We are very pleased to share our second call for papers for our workshop on 
Reference, Framing, and Perspective co-located with LREC-COLING 2024.

* Workshop website: https://cltl.github.io/reference-framing-perspective/
* When: Saturday, May 25th, 20204
* Where: Torino, Italy (co-located with LREC-COLING 2024)
* Deadline for submissions: February 20, 2024
* Paper submission link: 
https://softconf.com/lrec-coling2024/reference-framing-perspective2024/user/
* Deadline for camera-ready papers: beginning of April 1, 2024 
*  Shared dataset: https://github.com/cltl/rfp_corpus_collection

When something happens in the world, we have access to an unlimited range of 
ways (from lexical choices to specific syntactic structures) to refer to the 
same real-world event. We can chose to express information explicitly or imply 
it. Variations in reference may convey radically different perspectives. This 
process of making reference to something by adopting a specific perspective is 
also known as framing. Although previous work in this area is present (see Ali 
and Hassan (2022)’s survey for an overview), there is a lack of a unitary 
framework and only few targeted datasets (Chen et al., 2019) and tools based on 
Large Language Models exist (Minnema et al., 2022). In this workshop, we 
propose to adopt Frame Semantics (Fillmore, 1968, 1985, 2006) as a unifying 
theoretical framework and analysis method to understand the choices made in 
linguistic references to events. The semantic frames (expressed by predicates 
and roles) we choose give rise to our understanding, or framing, of an event. 
We aim to bring together different research communities interested in lexical 
and syntactic variation, referential grounding, frame semantics, and 
perspectives. We believe that there is significant overlap within the goals and 
interests of these communities, but not necessarily the common ground to enable 
collaborative work.


Referentially Grounded Shared Dataset

One way to study variation in framing is to conduct contrastive analyses of 
texts reporting on the same real-world event. Such an analysis can help to 
reveal the extent of variation in framing and possibly give rise to the 
underlying factors that lead to different choices in framing the same event. We 
collected such a corpus about the Eurovision Song Festival and make it 
available as a Shared Dataset for the Workshop. The purpose of this corpus is 
to enable exploratory analyses, facilitate discussion among participants, and, 
last but not least, make our workshop a real working workshop.
The corpus is composed of news articles reporting on the Eurovision Song 
Contest that took place in Rotterdam, the Netherlands (canceled in 2020 and 
held in 2021). The news articles have been collected using the structured 
data-to-text approach (Vossen et al., 2018). The corpus contains news articles 
in multiple languages. We invite participants to submit short and targeted 
analyses using the data (extended abstracts to be discussed in a hands-on data 
session). Participants are also free to use the data in regular contributions.

Regular contributions:
We aim to lay the groundwork for such efforts. We invite contributions (regular 
long papers of 8 pages or short papers of 4 pages) targeting any of the 
following - non-exhaustive - list of topics:
* Theoretical models of framing and perspective
* Annotation frameworks for framing and perspectives
* Computational models of framing and perspective
* Approaches for creating and analyzing referentially grounded datasets 
(containing different perspectives, written at different points in time, 
written in different languages)
* Approaches for and analyses of texts about contested and divisive events 
triggering different opinions and perspectives
* Analyses of and methods for analyzing (diachronic) lexical variation and 
framing
* Language resources for reference, frames, and perspectives
* Approaches and tools to compare claims of sources
* Frames as expressions of bias in the representation of social groups
* User interface for the visualization of multiple perspectives

Extended abstracts:
We invite extended abstracts (1,500 words maximum) about small analyses or 
experiments conducted on our Shared Data. The abstracts will be non-archival 
and discussed in a dedicated data session.

Invited speakers:
Maria Antoniak
Vered Shwartz

Organizers:
Pia Sommerauer, Tommaso Caselli, Malvina Nissim, Levi Remijnse, Piek Vossen
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