Grokhovski | 1 Aug 2011 01:13
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software for tonal analysis

Dear listmembers,

could you please share information on commercially and freely available software that may be used for tonal analysis of speech for tonal languages (like Chinese, Burman, Tibetan and related ones)

Yours sincerely,

Pavel Grokhovski,
Associate Professor, PhD,
Chair of Mongolian and Tibetan Studies,
Saint-Petersburg University, Russia

http://spbu.academia.edu/PavelGrokhovski
http://orient.pu.ru/dept_mongol/grohovsky.php (page in Russian
only)

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Konstantina Garoufi | 1 Aug 2011 11:10
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Go on a virtual treasure hunt and help us evaluate NLG systems

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Help us evaluate NLG systems by going on a virtual treasure hunt.

GIVE-2.5: NLG Challenge on Generating Instructions in Virtual Environments

http://www.give-challenge.org

Part of Generation Challenges 2011
Endorsed by SIGGEN and SIGSEM

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Dear colleagues,

for the third time now, the GIVE Challenge has invited research teams
to develop systems that generate natural-language instructions to
assist users in solving a puzzle in a virtual 3D environment. This
year teams of undergraduate students, graduate students, and
researchers from six universities in five countries have built eight
systems, and you can now play with these systems over the Internet.

If you go to

http://www.give-challenge.org

one of the systems will be assigned to you. Follow the instructions it
produces for you, and see whether you can find the trophy. It
shouldn't take more than 10 minutes and you are contributing valuable
evaluation data. Play as many games as you like: there are 3 new game
worlds to explore.

If you could help us spread this invitation by passing it on to your
colleagues (not necessarily NLP experts), friends, and students, we
would be most grateful.

You can find more information about the GIVE Challenge at
http://www.give-challenge.org/research.

Enjoy,

the GIVE-2.5 organizing committee

Alexandre Denis, Loria, Nancy
Andrew Gargett, U.A.E. University
Konstantina Garoufi, University of Potsdam
Alexander Koller, University of Potsdam
Kristina Striegnitz, Union College
Mariet Theune, University of Twente

the GIVE steering committee

Donna Byron, Northeastern University
Justine Cassell, Northwestern University
Robert Dale, Macquarie University
Alexander Koller, University of Potsdam
Johanna Moore, University of Edinburgh
Jon Oberlander, University of Edinburgh
Kristina Striegnitz, Union College

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K Pavan | 1 Aug 2011 12:05
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Flash Page Parsing

Hi, 


   I am looking for flash page parsing to extract content, out links from the flash pages. Is there a way/open source tool for extracting links in the SWF files


Thanks in advance,
Pavan
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Christian Chiarcos | 1 Aug 2011 13:31
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CFP: Linked Data in Linguistics 2012 (LDL 2012) - extended abstracts due August 7, 2011

Apologies for cross-postings. Please send it to interested colleagues. Thanks!
PDF-Version can be found here:
http://ldl2012.lod2.eu/DGFS2012-LinkedDataCfP.pdf
Although the workshop is held in 2012 the submission deadline for
extended abstracts is on August 7, 2011

2nd CALL FOR PAPERS (EXTENDED ABSTRACTS)

*********************************************************
Linked Data in Linguistics
Representing and connecting language data and language metadata
http://ldl2012.lod2.eu

Workshop organized as part of the Annual Conference of the German
Linguistic Society (DGfS),
to be held in Frankfurt, Germany, March 7-9, 2012
*********************************************************
Date: March 7-9, 2012
Submission Deadline: August 7, 2011 (Extended Abstracts)
Venue: Frankfurt am Main, Germany
*********************************************************

** Overview **
The explosion of information technology has led to a substantial
growth in quantity, diversity and complexity of linguistic data
accessible over the Internet. These resources become even more useful
when linked with each other. This workshop will present principles,
use cases, and best practices for using the linked data paradigm[a] to
represent, exploit, store, and connect different types of linguistic
data collections.
The intended audience includes empirically-working linguists and
philologists interested in the representation, exchange and
interlinking of linguistic data and metadata, computer scientists and
computational linguists interested in the application of Semantic Web
formalisms and technologies to language data, and developers of
infrastructures for linguistic data and other researchers with an
interest in both aspects.

** Linguistic data and metadata **
The last years have seen the rapid development of linguistic data
collections available over the Internet. The workshop intends to
address questions and use cases for the creation, publication and
application of data collections including (but not limited to):

1. Language archives for (endangered) languages, that contain a wealth
of textual material as well as audio and video (DOBES, PARADISEC,
ELAR). How can this material be mobilized?
2. Typological databases such as the World Atlas of Language
Structures (WALS), or the Typological Database System (TDS) provide
rich repositories of information about languages and their respective
features. An interesting feature would be to combine the information
from these resources, for example “Is it true that OV languages [WALS
feature 83A] are characterized by pitch accent [TDS, StressTyp data
base]” ? How can such queries be accomplished?
3. Computational lexicography uses formalisms such as RDF, SKOS and
OWL to encode dictionaries and to employ them in different
applications. What are the practical benefits of this representation?
4. Lexical-semantic resources such as WordNet, FrameNet and general
knowledge bases like DBpedia and Yago represent the very foundation of
computational semantics, and are also available in OWL and RDF. How
does this representation improve the accessibility and the application
of these resources?
5. Linguistic corpora involve an increasing diversity of annotations
such as syntax, semantics and coreference (e.g.,
PennTreeBank/PropBank/PennDiscourseTreebank, OntoNotes, SALSA/TIGER).
How can such multi-layered corpora be represented, evaluated and
connected to electronic lexicons, lexical-semantic resources, or
metadata repositories?
6. Metadata repositories provide common vocabularies for the
description of other types of linguistic data, thus enabling to
compare and integrate them. This includes information about languages
(e.g. in LL-MAP or Mulitree), but also information about linguistic
data categories and phenomena (e.g. in GOLD and ISOcat). How do such
common repositories improve the re-usability of linguistic resources
in research and in Semantic Web applications?

It is the challenge of our time to store, interlink and exploit this
wealth of data. Our workshop leverages the Digital Humanities paradigm
within linguistics, focusing on the use of information technology to
improve data-driven linguistic research.
This workshop invites researchers from the fields of language
documentation, typology, computational linguistics, corpus
linguistics, as well as researchers from other empirically-oriented
disciplines of linguistics who share an interest in data and metadata
modelling with Semantic Web technologies such as RDF or OWL.

** Topics of interests **
We invite contributions related (but not limited) to one of the
following topics:
1. Use cases, problem descriptions and project proposals for the
creation, maintenance and publication of linguistic data collections
that are linked with other resources
2. Modelling linguistic data and metadata with OWL and/or RDF
3. Ontologies for linguistic data and metadata collections
4. Applications of such data, other ontologies or linked data from any
subdiscipline of linguistics (may include work in progress or project
descriptions)
5. Legal and social aspects of Linked Linguistic Data

** Goals **
Beside the discussion of projects, experiences and open questions, the
workshop hopes to support the on-going development of a community of
researchers interested in linked linguistic data. This involves the
following aspects:

1. The primary goal is to establish interdisciplinary contact across
the boundaries between different subdisciplines of applied
linguistics, computational linguistics and neighbouring fields. We are
under the impression that people coming from very different
backgrounds encounter similar issues in their work and that there is
potential for synergies here.
2. The second goal is to increase the amount of Linked Open Data on
the web so that researchers can make use of the data already out
there. In other words: we want to find the data giants on whose
shoulders future generations would be able to stand, and convince them
to make their data available as Linked Data.
3. The third goal is to discuss strategies, reasons and problems to
publish linguistic data under open licensed, with the perspective to
increase the prestige of data as a form of scientific production which
does not need to shy away from comparison with more established genres
like articles or monographs.

** Submission **
Until August 7, 2011 we are expecting an extended abstract of up to
2500 words plus references. With A4 and 10pt Times font, this
corresponds to four pages plus references. For submission details,
please consult the workshop webpage: http://ldl2012.lod2.eu/submission

** Important Dates **
August 7, 2011: Deadline for extended abstracts (four pages plus references)
September 9, 2011: Notification of acceptance
October 23, 2011: One-page abstract for DGfS conference proceedings
December 1, 2011: Camera-ready papers for workshop proceedings (eight
pages plus references)
March 7-9, 2012: Workshop

** Invited speakers **
Martin Haspelmath (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology)
Nancy Ide (American National Corpus, Vassar College)

** Workshop organizers **
Sebastian Nordhoff (Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary
Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany)
Christian Chiarcos (University of Potsdam, Germany)
Sebastian Hellmann (University of Leipzig, Germany)

** Programme committee**
Emily Bender (University of Washington)
Philipp Cimiano (CITEC, Universität Bielefeld)
Alexis Dimitriadis (Universiteit Utrecht)
Caroline Féry (Universität Frankfurt)
Jeff Good (University at Buffalo)
Harald Hammarström (MPI-EVA Leipzig)
Ernesto William de Luca (DAI-Lab, Technische Universität Berlin)
Harald Lüngen (IDS Mannheim)
Lutz Maicher (Fraunhofer MOEZ)
John McCrae (CITEC, Universität Bielefeld)
Gerard de Melo (MPI for Informatics, Saarbrücken)
Pablo Mendes (FU Berlin)
Steven Moran (University of Washington)
Axel-C. Ngonga Ngomo (Universität Leipzig)
Antonio Pareja-Lora (Universidad Complutense de Madrid)
Cornelius Puschmann (Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf)
Felix Sasaki (DFKI Berlin, FH Potsdam)
Stavros Skopeteas (Universität Bielefeld)
Dennis Spohr (CITEC, Universität Bielefeld)
Johanna Völker (Universität Mannheim)
Menzo Windhouwer (MPI Nijmegen / Universiteit Amsterdam)
Alena Witzlack-Makarevich (University of Zurich)

The workshop is endorsed and sponsored by the Max Planck Institute for
Evolutionary Anthropology (http://www.eva.mpg.de) and the LOD2
project: Creating Knowledge out of Interlinked Data (http://lod2.eu)
--

-- 
Christian Chiarcos
Applied Computational Linguistics
Universität Potsdam, Germany
snail: Karl-Liebknecht-Str. 24-25, 14476 Golm
web: http://www.sfb632.uni-potsdam.de/~chiarcos
email: chiarcos AT uni LINE potsdam DOT de
phone: +49-331-977-2664
fax: +49-331-977-2087

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info | 1 Aug 2011 15:39

PR: ELRA joins INTERSPEECH 2011 as Bronze Sponsor and Exhibitor

[Apologies for cross-postings]

Press Release - Immediate
Paris, France, August 1st, 2011
 
ELRA joins INTERSPEECH 2011 as Bronze Sponsor and Exhibitor


ELRA, a world-wide leading player providing production services to the speech language communities, sponsors the 12th Annual Conference of the International Speech Communication Association to be held in Firenze (Italy), on next August 28-30.

Through this sponsorship, ELRA and ISCA are continuing their long-term collaboration.

ELRA will be exhibitor at the conference. You are very welcome to visit us at Booth 14 from August 28 to 30.
 

*** About ELRA ***

The European Language Resources Association (ELRA) is a world-wide leading player in language resource distribution, sharing and production. ELRA provides services to the speech language communities related to production of resources, including production on demand, technology evaluation and benchmarking. ELRA organizes LREC, the major international conference devoted to language resources and evaluation and the next edition will be held in Istanbul in 2012.

To find out more about ELRA, please visit our web site: http://www.elra.info

 
*** About INTERSPEECH ***

INTERSPEECH is the world's largest and most comprehensive conference on issues surrounding the science and technology of spoken language processing (SLP) both in humans and in machines. INTERSPEECH 2011 will cover all the scientific and technological aspects of speech and language with a specific focus on “Speech science and technology for real life”.

To find out more about INTERSPEECH and ISCA, please visit:  http://www.isca-speech.org

 

Contact : Helene Mazo, mazo <at> elda.org
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Patrick Demasco | 2 Aug 2011 16:03

Position Announcement: Corpus Linguist (contract) at Swype, Inc. in Boston

Swype (http://www.swype.com) has developed an innovative text input method
for touch-screen devices (as described in the next paragraph)...

Swype provides a faster and easier way to input text on any screen. With
one continuous finger or stylus motion across the screen keyboard, the
patented technology enables users to input words faster and easier than
other data input methods—at over 40 words per minute. The application is
designed to work across a variety of devices such as phones, tablets, game
consoles, kiosks, televisions, virtual screens and more.

We are looking for a linguist to lead our Web-based corpus collection
efforts across a wide range of languages. This position will be
contract-based (6-12 months) and may be converted to a full-time
employment position. Hourly rate commensurate with experience.

Responsibilities include:

- Research and identify web-based sources of corpus data
- Use our in-house tools to collect and evaluate data; coordinate with
other staff who may assist in this effort
- Recruit/supervise native language testers
- Coordinate with development team to improve our tools
- Organize and document our corpus data assets
- Work with other team members to improve our processes

The ideal candidate will be smart, creative and hard working and have the
following:

- B.A./B.S. degree in Linguistics or Computational Linguist (graduate work
desirable)
- Experience in multi-lingual corpus linguistics
- Ability to use software-based tools to collect and analyze text data
- Solid understanding of character encoding issues
- Good written and verbal communication skills
- Ability to work in a fast-paced team-oriented environment

Additional skills would be helpful but not necessary:
- Fluency in a non-English language
- Scripting language (Python, Perl)

For more information, please contact: Patrick Demasco
(pdemasco <at> literate.com).

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James Wilson | 2 Aug 2011 12:12
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Release of IntelliText 1.0

Dear Colleague

The Centre for Translation Studies at the University of Leeds is pleased to announce the release of the
IntelliText corpus interface. The interface is freely available for public use via

http://corpus.leeds.ac.uk/itweb/<http://smlc09.leeds.ac.uk/itweb/htdocs/Query.html>

AND as a download from SourceForge –
http://sourceforge.net/projects/csar/<http://sourceforge.net/projects/csar/files/> – for
users who wish to install it on their own server and/or add their own features and corpora. The interface
relies on CorpusWorkbench, available from <http://sourceforge.net/projects/csar/files/> http://sourceforge.net/projects/cwb/<http://sourceforge.net/projects/csar/files/>

The IntelliText interface provides access to monolingual corpora in 11 languages (Chinese, English,
French, German, Italian, Japanese, Kannada, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish and Ukrainian) as well as to
several bilingual corpora. At least two corpora are available for many of the supported languages.

Users may choose from seven search options:

§  Concordance search [all languages]

§  Collocation search [all languages]

§  Affix search [all languages]

§  Comparison of the frequency of two or more competing words or phrases [all languages]

§  Frequency lists [all languages]

§  Genre classification [German, Japanese, Russian]

§  Multivariate analysis [English only]

This versatile and intuitive interface offers a simple step-by-step approach to performing a corpus
search. First-time and inexperienced corpus users can use the IntelliText Search Builder and
Part-of-Speech Editor to build multi-word phrases and add grammatical information to their corpus
queries – without having to enter complex string codes.

In addition, users may build their own corpora by uploading texts to the IntelliText interface. Uploaded
corpora are automatically lemmatised and POS-tagged and users can search them using the options listed above.

The interface is supported by a clear and comprehensive User Guide with video instructions to help users
understand and perform the various types of corpus search and build their own corpora. Tutorials that
focus on language-specific corpus searches and contain sample exercises are also available for some of
the supported languages.

For further information about the project, please see the IntelliText homepage

http://corpus.leeds.ac.uk<http://corpus.leeds.ac.uk/>/it

Please enjoy!

The IntelliText Team

IntelliText was supported by AHRC grant AH/H0373061.
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Verena Henrich | 3 Aug 2011 12:06
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Position in European-wide eSciences Infrastructure Project

The Division of Computational Linguistics in the Dept. of Linguistics at the University of Tuebingen,
Germany has an opening for a computer scientist  or computational linguist within a large-scale, EU
funded eScience infrastructure project. The goal of the project as a whole is to provide an
infrastructure for storing and analyzing large data sets. The specific responsibilities of this
position include:

- the design and implementation of data analysis workflows (or processing chains) operating on
linguistic data stored in the provided infrastructure
- creating front-end web applications and services to provide access to the data within the
infrastructure and to carry out the workflows
- working closely with other user communities within the project who will be creating similar workflows
for non-linguistic data sets (eg climate data) in order to identify, generalize, and implement one or
more generic workflows

Applicants should demonstrate expertise in one or more of the following areas:
- knowledge of client-server software development (including web services)
- managing large data sets
- extensive programming experience in Java or another object-oriented programming language
- knowledge of XML technologies
- knowledge of natural-language processing

A good command of English is a must as well as the ability to work in a team. Some proficiency in German is helpful.

The position is available from October 1, 2011 until December 31, 2013, although an appointment for a
shorter period is also possible. The position is at the rank of 'Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter' (Ph.D.
or M.A./M.Sc. in computer science, computational linguistics or a related field is required). The
salary is determined by the German civil servants standard (Entgeltgruppe 13 TV-L).

Applications should include a CV, an outline of research and/or practical experience, as well as names and
addresses of 3 references. Applications should be sent by mail or by email to the address below.

Applications received by September 10, 2011 will receive full consideration, although interviews may
start at any time and will continue until the position has been filled.
				
Disabled applicants will be preferred if they have the same qualifications as non-disabled applicants.
The University of Tuebingen strives to increase the proportion of women in research and teaching, and
therefore encourages qualified female scientists to apply.

Application Deadline: September 10, 2011 (Open until filled)

Contact information for Applications:

Thomas Zastrow
Seminar fuer Sprachwissenschaft
Wilhelmstr. 19
Tuebingen 72074
Germany

Email:thomas.zastrow <at> uni-tuebingen.de

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Lucia Specia | 3 Aug 2011 12:15
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PhD studentship - University of Wolverhampton: Statistical Methods for Recognising Textual Entailment

The Research Group in Computational Linguistics (http://clg.wlv.ac.uk)
of the University of Wolverhampton invites applications for a 3-year
University of Wolverhampton PhD studentship in the area of Textual
Entailment with Statistical Methods. This is a funded bursary which
will consist of a stipend towards living expenses and remission of
fees. The PhD candidate will be expected to carry out research towards
the design, implementation and evaluation of advanced approaches for
textual entailment using statistical methods.

The application deadline is 30th August 2011. The starting date of the
PhD position is October 2011. Applications from existing PhD students
are welcomed.

A successful applicant must have:
A good honours degree or equivalent in Computational Linguistics,
Artificial Intelligence, Computer Science/ Engineering. Mathematical,
statistics or closely related areas.
Strong programming skills in one or more languages including Perl C/C++
Experience in computational linguistics / natural language processing,
particularly the area of textual entailment.
Acquaintance with machine learning and statistical modelling techniques.

Applications must include:

1) A curriculum vitae indicating degrees obtained, course covered,
publications, relevant work experience, and names of two referees that
could be contacted if necessary
2) A 1-page cover letter with statement of research interests,
indicating why you are interested in this position and why you
consider your experience is relevant.
3) An expression of interest form: http:
//www.wlv.ac.uk/Docs/grad_sch_exp_of_int.doc

The shortlisted applicants will be interviewed by telephone in the
weeks following the application deadline. They will then be asked to
complete a research proposal.

Established by Prof Mitkov in 1998, the research group in
Computational Linguistics delivers cutting-edge research in a number
of NLP areas such as anaphora resolution, automatic summarisation,
question answering, multilingual text processing, multiple-choice
question generation and text simplification. The results from the
latest Research Assessment Exercise announced on 17 December 2008
confirm the research group in Computational Linguistics as one of the
top performers in UK research. The research group was ranked joint 3rd
with 2 more universities in the Unit of Assessment “Linguistics”.
According to the league tables of the Guardian, The Times and Research
Fortnight, research in Linguistics at the University of Wolverhampton
in one of the top 6 in the UK.

Informal enquiries and electronic applications can be sent to by email to:

Erin Stokes
Research Institute of Information and Language Processing
University of Wolverhampton
Stafford St.
Wolverhampton
WV1 1SB
United Kingdom
Email: erin.stokes <at> wlv.ac.uk

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A.S.Belz | 4 Aug 2011 12:49
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V&L Net Workshop on Vision and Language - Final Call for Abstracts


V&L Net Workshop on Vision and Language ======================================= FINAL CALL FOR ABSTRACTS Endorsed by EACL (the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics) and BMVA (the British Machine Vision Association) Date: Thursday, 15 September 2011 Venue: Huxley Building, University of Brighton The EPSRC Network on Vision and Language (V&L Net) -------------------------------------------------- The EPSRC Network on Vision and Language (V&L Net) is a forum for researchers from the fields of Computer Vision and Language Processing to meet, exchange ideas, expertise and technology, and form new partnerships. Our aim is to create a lasting interdisciplinary research community situated at the language-vision interface, jointly working towards solutions for some of today's toughest computational challenges, including image and video search, description of visual content and text-to-image generation. Workshop Aims ------------- The Vision and Language Workshop is chiefly intended to be a networking and community building event for the computer vision and language processing communities. It will give us an opportunity to meet and get to know each other. This process will be supported by an informal approach characterised by diverse networking activities and a large number of brief oral presentations combined with poster presentations. The Vision and Language Workshop is free for full V&L Net members. V&L Net will furthermore cover the cost of one night's accommodation in Brighton and economy-class travel within the UK for full V&L Net members presenting an accepted poster. Full details can be found on the workshop page on the V&L Net website (for contact details see below). Call for Contributions ---------------------- The Vision & Language Workshop organisers invite the submission of abstracts addressing any aspect of research that involves both vision and language. We encourage a wide range of different types of abstracts/posters, including but not limited to the following: * Presentations of existing projects and research programmes * Outlines of project ideas, in particular from those seeking collaborators * Reports of research in progress * Reports of research results * System demos Specific research topics include, but are by no means limited to: * Image and video labelling and annotation * Image and video description * Computational modelling of human vision and language * Image and video retrieval * Multimodal human-computer communication * Text-to-image generation * Language-driven animation * Facial animation for speech * Assistive methodologies Accepted abstracts will be presented at the workshop in the form of brief 'teaser' presentations, followed by a poster presentation during the workshop poster session. Submission Guidelines --------------------- Submitted abstracts should be 1-2 pages in length. PDF format is strongly preferred. Please send abstracts no later than 7 August 2011 to vl-net <at> brighton.ac.uk. Mini-posters for WLTM Notice Board ---------------------------------- Delegates are furthermore encouraged to bring along to the workshop A3-sized mini-posters for our would-like-to-meet notice board. The idea is for mini-posters to describe collaborations sought, profile research groups, advertise publications, and similar items. Outline Programme ----------------- Morning: Introduction and Welcome Computer Vision Invited Talk: Yiannis Aloimonos, University of Maryland Language Processing Invited Talk (speaker t.b.c.) Speed Networking Session Feedback to V&L Net Lunch Break Afternoon: Teaser Presentations for Posters Poster Session Would-like-to-meet Notice Board Evening Drinks Important Dates --------------- Submission of Abstracts 07 Aug 2011 Notification of Acceptance 15 Aug 2011 Workshop on Vision and Language 15 Sep 2011 Organisers ---------- Anja Belz, University of Brighton Darren Cosker, University of Bath Frank Keller, University of Edinburgh Dimitrios Makris, Kingston University Contact ------- vl-net <at> brighton.ac.uk http://www.vlnet.org.uk/VL-Workshop-2011.html
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Gmane