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 * LREC  * LREC : Every two years.

Joel Tetreault maintains a [http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/tetreaul/conferences.html calendar] with call for papers deadlines and conferences dates for a lot of the computational linguistic conferences. He does not include some of the dialogue specific ones such as:
 * SIGDIAL : Every year. It is collocated with either ACL or InterSpeech.
 * SEMDIAL : Every year. Dedicated to dialogue and semantic work. Its name changes depending on the location where it is being held. In 2008 it was LONDIAL, since it took place in London.. (cute).

  

Conferences of Interest to the Lab

1. Psycholinguistics

  • Psychonomics ([http://www.psychonomic.org/annual-meeting.html Annual meeting])

  • CUNY

  • Architectures and Mechanisms for Language Processing (AMLaP) ([http://www.amlap.org/ AMLaP])

    • Deadline: May
    • Conference: Early September, Barcelona
    • Presentation types: same as CUNY
    • Summary: Same audience as CUNY, but more folks from Europe (since it takes place in Europe). Maybe traditionally more accepting of modeling work. Also less limited to sentence processing.

  • International Workshop on Language Production ([http://www.lang-prod.org/ IWLP])

    • Conference: 2010 (probably on a bi-annual schedule now)
    • Presentation types: invited talks, posters
    • Summary: Relatively small gathering (~60 people?) focused on language production. Talks are by invitation only, with a restriction that no speaker will be invited more than once. Talks are ~45 minutes, with ~15 minutes for questions. Discussion is heavily encouraged, and there are generally several panel-type sessions.
    • Publications: Work presented here is usually collect for a special issue of Language and Cognitive Processes.
  • Experimental Pragmatics ([http://xprag.l2c2.isc.cnrs.fr/XPrag/ XPrag 2009])

    • Conference: 23-25 April, Lyon, France (biannual schedule)
    • Presentation types: oral (25+5 min, ca. 20% chance), posters (ca. 40% chance), invited talks, commentaries on sessions (by invitation only)
    • Summary: Fairly small (~70) but growing group of experimental pragmaticists who gather to talk about the processing of scalar implicatures, presuppositions, perspective-taking, communicative intentions, information structure, metaphor, ad hoc concepts,... Methods are behavioral, psycho-/neurolinguistic. No modeling (yet).
    • Publications: Talks get a proceedings paper.

2. Cognitive Science

  • CogSci

  • Neural Information Processing Systems (NIPS)

    • Deadline: Early May
    • Conference: Early December, Vancouver
    • Presentation types: oral (< 2% chance), spot-light poster (2min; < 5%), poster

    • Summary: Annual conference on machine learning on topics related to neural or cognitive themes, but actually pretty much hard core machine learning. About 1,000+ people from CS, engineering, cogsci, computational linguistics, neuroscience. Both theoretical and method related work is accepted as long as it meets the (high!) formal standards.
  • ICCM

3. Computational Linguistics

  • ACL : yearly
  • NAACL : yearly, unless ACL located in North America
  • EACL : yearly, unless ACL located in Europe
  • EMNLP : yearly
  • COLING: every other year
  • [http://www.aclweb.org/ ACLWeb] (external CL resource page)

  • LREC : Every two years.

Joel Tetreault maintains a [http://www.cs.rochester.edu/u/tetreaul/conferences.html calendar] with call for papers deadlines and conferences dates for a lot of the computational linguistic conferences. He does not include some of the dialogue specific ones such as:

  • SIGDIAL : Every year. It is collocated with either ACL or InterSpeech.

  • SEMDIAL : Every year. Dedicated to dialogue and semantic work. Its name changes depending on the location where it is being held. In 2008 it was LONDIAL, since it took place in London.. (cute).

4. Linguistics

  • Linguistics Society of America (LSA) ([http://www.lsadc.org/info/meet-annual.cfm LSA])

    • Deadline: Beginning September (need to be member for submission; can become member along with submission)
    • Conference: January 7th-10th 2010 in Baltimore, MD.
    • Presentation types: oral (20+10), poster
    • Summary: Annual linguistics meeting. About 1,000+ linguists from all over the world. Many (6ish) parallel sessions about all types of linguistic work. Sometimes hard to attract enough people with processing or computational interest, but it's getting better. Good for overview talks.

5. Statistics

  • Conference on Quantitative Social Science Research Using R ([http://www.cis.fordham.edu/QR2009/index.html QR 2009])

    • Deadline: rolling, May 15 final submission date. Acceptance notification within 2 weeks of submission.
    • Conference: June 18-19, 2009 in Manhattan (hosted by Fordham University).
    • Presentation types: Platform session talks, parallel session talks, posters
    • Summary: This conference is about applications of the R software and graphics system to important policy and research problems. It provides an excellent opportunity to bring together researchers from various disciplines using R in their work.
    • Publications: All accepted papers have to be accompanied by R code and data. Code and data will be made available on CD-ROM. Full papers will be published by Springer in the UseR! series.
  • Joint Statistical Meetings ([http://www.amstat.org/meetings/JSM/2009/ JSM])

6. Mathematical/Quantitative Psychology

Conferences (last edited 2011-09-30 18:09:07 by echidna)

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