We cordially invite you to participate in the upcoming workshop on Natural 
Language Processing for Computer Assisted Language Learning, to be held on the 
Faroe Islands, and online on May 22, 2023.

In order to participate, please register using the following link. Please note 
that remote participants are also required to register. The link for online 
participation will be sent out to registered participants.

https://www.nodalida2023.fo/registration

For more information on the workshop, see below, or visit the workshop website:

https://spraakbanken.gu.se/en/research/themes/icall/nlp4call-workshop-series/nlp4call2023

Best regards,
David



== 12th NLP4CALL, Tórshavn, Faroe Islands==

The workshop series on Natural Language Processing (NLP) for Computer-Assisted 
Language Learning (NLP4CALL) is a meeting place for researchers working on the 
integration of Natural Language Processing and Speech Technologies in CALL 
systems and exploring the theoretical and methodological issues arising in this 
connection. The latter includes, among others, insights from Second Language 
Acquisition (SLA) research, on the one hand, and promote development of 
“Computational SLA” through setting up Second Language research 
infrastructure(s), on the other.

The intersection of Natural Language Processing (or Language Technology / 
Computational Linguistics) and Speech Technology with Computer-Assisted 
Language Learning (CALL) brings “understanding” of language to CALL tools, thus 
making CALL intelligent. This fact has given the name for this area of research 
– Intelligent CALL, ICALL. As the definition suggests, apart from having 
excellent knowledge of Natural Language Processing and/or Speech Technology, 
ICALL researchers need good insights into second language acquisition theories 
and practices, as well as knowledge of second language pedagogy and didactics. 
This workshop invites therefore a wide range of ICALL-relevant research, 
including studies where NLP-enriched tools are used for testing SLA and 
pedagogical theories, and vice versa, where SLA theories, pedagogical practices 
or empirical data are modeled in ICALL tools.

The NLP4CALL workshop series is aimed at bringing together competences from 
these areas for sharing experiences and brainstorming around the future of the 
field.

We welcome papers:

- that describe research directly aimed at ICALL;
- that demonstrate actual or discuss the potential use of existing Language and 
Speech Technologies or resources for language learning;
- that describe the ongoing development of resources and tools with potential 
usage in ICALL, either directly in interactive applications, or indirectly in 
materials, application or curriculum development, e.g. learning material 
generation, assessment of learner texts and responses, individualized learning 
solutions, provision of feedback;
- that discuss challenges and/or research agenda for ICALL
- that describe empirical studies on language learner data.

This year a special focus is given to work done on error detection/correction 
and feedback generation.

We encourage paper presentations and software demonstrations describing the 
above- mentioned themes primarily, but not exclusively, for the Nordic 
languages.


==Invited speakers==

This year, we have the pleasure to announce two invited talks.

The first talk is given by Marije Michel from the University of Amsterdam.

TELL: Tasks Engaging Language Learners
Taking a task-based approach on language teaching, learning and assessment 
(TBLT), the basic unit of second language (L2) instruction is a task. Tasks are 
(pedagogic) activities that adhere to specific criteria (e.g., there needs to 
be a communicative gap, Skehan, 1998) in order to ensure that learners engage 
in meaningful language use during task performance. In the long run, only tasks 
engaging students in authentic language use may lead to L2 processes that have 
the potential to support L2 acquisition. In this presentation, I will review 
the most important principles of designing engaging learning tasks, highlight 
examples of practice-induced L2 research using digital tools, and will showcase 
some of my own work on task design for L2 learning during digitally mediated 
communication and L2 writing. In doing so, I will discuss the NLP measures we 
use to evaluate task-based performance, formulating TBLT desiderata for the 
future of NLP4CALL.


The second talk is given by Pierre Lison from the Norwegian Computing Center.

Privacy-enhancing NLP: a primer
Text documents often contain personal data in some form – either related to the 
authors themselves or to some other individuals mentioned in the text. This 
raises privacy concerns, especially when those documents are to be published 
online or included as training data for NLP models. For Computer-Assisted 
Language Learning, this problem is compounded by the presence of various 
lexical and grammatical errors that may provide additional cues as to the 
identity of the author. Fortunately, privacy-enhancing techniques can be 
applied to provide at least some level of privacy, both for the author of the 
text (or linguistic production) and for the other individuals that may be 
referred in it. I’ll review in this talk some of those techniques, such as text 
sanitization, text rewriting, and privacy-preserving training. I’ll also 
describe in our own work on data-driven text sanitization based on explicit 
measures of privacy risks and will also present how such methods can be 
evaluated using our recently released Text Anonymization Benchmark (TAB).


==Important dates==

22 May 2023: workshop date


==Organizers==

David Alfter (1), Elena Volodina (2), Thomas François (3), Arne Jönsson (4), 
Evelina Rennes (4)

(1) Gothenburg Research Infrastructure in Digital Humanities, Department of 
Literature, History of Ideas, and Religion, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
(2) Språkbanken Text, Department of Swedish, Multilingualism, Language 
Technology, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
(3) CENTAL, Institute for Language and Communication, Université Catholique de 
Louvain, Belgium
(4) Department of Computer and Information Science, Linköping University, Sweden


==Contact==

For any questions, please contact David Alfter, [email protected]

For further information, see the workshop website 
<https://spraakbanken.gu.se/en/research/themes/icall/nlp4call-workshop-series/nlp4call2023>

Follow us on Twitter @NLP4CALL <https://twitter.com/NLP4CALL/>

_______________________________________________
Corpora mailing list -- [email protected]
https://list.elra.info/mailman3/postorius/lists/corpora.list.elra.info/
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to