the workshop will
be reviewed by an international program committee and selected based
on their quality, innovation, and the potential for fostering
discussion.
Contributors to this workshop will be invited to submit an
extended paper for a special issue of the journal UNIVERSAL ACCESS
IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY.
The workshop will be a full-day event and will consist of
presentations of position papers, demonstration of systems, as well
as group discussions. At least one author of an accepted paper needs
to register for the workshop and for at least one day of the
conference (either day from Monday to Thursday).
Please visit our website for the list of
the program committee members.
IMPORTANT DATES
Papers due: 12 January 2007 (5pm Pacific Time)
Acceptance / rejection notices: 1 February 2007
Camera-ready papers: 15 February 2007
Registration deadline: 9 April 2007
Workshop held: 29 April 2007
Main program of CHI 2007: 30 April -- 3 May 2007
Journal paper manuscripts due: 31 May 2007
Journal publication: Late 2007
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Please set your papers in the 2-column ACM format. LaTeX and MS Word
templates are available
here or here
Your paper should not exceed the length of four pages.
Please send your papers in PDF format by
email. Your submissions need not be
anonymized.
Additionally, you are encouraged to submit video(s) of your system
that demonstrates its functionality and interaction methods. Please
do not send this file as attachment to your message. Instead, please
put the file on a non-public WWW page and send us its URL. Your video
should not exceed 50 MB of file size and 5 minutes of length.
Don't hesitate to contact us regarding any questions or concerns.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Workshop organizers:
common e-mail address
Adam J Sporka , (Czech Technical University in Prague);
telephone (+420) 603-287-605 (CET zone)
Susumu Harada (University of Washington)
Sri H Kurniawan /A>(University of Manchester)
Workshop website
CHI 2007 website for workshop participants
Last CFP-Fifth International Workshop on
Content-Based Multimedia Indexing, CBMI-2007
June 25-27, 2007, Bordeaux, France
The Workshop is supported by IEEE, EURASIP, European research networks
COST292 and Muscle, INRIA, CNRS, Region d'Aquitaine, University Bordeaux
1, IBM
Topics
Multimedia indexing and retrieval (image, audio, video, text)
Multimedia content extraction
Matching and similarity search
Construction of high level indices
Multi-modal and cross-modal indexing
Content-based search techniques
Multimedia data mining
Presentation tools
Meta-data compression and transformation
Handling of very large scale multimedia database
Organisation, summarisation and browsing of multimedia documents
Applications
Evaluation and metrics
Paper submission
Perspective contributors are invited to submit papers via conference
web-site
Submission of full paper (to be received by):
January 25, 2007
Notification of acceptance:
March 10, 2007
Submission of camera-ready papers:
April 10, 2007
Submission of extended versions in Special issue of JSPIC March 1, 2007
Oerganizers
Chair of Organising committee : Jenny Benois-Pineau, LABRI, University
Bordeaux 1, France
*Technical Program Chair :* Eric Pauwels, CWI, The Netherlands
45th Annual Meeting of the Association of Computational Linguistics
Prague, Czech Republic, June 23rd-30th, 2007
The conference is organized by the Institute of Formal and Applied
Linguistics, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Charles University in
Prague ("Univerzita Karlova v Praze"), Czech Republic, the oldest
University in Europe to the north of the Alps (founded in 1348).
General Chair of the Conference: John Carroll (University of Sussex, UK)
Programme Chairs: Annie Zaenen (PARC, U.S.A.)
Antal van den Bosch (Tilburg University, The Netherlands)
Local Arrangements Chair: Eva Haji?ová (Charles University, Czech Republic)
Conference Secretary: Anna Kot?šovcová (Charles University, Czech Republic)
The topics of the papers cover substantial, original, and
unpublished research on all aspects of computational
linguistics, including, but not limited to: pragmatics, semantics,
syntax, grammars and the lexicon; phonetics, phonology and morphology;
lexical semantics and ontologies; word segmentation, tagging and
chunking; parsing; generation and summarization; language modeling,
spoken language recognition and understanding; linguistic, psychological
and mathematical models of language; document retrieval, question
answering, information extraction, and text mining; machine learning for
natural language; corpus-based modeling of language, discourse and
dialogue; multi-lingual processing, machine translation and translation
aids; multi-modal and natural language interfaces and dialogue systems;
applications, tools and resources; and evaluation of systems.
he following tutorials will be offered at ACL-07 in Prague,
June 24, 2007:
- Usability and Performance Evaluation for Advanced Spoken Dialogue
Systems (Michael McTear, Kristiina Jokinen)
- Nonparametric Structured Models (Percy Liang, Dan Klein)
- Textual Entailment (Ido Dagan, Fabio Massimo Zanzotto, Dan Roth)
- Quality Control of Corpus Annotation Through Reliability Measures
(Ron Artstein)
- From Web Content Mining to Natural Language Processing (Bing Liu)
The following 15 thematic workshops will be held at ACL 2007:
Two-day
* SemEval 2007: 4th International Workshop on Semantic Evaluations
1.5-day
* Joint Workshop on Entailment and Paraphrase and 3rd PASCAL
Recognizing Textual Entailment (RTE-3) Challenge
* Joint Workshop on Frontiers in Linguistically Annotated Corpora 2
(FLAC2) and Sixth NLPXML Workshop
One-day
* ACL SIGMORPHON Computational Research in Morphology and Phonology,
Special Theme: Computational Historical Linguistics
* NLP for Balto-Slavonic languages, Special Focus on IE
* Grammar-based approaches to spoken language processing
* Deep Linguistic Processing
* Cognitive Aspects of Computational Language Acquisition
* Embodied Language Processing
* BioNLP'07
* Second Workshop on Statistical Machine Translation
Half-day
* Computational Approaches to Semitic Languages: Common Issues and
Resources
* A Broader Perspective on Multiword Expressions
* Language Technology for Cultural Heritage Data
* 4th ACL-SIGSEM Workshop on Prepositions
The conference will take place in the TOP HOTEL Praha, located in the
quiet neighborhood of the Prague 4 district, only 15-20 minutes from the
historic center of Prague. The hotel can accommodate up to 1000
participants on-site (with a small number of dormitory rooms available
nearby). The hotel offers one auditorium, three large lecture rooms,
number of smaller rooms for tutorials and workshops, several restaurants
and cafes and lot of open air space for walks and informal discussions.
The conference banquet and a conference concert will take place in the
historic buildings in the city center -- one in the Municipal Hall
(built in the Art-nouveau style of the early 20th century) and the other
in the 14th century main University Hall.
For accommodation reservation, please go directly to the TOP
Hotel's reservation page. The Local Arrangements Committee
has negotiated a substantial reduction of prices for a block of rooms
available to ACL participants: For these prices to apply, please use
the "code" "the ACL 2007 Congress" in the section named
"Detailed information, comments and desires" on the reservation page.
For further information see the conference web site
FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS:
ICPhS 2007 Satellite Workshop on Speaker Age
Saarland University, Saarbruecken, Germany
August 4, 2007
Website
Submission Deadline: April 15, 2007
SCOPE:
This workshop is dedicated to current research on speaker age, a
speaker-specific quality which is always present in speech. Although
researchers have investigated several of aspects of speaker age,
numerous questions remain, including (1) the accuracy by which human
listeners and automatic recognizers are able to judge child and adult
speaker age from speech samples of different types and lengths, (2)
the acoustic and perceptual features (and combination of features)
which contain the most important age-related information, and (3) the
optimal methods for extracting age-related features and integrating
speaker age into speech technology and forensic applications. The
purpose of the workshop is to bring together participants from
divergent backgrounds (e.g. forensics, phonetics, speech therapy and
speech technology) to share their expertise and results. Further
information can be found on the workshop website.
TOPICS:
The topics cover, among others, the following issues:
- methods and tools to identify acoustic correlates of speaker age
- systems which automatically recognize (or estimate) speaker age
- studies on the human perception of speaker age
- projects on the synthesis of speaker age
SUBMISSION:
If you are interested in contributing to the workshop, please send an
extended abstract to both of the organizers
Christian Mueller and Susanne Schotz by April 15, 2007. Contributions on work in progress are
specifically encouraged. The abstract does not have to be formatted.
Feel free to send .doc, .pdf, .txt or .tex files.
CfP-14th International Conference on Systems, Signals and Image Processing,
IWSSIP 2007
and
6th EURASIP Conference Focused on Speech and Image Processing, Multimedia Communications and Services
EC-SIPMCS 2007
June 27 – 30, 2007, Maribor, Slovenia
CALL FOR PAPERS
Download Call for Papers
IWSSIP is an International Conference on Systems, Signals and Image Processing which brings together researchers
and developers from both academia and industry to report on the latest scientific and theoretical advances,
to discuss and debate major issues and to demonstrate state of-the-art systems.
The EURASIP conference is initiated by the European Association for Speech, Signal and Image Processing (EURASIP)
that is focused on Speech and Image Processing, Multimedia Communications and Services (EC-SIPMCS).
The goal of EC-SIPMCS is to promote the interface researchers involved in the development and applications of
methods and techniques within the framework of speech/image processing, multimedia communications and services.
Topics of Interest
The program includes keynote and invited lectures by eminent international experts, peer reviewed contributed
papers, posters, invited sessions on the same or related topics, industrial presentations and exhibitions around
but not limited to the following topics for IWSSIP and EC-SIPMCS conferences:
• Signal Processing and Systems
• Artificial Intelligence Technologies
• ICT in E-learning/Consulting
• Standards and Related Issues
• Image Scanning, Display and Printing
• Video Streaming and Videoconferencing
• Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB)
• Watermarking and Encryption
• Implementation Technologies
• Applications Areas
• Speech and Audio Processing
• Image and Video Processing and Coding
• Audio, Image and Video Indexing and Retrieval
• Multimedia Signal Processing
• Multimedia Databases
• Multimedia and DTV Technologies
• Multimedia Communications, Networking, Services and Applications
• Multimedia Human-Machine Interface and Interaction
• Multimedia Content Processing and Content Description
• Multimedia Data Compression
• Multimedia Systems
Keynote speakers:
Prof. Dr. Kamisety R. Rao, IEEE Fellow, University of Texas Arlington, USA
Prof. Dr. Markus Rupp, Vienna University of Technology, Austria
Prof. Dr. Levent Onural, Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey
Submission of Regular Papers
Papers must be submitted electronically by March 18, 2007. Each paper will be evaluated by at least two independent
reviewers, and will be accepted based on its originality, significance and clarity.
Publications
All accepted papers will be published in CD Proceedings that will be available at the Conference.
Abstracts of accepted papers will be printed and included in the INSPEC database. Selected papers
will be considered for possible publication in scholarly journals.
Tutorial and Special Sessions
Those willing to prepare a tutorial course and those willing to organize special session during EC-SIPMCS 2007 and IWSSIP 2007 Conference should contact dr. Peter Planinši? at ec2007uni-mb.si.
Important Dates
Paper and Poster Submissions: March 18, 2007 Notification of acceptance: April 20, 2007
Camera ready copy due: May 6, 2007 Author Registration: May 6, 2007
Contact Information:
Fax: +386 2 220 7272
E-mail
Website
Žarko ?u?ej, General Chair
University of Maribor, Slovenia
Peter Planinši?, Program Chair
University of Maribor, Slovenia
CFP-4th Joint Workshop on Machine Learning and Multimodal Interaction (MLMI'07)
28-30 June 2007
Brno, Czech Republic
website
MLMI brings together researchers from the different communities working
on the common theme of advanced machine learning algorithms applied to multimodal human-human and human-computer
interaction. The motivation for creating this joint multi-disciplinary workshop arose from the actual needs of several
large collaborative projects.
MLMI'07 will follow on directly from the annual conference of the Association for Computational
Linguistics (ACL/EACL 2007), which will take place in Prague on June 25-27, 2007.
Important dates
Submission of full papers: 23 February
Submission of extended abstracts: 23 March 2007
Submission of demonstration proposals: 23 March 2007
Acceptance decisions: 17 April 2007
Workshop: 28-30 June 2007
Workshop topics
MLMI'07 will feature talks (including a number of invited speakers), posters and demonstrations.
Prospective authors are invited to submit proposals in the following areas of interest, related to
machine learning and multimodal interaction:
- human-human communication modeling
- human-computer interaction modeling
- speech processing
- image and video processing
- multimodal processing, fusion and fission
- multimodal discourse and dialogue modeling
- multimodal indexing, structuring and summarization
- annotation and browsing of multimodal data
- machine learning algorithms and their applications to the topics above
Satellite events
MLMI'07 will feature special sessions and satellite events such as the Summer school of the
European Masters in Speech and Language (http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/emasters/) and the PASCAL Speech
Separation Challenge II (http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/mlincol1/SSC2/). To propose other special
sessions or satellite events for MLMI'07, please contact the organizing committee.
Guidelines for submission
In common with the previous MLMI workshops, revised versions of selected papers
will be published in Springer's Lecture Notes in Computer Science series (cf. LNCS 3361, 3869, 4299).
Submissions are invited in one of the following formats:
- full papers for oral or poster presentation (12 pages)
- extended abstracts for poster presentation only (1-2 pages)
- demonstration proposals (1-2 pages)
Please submit PDF files using the submission website ,
following the Springer LNCS format
for proceedings and other multiauthor volumes.
Venue
Brno is the second largest city in the Czech Republic and the capital of Moravia. Brno had been a royal city since
1347 and is the country's judiciary and trade-fair center. With a population of almost four hundred thousand and
its six universities, Brno is also the cultural center of the region.
Brno can be easily reached by direct flights from Prague, London and Munich and by trains or buses from Prague
(200 km) or Vienna (130 km).
MLMI'07 will take place at the Hotel Continental (http://www.continentalbrno.cz), a modern hotel located in a
quiet part of the city within walking distance from the city center. The local organizers are members of the
Faculty of Information Technology at Brno University of Technology, which was founded
in 1899 as the Czech Technological University.
Organizing Committee
Honza Cernocky, Brno University of Technology (organization co-chair)
Andrei Popescu-Belis, University of Geneva (programme chair)
Steve Renals, University of Edinburgh (special sessions)
Pavel Zemcik, Brno University of Technology (organization co-chair)
CFP-Interdisciplinary Workshop on "The Phonetics of Laughter
5 August 2007
Saarbrücken, Germany
Website
Aim of the workshop
Research investigating the production, acoustics and perception of
laughter is very rare. This is striking because laughter occurs as an
everyday and highly communicative phonetic activity in spontaneous
discourse. This workshop aims to bring researchers together from various
disciplines to present their data, methods, findings, research
questions, and ideas on the phonetics of laughter (and smiling).
The workshop will be held as a satellite event of the 16th International
Congress of Phonetic Sciences in Saarbrücken,
Germany.
Papers
We invite submission of short papers of approximately 1500 words length.
Oral presentations will be 15 minutes plus 5 minutes discussion time.
Additionally, there will be a poster session.
All accepted papers will be available as on-line proceedings on the web,
there will be no printed proceedings. We plan to publish selected
Submissions
All submissions will be reviewed anonymously by two reviewers.
Please send submissions by e-mail to laughter@coli.uni-sb.de specifying
"short paper" in the subject line and providing
1. for each author: name, title, affiliation in the body of the mail
2. Title of paper
3. Preference of presentation mode (oral or poster)
4. Short paper as plain text
In addition you can submit audio files (as wav), graphical files (as
jpg) and video clips (as mpg). All files together should not exceed 1 Mb.
Important dates
Submission deadline for short papers: March 16, 2007
Notification of acceptance: May 16, 2007
Early registration deadline: June 16, 2007
Workshop dates: August 5, 2007
Plenary lecture
Wallace Chafe (University of California, Santa Barbara)
Organisation Committee
Nick Campbell (ATR, Kyoto)
Wallace Chafe (University of California, Santa Barbara)
Jürgen Trouvain (Saarland University & Phonetik-Büro Trouvain, Saarbrücken)
Location
The laughter workshop will take place in the Centre for Language
Research and Language Technology on the campus of the Saarland
University in Saarbrücken, Germany. The campus is located in the woods
and is 5 km from the town centre of Saarbrücken.
Contact
Jürgen Trouvain
Saarland University
FR. 4.7: Computational Linguistics and Phonetics
Building C7.4
Postfach 15 11 50
66041 Saarbrücken
Germany
CfP-"Speech and language technology for less-resourced languages"
Two-hour Special Session at INTERSPEECH 2007, Antwerp, Belgium
Interspeech 07 website
Special Session website
Speech and language technology researchers who work on less-resourced
languages often have very limited access to funding, equipment and software
.
This makes it all the more important for them to come together to share bes=
t
practice, in order to avoid a duplication of effort. This special session=
will therefore be devoted to speech and language technology for
less-resourced languages.
In view of the limited resources available to the targeted researchers, the
re
will be a particular emphasis on "free" software, which may be either
open-source or closed-source. However, submissions are also invited from
those using commercial software.
Topics
Topics may include (but are not limited to) the following:
* Examples of systems b
uilt using free or purpose-built software
(possibly with demonstrations).
* Presentations of bugs in free software, and strategies for dealing
with them.
* Presentations of additions and enhancements made to the software by
research group.
* Presentations of linguistic challenges for a particular less-resourc
ed
language.
* Descriptions of desired features for possible future implementation.
Submission
1. Papers can be submitted by proceeding according to the regular
submission procedure of Interspeech 2007 and selecting "Speech and language
technology for less-resourced languages" as the topic of your first choice.
The paper submission deadline is March 23, 2007.
2. We offer a light submission procedure for demos. (Please note: unlik
e
regular papers, texts submitted with a demo will NOT be published in the
proceedings, but will be made available for download from the SALTMIL websi
te. In this case, please submit a short
description of the system demonstrated, the demo, required materials for th
e
demo, and references, to the first of the session organisers (see below) an
d
to special_sessions@interspeech2007.org before April 27, 2007.
Demo
submission texts should be formatted in accordance with the Interspeech 200
7
author kit, and should be between 1 and 4 pages in length.
Session organisers
Dr Briony Williams
Language Technologies Unit, Canolfan Bedwyr, University of Wales, Bangor, UK
Dr Mikel Forcada
Departament de Llenguatges i Sistemes Informrtics, Universitat d'Alacant,
E-03071 Alacant, Spain
Dr Kepa Sarasola
Dept of Computer Languages, Univ of the Basque Country, PK 649 20080
Donostia, Basque Country, Spain
Important dates
Four-page paper deadline:
March 23, 2007
Demo submission deadline:
April 27, 2007
Notification of acceptance:
May 25, 2007
Early registration deadline:
June 22, 2007
Main Interspeech conference:
August 28-31, 2007
Machine Learning for Spoken Dialogue Systems:
Special Session at INTERSPEECH 2007, Antwerp, Belgium
Submission deadline: 23rd March
Interspeech 2007 website
During the last decade, research in the field of Spoken Dialogue
Systems (SDS) has experienced increasing growth. Yet the design and
optimization of SDS does not simply involve combining speech and
language processing systems such as Automatic Speech Recognition
(ASR), parsers, Natural Language Generation (NLG), and Text-to-Speech
(TTS) synthesis. It also requires the development of dialogue
strategies taking into account the performances of these subsystems,
the nature of the dialogue task (e.g. form filling, tutoring, robot
control, or search), and the user's behaviour (e.g. cooperativeness,
expertise). Currently, statistical learning techniques are emerging
for training and optimizing speech recognition, parsing, and
generation in SDS, depending on representations of context. Automatic
learning of optimal dialogue strategies is also a leading research
topic.
Among machine learning techniques for dialogue strategy optimization,
Reinforcement Learning using Markov Decision Processes (MDPs) and
Partially Observable MDP (POMDPs) has become a particular focus. One
concern for such approaches is the development of appropriate dialogue
corpora for training and testing.
Dialogue simulation is often required to expand existing corpora and
so spoken dialogue simulation has become a research field in its
own right. Other areas of interest are statistical approaches in
context-sensitive speech recognition, trainable NLG, and statistical
parsing for dialogue.
The purpose of this special session is to offer the opportunity to the
international community concerned with these topics to share ideas and
have constructive discussions in a single, focussed, special
conference session.
Submission instructions
Researchers who are interested in contributing to this special session
are invited to submit a paper according to the regular submission
procedure of INTERSPEECH 2007, and to select "Machine Learning for
Spoken Dialogue Systems" in the special session field of the paper
submission form. The paper submission deadline is March 23, 2007.
The subjects to be covered include, but are not restricted to:
* Reinforcement Learning of dialogue strategies
* Partially Observable MDPs in dialogue strategy optimization
* Statistical parsing in dialogue systems
* Machine learning and context-sensitive speech recognition
* Learning and NLG in dialogue
* User simulation techniques for strategy learning and testing
* Corpora and annotation for machine learning approaches to SDS
* Machine learning for multimodal interaction
* Evaluation of statistical approaches in SDS
Contact
Session organizers:
Oliver Lemon,
Edinburgh University
School of Informatics
Olivier Pietquin
SUPELEC - Metz Campus
IMS Research Group
Metz
SYNTHESIS OF SINGING challenge
Special Session at INTERSPEECH 2007, Antwerp, Belgium
Tuesday afternoon, August 28, 2007
Webpage > Special Sessions > Synthesis
of Singing Challenge
Organized by Gerrit Bloothooft, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Singing is perhaps the most expressive usage of human voice and speech.
An excellent singer, whether in classical opera, musical, pop, folk
music, or any other style, can express a message and emotion so
intensely that it moves and delights a wide audience. Synthesizing
singing may be considered therefore as the ultimate challenge to our
understanding and modeling of human voice. In this two hours interactive
special session of INTERSPEECH 2007 on synthesized singing, we hope to
present an enjoyable demonstration of the current state of the art, and
we challenge you to contribute!
Topics
The session will be special in many ways:
* Participants have to submit a composition of their own choice, and
they have to produce their own version of a compulsory musical
score.
* During the special session, each participant will be allowed to
demonstrate the free and compulsory composition, with additional
explanation.
* The contribution will be commented by a panel consisting of
synthesis experts and singers, and the audience.
* Evaluative statements will be voted for by everyone, if possible
by a voting box system.
* The most preferred system will be allowed to play the
demonstration during the closing session of the conference.
Submission
If you are interested to join the challenge, you are invited to submit a
paper on your system and to include an example composition of your own
choice (in .wav format) within the regular submission procedure of
INTERSPEECH 2007, and to select "Synthesis of Singing Challenge" for
Special Session. The deadline is March 23, 2007.
We also offer a light submission procedure that will not result in a
regular peer reviewed paper in the Proceedings. In that case you can
submit the composition of your own choice in .wav format /to the session
organizer/ (see below) before April 27, 2007. See the website for more
details.
The composition may have a maximum duration of two minutes; no
accompaniment is allowed. There are no restrictions with respect to the
synthesis method used, which may range from synthesis of singing by
rule, articulatory modelling, sinusoidal modelling, unit selection, to
voice conversion (include the original in your two minutes demo as well).
All accepted contributors (notification on May 25) will be required to
produce their own version of a musical score published by July 1, 2007.
The corresponding sound file should be sent as a .wav file /to the
session organizer/ (see below) before August 21, 2007.
Contact
Session organiser:
Gerrit Bloothooft
UiL-OTS, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Webpage > Special Sessions > Synthesis
of Singing Challenge
RECENT ADVANCES IN NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING (RANLP-07)
SAMOKOV hotel, Borovets, Bulgaria
conference website RANLP-07
tutorials: September 23-25, 2007 (Sunday-Tuesday) RANLP-07 workshops:
September 26, 2007 (Wednesday) 6th Int. Conference RANLP-07: September
27-29, 2007 (Thursday-Saturday) We are pleased to announce that the
dates for RANLP’07 have been finalised (see above). Building on both the
successful international summer schools organised for more than 17 years,
and previous conferences held in 1995, 1997, 2001, 2003 and 2005, RANLP
has become one of the most influential, competitive and far-reaching
conferences, with wide international participation from all over the
world. Featuring leading lights in the area as keynote speakers or
tutorial speakers, RANLP has now grown into a larger-scale meeting with
accompanying workshops and other events. In addition to the 6 keynote
speeches and tutorials on hot NLP topics, RANLP07 will be accompanied by
workshops and shared task competitions. Volumes of selected papers are
traditionally published by John Benjamins Publishers and previous
conferences have enjoyed support from the European
Commission. Important dates : Conference 1st Call for Papers:
October 2006; Call for Workshop proposals: November 2006, deadline
of proposals end of January 2007; Workshop selection: early March
2007; Conference Submission deadline: March 2007 with notification 30
May 2007; Workshop Submission deadline: 15 June 2007 with notification
in July 2007; RANLP-07 tutorials, workshops and conference: 23-30
September 2007 The conference will be held in the picturesque resort of
Borovets. It is located in the Rila mountains and is one of the best known
ski and tourist resorts in South-East Europe. The conference venue Samokov
hotel offers excellent working and leisure facilities. Borovets is only 1
hour away from Sofia international airport. THE TEAM BEHIND
RANLP-07 Galia Angelova, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
(Chair of the Organising Committee) Kalina Bontcheva, University of
Sheffield, UK Ruslan Mitkov, University of Wolverhampton, UK (Chair of
the Programme Committee) Nicolas Nicolov, Umbria Communications,
Boulder, USA Nikolai Nikolov, INCOMA Ltd., Shoumen, Bulgaria Kiril
Simov, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria (Workshop
Coordinator) E-mail
<
16th International Congress of Phonetic Sciences
Saarland University, Saarbrücken, 6-10 August 2007. The
first call for papers will be made in April 2006. The deadline for
*full-paper submission* to ICPhS 2007 Germany will be February 2007.
Further information is available under conference website
SSP 2007 CfP- IEEE Statistical signal processing workshop (SSP)
The Statistical Signal Processing (SSP) workshop, sponsored by the
IEEE Signal Processing Society, brings members of the IEEE Signal
Processing Society together with researchers from allied fields
such as statistics and bioinformatics. The scope of the workshop
includes basic theory, methods and algorithms, and applications of
statistics in signal processing. Topics
Topics to be covered include:
Theoretical topics:
- Adaptive systems and signal processing
- Monte Carlo methods
- Detection and estimation theory
- Learning theory and pattern recognition
- Multivariate statistical analysis
- System identification and calibration
- Time-frequency and time-scale analysis
Application areas:
- Bioinformatics and genomic signal processing
- Automotive and industrial applications
- Array processing, radar, and sonar
- Communication systems and networks
- Sensor networks
- Information forensics and security
- Biosignal processing and medical imaging
- New methods, directions, and applications
Date and venue
The workshop will be held on August 26-29, 2007, in Madison,
Wisconsin, a vibrant city situated on a narrow isthmus between two
large lakes. The workshop will be co-located at the spectacular
Frank Lloyd Wright inspired Monona Terrace Convention Center.
Plenary lecturers include:
- William Freeman (MIT)
- Emmanuel Candes (Caltech)
- George Papanicolaou (Stanford)
- Nir Friedman (Hebrew University)
- Richard Davidson (Univ. of Wisconsin)
How to submit
Paper submission: Prospective authors are invited to submit
extended summaries of not more than three (3) pages including
results, figures, and references. Papers will be accepted only by
electronic submission by EMAIL starting March 1, 2007.
Important dates
Submission of 3-page extended summary: April 1, 2007
Notification of acceptance: June 1, 2007
Submission of 5-page camera-ready papers: July 1, 2007
The workshop will include a welcoming reception, banquet, technical
poster sessions, several special invited sessions, and several
plenary lectures.
Further information available on conference web.
CFP-
International Conference:
"Where Do
Come From ?
Phonological Primitives in the Brain, the Mouth, and the Ear"
Universite Paris-Sorbonne (1, rue Victor Cousin 75230 Paris cedex)
Website
Speech sounds are made up of atomic units termed "distinctive features", "p
honological features" or "phonetic features", according to the researcher.
These units, which have achieved a notable success in the domain of phonolo
gical description, may also be central to the cognitive encoding of speech,
which allows the variability of the acoustic signal to be related to a sma
ll number of categories relevant for the production and perception of spoke
n languages. In spite of the fundamental role that features play in current
linguistics, current research continues to raise many basic questions conc
erning their cognitive status, their role in speech production and percepti
on, the relation they have to measurable physical properties in the articul
atory and acoustic/auditory domains, and their role in first and second lan
guage acquisition. The conference will bring together researchers working i
n these and related areas in order to explore how features originate and ho
w they are cognitively organized and phonetically implemented. The aim is t
o assess the progress made and future directions to take in this interdisci
plinary enterprise, and to provide researchers and graduate students from d
iverse backgrounds with a stimulating forum for discussion.
How to submit
Authors are invited to submit an anonymous two-page abstract (in English or
French) by April 30, 2007 to Rachid Ridouane
, accompanied by a
separate page stating name(s) of author(s), contact information, and a pref
erence for oral paper vs. poster presentation. Contributions presenting new
experimental results are particularly welcome. Notification e-mails will b
e sent out by June 15, 2007. Publication of selected papers is envisaged.
Topics
Conference topics include, but are not limited to:
Phonetic correlates of distinctive features
Acoustic-articulatory modeling of features
Quantal definitions of distinctive features
Role of subglottal and/or side-cavity resonances in defining
feature boundaries
Auditory/acoustic cues to acoustic feature correlates
Visual cues to distinctive features
Within- and across-language variability in feature realizati
on
Enhancement of weak feature contrasts
Phonological features and speech motor commands
Features and the mental lexicon
Neurological representation of features
Features in early and later language acquisition
Features in the perception and acquisition of non-native lan
guages
Features in speech disorders
The two-day conference (October 4-5, 2007) will consist of four invited tal
ks, four half-day sessions of oral presentations (30 minutes including disc
ussion), and one or two poster sessions.
Important dates
April 30, 2007 Submission deadline
June 15, 2007 Acceptance notification date
October 4-5, 2007 Conference venue
Organizers
Rachid Ridouane (Laboratory of Phonetics and Phonology, Paris)
Nick Clements (Laboratory of Phonetics and Phonology, Paris)
Contact
Rachid Ridouane
Ce colloque est finance par le Ministere Delegue Francais de la
la Recherche sous le programme "Action Concertee Incitative PROSODIE
" (Programme de soutien dans l'innovation et l'excellence en sciences humai
nes et sociales).
CFP 3rd Language and Technology
Conference: Human Language Technologies as a Challenge for Computer
Science and Linguistics October 5-7, 2007, Faculty of
Mathematics and Computer Science of the Adam Mickiewicz
University, Poznan, Poland, Website CONFERENCE
TOPICS The conference program will include the following
topics: * electronic language resources and tools * formalisation
of natural languages * parsing and other forms of NL processing *
computer modelling of language competence * NL user modelling * NL
understanding by computers * knowledge representation * man-machine
NL interfaces * Logic Programming in Natural Language Processing *
speech processing * NL applications in robotics * text-based
information retrieval and extraction, question answering * tools and
methodologies for developing multilingual systems * translation
enhancement tools * methodological issues in HLT * prototype
presentations * intractable language-specific problems in HLT (for
languages other than English) * HLT standards * HLT as foreign
language teaching support * new challenge: communicative
intelligence * vision papers in the field of HLT * HLT related
policies This list is not closed and we are open to further proposals.
The Program Committee is also open to suggestions concerning accompanying
events (workshops, exhibits, panels, etc). Suggestions, ideas and
observations may be addressed directly to the LTC Chair.
FURTHER
INFORMATION Further details will be available soon. The call for
papers will be distributed by mail and published on the conference site . The site currently
contains information about LTC’05 including freely-downloadable abstracts
of the papers presented. Zygmunt
Vetulani LTC’07 Chair
PRELIMINARY CFP-
2007 IEEE International Conference on
Signal Processing and Communications, United Arab Emirates
24–27 November 2007
Dubai, United Arab Emirates
The IEEE International Conference on Signal Processing and Communications (ICSPC 2007)
will be held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) on 24–27 November 2007. The ICSPC will
be a forum for scientists, engineers, and practitioners throughout the Middle East region and
the World to present their latest research results, ideas, developments, and applications in all
areas of signal processing and communications. It aims to strengthen relations between
industry, research laboratories and universities. ICSPC 2007 is organized by the IEEE UAE
Signal Processing and Communications Joint Societies Chapter. The conference will include
keynote addresses, tutorials, exhibitions, special, regular and poster sessions. All papers will
be peer reviewed. Accepted papers will be published in the conference proceedings and will
be included in IEEE Explore. Acceptance will be based on quality, relevance and originality.
SCOPE
Topics will include, but are not limited to, the following:
• Digital Signal Processing
• Analog and Mixed Signal Processing
• Audio/Speech Processing and Coding
• Image/Video Processing and Coding
• Watermarking and Information Hiding
• Multimedia Communication
• Signal Processing for Communication
• Communication and Broadband Networks
• Mobile and Wireless Communication
• Optical Communication
• Modulation and Channel Coding
• Computer Networks
• Computational Methods and Optimization
• Neural Systems
• Control Systems
• Cryptography and Security Systems
• Parallel and Distributed Systems
• Industrial and Biomedical Applications
• Signal Processing and Communications Education
SUBMISSION
Prospective authors are invited to submit full-length (4 pages) paper proposals for review.
Proposals for tutorials, special sessions, and exhibitions are also welcome. The submission
procedures can be found on the
conference web site:
All submissions must be made on-line and must follow the guidelines given on the web site.
ICSPC 2007 Conference Secretariat,
P. O. Box: 573, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates (U.A.E.),
Fax: +971 6 5611789
ORGANIZERS
Honorary Chair
Arif Al-Hammadi,
Etisalat University College, UAE
General Chair
Mohammed Al-Mualla
Etisalat University College, UAE
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission of proposals for tutorials,
special sessions, and exhibitions March 5th, 2007
Submission of full-paper proposals April 2nd, 2007
Notification of acceptance June 4th, 2007
Submission of final version of paper October 1st, 2007
5th International Workshop
on
Models and Analysis of Vocal Emissions for Biomedical Applications
MAVEBA 2007
December 13 - 15, 2007
Conference Hall - Ente Cassa di Risparmio di Firenze
Via F. Portinari 5r, Firenze, Italy
DEADLINES:
30 May 2007 - Submission of extended abstracts (1-2 pages, 1 column),
special session proposal
30 July, 2007 - Notification of paper acceptance
30 September 2007 - Final full paper submission (4 pages, 2 columns, pdf
format) and early registration
13-15 December 2007 - Conference venue
CONTACT:
Dr. Claudia Manfredi - Conference Chair
Dept. of Electronics and Telecommunications
Universita degli Studi di Firenze
Via S. Marta 3
50139 Firenze, Italy
Phone: +39-055-4796410
Fax: +39-055-494569
top |