Processing of figurative language is a rapidly growing area in NLP, including 
computational modeling of metaphors, idioms, puns, irony, sarcasm, simile, and 
other figures.  Characteristic to all areas of human activity (from poetic, 
ordinary, scientific, social media) and, thus, to all types of discourse, 
figurative language becomes an important problem for NLP systems. Its ubiquity 
in language has been established in a number of corpus studies and the role it 
plays in human reasoning has been confirmed in psychological experiments. This 
makes figurative language an important research area for computational and 
cognitive linguistics, and its automatic identification, interpretation and 
generation indispensable for any semantics-oriented NLP application.

The proposed workshop will be the fourth edition of the biennial Workshop on 
Figurative Language Processing, whose first editions were held at NAACL 2018, 
ACL 2020 and EMNLP 2022, respectively. The workshop builds upon a long series 
of related workshops that the current organizers have been involved with: 
“Metaphor in NLP” series (2013-2016) and “Computational Approaches to 
Linguistic Creativity” series (2009-2010). We expand the scope to incorporate 
various types of figurative language, with the aim of maintaining and 
nourishing a community of NLP researchers interested in this topic. The main 
focus will be on computational modeling of figurative language, however papers 
on cognitive, linguistic, social, rhetorical, and applied aspects are also of 
interest, provided that they are presented within a computational, formal, or a 
quantitative framework.  Recent advancement in language models have led to 
several works on figurative language understanding (Chakrabarty et al 2022a; 
Chakrabarty et al 2022b; Liu et al 2022; Hu et al 2023) and generation (Stowe 
et al 2021; Chakrabarty et al 2021; Sun et al 2022; Tian et al 2021)  At the 
same time large language models have opened up opportunities to utilize 
figurative language in scientific (Kim et al 2023) as well as creative writing 
(Chakrabarty et al 2022c; Tian et al 2022). Additionally there have also been 
recent work on multimodal figurative language generation (Chakrabarty et al 
2023; Akula et al 2023), understanding (Hessel et al 2023; Yosef et al 2023) 
and interpretation (Hwang et al 2023; Desai et al 2022; Kumar et al 2022). We 
encourage submissions along these axes.

Topics of Interest

The workshop will solicit both full papers and short papers for either oral or 
poster presentation. Topics will include, but will not be limited to, the 
following:

Identification and interpretation of different types of figurative language: 
Linguistic, conceptual and extended metaphor; irony, sarcasm, puns, simile, 
metonymy, personification, synecdoche, hyperbole

Generation of different types of figurative language: sarcasm, simile, 
metaphors, humor, hyperbole

Multilingual and multimodal figurative language processing

Resources and evaluation

Annotation of figurative language in corpora

Datasets for evaluation of tools

Evaluation methodologies

Figurative use in low-resource languages

Processing of figurative language for NLP applications

Figurative language in sentiment analysis; dialogue systems; computational 
social science; educational applications

Figurative language and mental health

Figurative language in digital humanities

Figurative language in creative writing

Figurative language and cognition

Cognitive models of processing of figurative language by the human brain

Human-AI collaboration for figurative language

Shared Tasks

Multilingual euphemisms detection: Euphemisms are a linguistic device used to 
soften or neutralize language that may otherwise be harsh or awkward to state 
directly (e.g. "between jobs" instead of "unemployed", "late" instead of 
"dead", "collateral damage" instead of "war-related civilian deaths"). By 
acting as alternative words or phrases, euphemisms are used in everyday 
language to maintain politeness, mitigate discomfort, or conceal the truth. 
While they are culturally-dependent, the need to discuss sensitive topics in a 
non-offensive way is universal, suggesting similarities in the way euphemisms 
are used across languages and cultures. We propose a shared task in which 
participants will need to disambiguate sentences in multiple languages as 
either euphemistic or not. The dataset will include English, Mandarin, Spanish, 
Yoruba, and possibly additional languages.

https://www.codabench.org/competitions/1959/

Understanding of Figurative Language through Visual Entailment: One important 
modality that has gained interest recently is vision, namely the interpretation 
of figurative language in media such as memes, art, or comics. This task is 
challenging because it involves reasoning abstractly about images, and also 
involves understanding social commonsense and cultural context. We will frame 
this as a visual entailment task where a model not only has to predict if a 
caption entails the content in the image but also provide free text 
explanations justifying the label prediction. These tasks have proved difficult 
for state-of-the-art multimodal models in the past. We will have a paper and a 
baseline for the same.

https://www.codabench.org/competitions/1970/

Important Dates

Long, Short & Demonstration Paper Submission: March 10th, 2024

Long, Short & Demonstration Paper Notification: April 14th, 2024

Final Paper Submission: April 24th, 2024

Workshop: June 20/21, 2024

For more information, please check https://sites.google.com/view/figlang2024
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