21.307 events: CICLing 2008; ISKO; AVROSS; DH2008

From: Humanist Discussion Group (by way of Willard McCarty willard.mccarty_at_kcl.ac.uk>
Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 06:30:19 +0100

               Humanist Discussion Group, Vol. 21, No. 307.
       Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King's College London
  www.kcl.ac.uk/schools/humanities/cch/research/publications/humanist.html
                        www.princeton.edu/humanist/
                     Submit to: humanist_at_princeton.edu

   [1] From: "Alexander Gelbukh (CICLing-2008)" (11)
                 <cfp2008b_at_cicling.org>
         Subject: CFP: CICLing-2008: NLP & Computational Linguistics,
                 Springer LNCS: reminder

   [2] From: Marc <klists_at_saphor.de> (59)
         Subject: German section of the International Society of
                 Knowledge Organization (ISKO): Call for Papers

   [3] From: "Barjak,Franz" <franz.barjak_at_fhnw.ch> (28)
         Subject: Invitation to AVROSS Final Workshop, Brussels,
                 November 27, 2007

   [4] From: DH2008 <dh2008_at_digitalhumanities.org> (158)
         Subject: DH2008: CFP: Digital Humanities 2008, Oulu Finland

--[1]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 08:04:19 +0100
         From: "Alexander Gelbukh (CICLing-2008)" <cfp2008b_at_cicling.org>
         Subject: CFP: CICLing-2008: NLP & Computational Linguistics,
Springer LNCS: reminder

Dear colleague,

This is a gentle reminder of the submission deadline for CICLing-2008, 9th
International Conference on Intelligent Text Processing and Computational
Linguistics, February 17-23, 2008, Haifa, Israel, www.CICLing.org/2008, in
case you are interested.

Topics: all of NLP and computational linguistics; publication: Springer
LNCS; keynote speakers: Ido Dagan, Eva Hajicova, Alon Lavie, and Kemal
Oflazer; tours: Jerusalem, Nazareth, and more.

Thank you!
Alexander Gelbukh
www.Gelbukh.com

--[2]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 08:03:49 +0100
         From: Marc <klists_at_saphor.de>
         Subject: German section of the International Society of
Knowledge Organization (ISKO): Call for Papers

Dear Colleagues,

Please find attached the Call for Papers of the German chapter of the
International Society of Knowledge Organization (ISKO). While this is
not an eHumanities conference in the strict sense, many of its topics
are very pertinent to our field.

Best regards,

Marc K=FCster

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

English Version (abridged):
February 20th through 22nd, 2008, the ISKO conference will take place at
Constance (Germany). The conference is organized by the German chapter
of ISKO, the Library Service Centre Baden-W=FCrttemberg, and the
Department of Information Science at the University of Konstanz.
The general topic is:

Repositories of knowledge in digital spaces
Accessibility, sustainability, semantic interoperability

The following sessions (and special topics) are planned:

a. Ontologies, controlled vocabulary, topic maps, semantic web
Ontologies, classifications, topic maps, and the semantic web seem to
enhance the usefulness and the usability of online knowledge. The
different communities of developers often don't know anything about each
other although there might be chances of fruitful cooperation.
Ontologies and classifications (UDC, DDC) are a instruments of knowlegde
organization and universal views on knowledge structures. Topic maps
offer new and user friendly strategies of retrieval. The semantic web
seems to be split between promise and reality. Successful applications
are therefore of interest.

B. Social tagging
Folksonomies and wikies can be perceived as a way of democratization of
knowledge. Nevertheless the producers of this knowledge control the
structure of knowledge which is a debatable point. Another one is,
whether the sustainability of knowledge can be guaranteed under the
circumstances of an anarchic process of knowledge creation. Political
questions like these are of interest.

C. Platforms of knowledge
There are several platforms and environments, where online knowledge is
used enriching and organizing it for new purposes. Therefore
contributions for some of those platforms such as e-learning,
e-scholarship, e-publishing are welcome.

D. Applications and projects
Developers of new applications and services are invited to share their
knowledge with the participants of the conference. European projects
like MINERVA, the European Digital Library etc. try to offer digitized
knowledge and are good examples of the development into the direction of
global stores of knowledge.

All those interested in the above mentioned topics or those running
relevant projects are invited to participate in and contribute to the
conference. English contributions as well as talks or session proposals
in other fields of knowledge organization and related matters are also
welcome. Please send a proposal with title, author, address details and
an abstract of up to one page length till

November 30th, 2007
Organizer: Dr. J=F6rn Sieglerschmidt, <joern.sieglerschmidt AT
uni-konstanz.de>.

Members of the program committee are: Gerhard Budin (University of
Vienna), Marc Wilhelm K=FCster (Polytechnic Worms), Rainer Kuhlen
(University of Konstanz), H. Peter Ohly (GESIS/ IZ Social Sciences), Max
Stempfhuber (GESIS/ IZ Social Sciences), and J=F6rn Sieglerschmidt
(Library Service Centre Baden-W=FCrttemberg).

--[3]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 06:14:08 +0100
         From: "Barjak,Franz" <franz.barjak_at_fhnw.ch>
         Subject: Invitation to AVROSS Final Workshop, Brussels,
November 27, 2007

Dear colleague,

We would like to invite you to a workshop on policies for increasing
the use of e-infrastructures in the social sciences and humanities
taking place with EC representatives in Brussels on November 27th.

The workshop is part of the Accelerating Transition to Virtual
Research Organisation in Social Science (AVROSS) study, conducted for
the European Commission under EU Service Contract No. 30-CE-0066163/00-39.

We would appreciate your presence and contributions as an expert in
the fields of e-Social Science and e-Infrastructures.

The workshop programme and a registration form are available on the
AVROSS web site: http://www.fhnw.ch/plattformen/avross.

Please confirm attendance by registering through the site (limited
number of places). If you should not be available for the workshop
but want to receive information on the project results, please send a
brief message to franz.barjak_at_fhnw.ch.

Yours sincerely

Franz Barjak
AVROSS coordinator

*********************************************
Franz Barjak
School of Business
University of Applied Sciences Northwestern Switzerland
Riggenbachstrasse 16
CH-4600 Olten
Switzerland
E-mail: franz.barjak_at_fhnw.ch
p. +41 62 287 7825, fax: +41 62 287 7845
*********************************************

--[4]------------------------------------------------------------------
         Date: Tue, 23 Oct 2007 06:15:38 +0100
         From: DH2008 <dh2008_at_digitalhumanities.org>
         Subject: DH2008: CFP: Digital Humanities 2008, Oulu Finland

Call for Papers
Alliance of Digital Humanities Organizations
Digital Humanities 2008

Hosted by the University of Oulu, Finland
25-29 June, 2008
http://www.ekl.oulu.fi/dh2008/

Abstract Deadline: November 18, 2007 (Midnight Universal Time)

Presentations can include:

* Single papers (abstract, min. of 750 words, max. of 1500 words)
* Multiple paper sessions (overview, min. of 750 words, max. of 1500 words)
* Posters (abstract, min. of 750 words, max. of 1500 words)

Call for Papers Announcement

I. General

The international Programme Committee invites submissions of abstracts
of between 750 and 1500 words on any aspect of humanities computing and
the digital humanities, broadly defined to encompass the common ground
between information technology and issues in humanities research and
teaching. As always, we welcome submissions in any area of the
humanities, particularly interdisciplinary work. We especially encourage
submissions on the current state of the art in humanities computing and
the digital humanities, and on recent and expected future developments
in the field.

Suitable subjects for proposals include, for example,

* text analysis, corpora, corpus linguistics, language processing,
    language learning
* creation, delivery and management of humanities digital resources
* collaboration between libraries and scholars in the creation,
    delivery, and management of humanities digital resources
* computer-based research and computing applications in all areas of
    literary, linguistic, cultural, and historical studies, including
    interdisciplinary aspects of modern scholarship
* use of computation in such areas as the arts, architecture, music,
    film, theatre, new media, and other areas reflecting our cultural
    heritage
* research issues such as: information design and modelling; the
    cultural impact of the new media
* the role of digital humanities in academic curricula

Proposals should report significant and substantive results and will
include reference to pertinent work in the field (up to 10 items) as
part of their critical assessment.

The range of topics covered by humanities computing can also be
consulted in the journal of the associations: Literary and Linguistic
Computing (LLC), Oxford University Press.

The deadline for submitting paper, session and poster proposals to the
Programme Committee is November 18, 2007 (midnight Universal Time).
All submissions will be refereed. Presenters will be notified of acceptance
by February by 13, 2008.

The electronic submission form will be available at the conference site
from October 15th, 2007. See below for full details on submitting
proposals.

Proposals for (non-refereed, or vendor) demos and for pre-conference
tutorials and workshops should be discussed directly with the local
conference organizer as soon as possible.

For more information on the conference in general please visit the
conference web site, at http://www.ekl.oulu.fi/dh2008/.

II. Types of Proposals

Proposals to the Programme Committee may be of three types: (1) papers,

(2) poster presentations and/or software demonstrations (poster/demos),
and (3) sessions (either three-paper or panel sessions). The type of
submission must be specified in the proposal.

Proposals to the Programme Committee may be presented in English and
any of the following languages: Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Italian,
Japanese, Russian, and Spanish. Conference presentations may be in these
languages as well, and the Programme Committee encourages presenters
to consider multilingual presentations (for example, a presentation in one
language with accompanying slides or handouts accommodating speakers
of another language).

1) Papers

Proposals for papers (750-1500 words) should describe original work:

either completed research which has given rise to substantial results,
or the development of significant new methodologies, or rigorous
theoretical, speculative or critical discussions. Individual papers will
be allocated 20 minutes for presentation and 10 minutes for questions.

Proposals that concentrate on the development of new computing
methodologies should make clear how the methodologies are applied to
research and/or teaching in the humanities, and should include some
critical assessment of the application of those methodologies in the
humanities. Those that concentrate on a particular application in the
humanities should cite traditional as well as computer-based approaches
to the problem and should include some critical assessment of the
computing methodologies used. All proposals should include conclusions
and references to important sources. Those describing the creation or
use of digital resources should follow these guidelines as far as
possible.

2) Poster Presentations and Software Demonstrations (Poster/Demos)

Poster presentations may include computer technology and project
demonstrations. The term poster/demo refers to the different possible
combinations of printed and computer based presentations. The
poster/demo sessions build on the recent trend of showcasing some of
the most important and innovative work being done in humanities computing.
By definition, poster presentations and project demonstrations are less
formal and more interactive than a standard talk. They provide the
opportunity to exchange ideas one-on-one with attendees and to discuss
their work in detail with those most deeply interested in the same
topic. Presenters will be provided with about two square meters of board
space to display their work. They may also provide handouts with
examples or more detailed information. Poster/demos will remain on
display throughout the conference, but there will also be a separate
conference session dedicated to them, when presenters should be prepared
to explain their work and answer questions. Additional times may also be
assigned for software or project demonstrations.

There should be no difference in quality between poster/demo
presentations and papers, and the format for proposals is the same for
both. The same academic standards should apply in both cases, but
posters/demos may be a more suitable way of presenting late-breaking
results, or significant work in progress, including pedagogical
applications. Both will be submitted to the same refereeing process. The
choice between the two modes of presentation (poster/demo or paper)
should depend on the most effective and informative way of communicating
the scientific content of the proposal.

As an acknowledgement of the special contribution of the posters and
demonstrations to the conference, the Programme Committee will award a
prize for the best poster.

3) Sessions

Sessions (90 minutes) take the form of either:

Three papers. The session organizer should submit a 500-word statement
describing the session topic, include abstracts of 750-1500 words for
each paper, and indicate that each author is willing to participate in
the session;

Or

A panel of four to six speakers. The panel organizer should submit an
abstract of 750-1500 words describing the panel topic, how it will be
organized, the names of all the speakers, and an indication that each
speaker is willing to participate in the session.

The deadline for session proposals is the same as for proposals for
papers, i.e. November 18, 2007.

III. Format of the Proposals

All proposals must be submitted electronically using the on-line
submission form, which will be available from October 15th, 2007 at:

https://secure.digitalhumanities.org/conftool/

Those who registered as authors, reviewers or participants at the DH2007
conference are kindly asked to log on to their existing account (the one
used for the DH2007 conference) rather than making up a new account.

IV. Bursaries for Young Scholars

A limited number of bursaries for young scholars will be made available
to those presenting at the conference. If you wish to be considered for
a bursary, please refer to information about the bursary schemes
available from the Association for Computing in the Humanities
(http://www.ach.org/ach_bursary/) and the Association for Literary and
Linguistic Computing (_http://www.allc.org/awards/bursary.htm_).

Applications may be made to either the ACH or the ALLC, but not both
organizations.

V. International Programme Committee

Jean Anderson (ALLC - University of Glasgow)
John Nerbonne(ALLC - University of Groningen)
Espen S. Ore (ALLC - National Library of Norway, Chair)
Stephen Ramsay (ACH - University of Nebraska)
Thomas Rommel (ALLC - Jacobs University Bremen)
Susan Schreibman (ACH - University of Maryland)
Paul Spence (ALLC - Kings College London)
Melissa Terras (ACH - University College London)
Claire Warwick (ACH - University College London, Vice Chair)
Espen S. Ore Lisa Lena Opas-Hanninen

Programme Chair Local Organizer
espen.ore_at_nb.no lisa.lena.opas-hanninen_at_oulu.fi

-- 
Digital Humanities 2008
https://secure.digitalhumanities.org/conftool/
Received on Tue Oct 23 2007 - 01:57:36 EDT

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