The Research Group LIFT presents a two-day meeting to bring together computational linguists, applied linguists and formal linguists, in order to develop to improve exchanges between these linguistical domains. The meeting will take place in Grenoble on December 6 & 7th.
In addition to the presentations of the keynotes speakers, we invite researchers to present their work by submitting an extended abstract (call for contributions).
About the “Computational, Formal & Field Linguistics” research project
Computational linguistics brings to linguists a large panel of techniques and resources which open the way to new perspectives for linguistic analysis, from data collection and annotation to the extraction and automatic checking of linguistic generalisations. The objectives of the LIFT project are :
to explore this potential by benefitting from a scientific network which promotes interactions between formal linguists, field linguists, and computational linguists
to foster the emergence of novel methods which would be benefitial for linguists (automating data analysis and verification), field linguists (collecting and analysing data), and computational linguists (e.g. developments in unsupervised methods for under-resourced languages)
The LIFT project builds upon 5 complementary axes:
automatic extraction of linguistic generalisations
linguistics and NLP system evaluation
tools for data collection and analysis for linguists
challenges and resources for open science
linguistics for under-resourced languages
Venue
The LIFT scientific meeting will take place at the ground floor of the IMAG building on Grenoble Alpes University campus.
Invited speakers
Laurent Besacier (Naver Labs Europe)
Daan van Esch (Google research)
Alda Mari (Institut Jean Nicod, CNRS)
Matti Miestamo (University of Helsinki)
Accepted communications
Oral presentations
Analyse orientée corpus d'universaux de Greenberg sur Universal Dependencies Hee-Soo Choi, Bruno Guillaume, Karën Fort
DinG -- a corpus of transcriptions of real-life, oral, spontaneous multi-party dialogues between French-speaking players of Catan Maria Boritchev, Maxime Amblard
La négation de l'impératif dans les langues atlantiques Aurore Montébran, Marc Allassonnière-Tang
Le projet ANR Autogramm et l'extraction automatique de grammaire - Illustration par la négation Kahane Sylvain, Bruno Guillaume, Kim Gerdes, Bernard Caron, Sylvain Loiseau
Le(s)? chinois du Shun-pao 申報 Pierre Magistry
Spécialisation de modèles neuronaux pour la transcription phonémique : premiers pas vers la reconnaissance de mots pour les langues rares Cécile Macaire, Guillaume Wisniewski, Séverine Guillaume, Benjamin Galliot, Guillaume Jacques, Alexis Michaud, Solange Rossato, Minh-Châu Nguyên, Maxime Fily
Poster presentations
Convertir le Trésor de la Langue Française en Ontolex-Lemon: un zeste de données liées Sina Ahmadi, Mathieu Constant, Karën Fort, Bruno Guillaume, John P. McCrae
Deux corpus audio transcrits de langues rares (japhug et na) normalisés en vue d'expériences en traitement du signal Benjamin Galliot, Guillaume Wisniewski, Séverine Guillaume, Laurent Besacier, Guillaume Jacques, Alexis Michaud, Solange Rossato, Minh-Châu Nguyên, Maxime Fily
Exploration de systèmes end-to-end pour la reconnaissance automatique de la parole spontanée Solène Evain
On avertives as complex negative event descriptions Patrick Caudal
Quelques exemples de négation dans les langues créoles Emmanuel Schang
Reading interlinearized glossed texts: inference of linguistic features from free translations Sylvain Loiseau
Rescuing of some-PPIs: from theory to experimental linguistics and back David Paul Gerards, Carmen Dobrovie-Sorin, Tabea Ihsane, Lucia Tovena
Segmentation en mots faiblement supervisée pour la documentation automatique des langues Shu OKABE, François YVON, Laurent Besacier
Simplification syntaxique de textes à base de représentations sémantiques en DMRS Hijazi Rita