Dear Sender,

I am currently out of the office and will not be checking emails regularly. I 
will return on September 9, and will respond to your message as soon as 
possible after that date.

Best regards,
Charlott Jakob

On 9 Jul 2024, at 20:31, Antti Arppe via Corpora <[email protected]> wrote:

Eighth Workshop on the Use of Computational Methods in the Study of Endangered 
Languages (ComputEL-8)
March 3-4, 2024
Honolulu, Hawai’i
URL: https://computel-workshop.org/computel-8/
EMAIL: [email protected]

Read to the end for guidelines for the Special Session submissions deadline.

FIRST CALL FOR PAPERS FOR REGULAR SESSION

We invite submissions to the 8th workshop on the Use of Computational Methods 
in the Study of Endangered Languages, by October 7, 2024.

The ComputEL-8 workshop focuses on the use of computational methods in the 
study, support, and revitalization of endangered languages. The primary aim of 
the workshop is to continue narrowing the gap between computational linguists 
interested in methods for low resource languages, academic linguists 
documenting  languages, and the language communities who are striving to 
maintain their languages. We encourage submissions from scholars and activists 
representing any or all of these perspectives.

The intention of the workshop is not merely to allow for the presentation of 
research, but also to build a network of computational linguists, documentary 
linguists, and community language activists who are able to effectively join 
together and serve their common interests.

WORKSHOP VENUE

ComputEL-8 will take place March 3-4, 2024, immediately preceding be co-located 
with the 9th International Conference on Language Documentation & Conservation 
(ICLDC) in Honolulu, Hawaii (https://ling.lll.hawaii.edu/sites/icldc/). 
In-person events will be co-located with the ICLDC at the University of Hawai’i 
Manoa.

The workshop will be a virtual/in-person hybrid event. Ability to attend in 
person will not affect consideration of submissions.

CALL FOR PAPERS

We encourage submissions that explore the interface and intersection of 
computational linguistics, documentary linguistics, and community-based efforts 
in language revitalization and reclamation. This includes submissions that:

(i) propose or demonstrate new methods or technologies for tasks or 
applications focused on low-resource settings, and in particular, endangered 
languages.

(ii) examine the use of specific methods in the analysis of data from 
low-resource languages, or propose new methods for analysis of such data, 
oriented toward the goals of language reclamation and revitalization

(iii) propose new models for the collection, management, and mobilization of 
language data in community settings, with attention to issues of data 
sovereignty and community protocols

(iv) explore concrete steps for a  more fruitful interaction among computer 
scientists, documentary linguists, and language communities

IMPORTANT DATES

07-Oct-2024     Deadline for submission of papers or extended abstracts
22-Nov-2024     Notification of Acceptance
10-Jan-2025     Camera-ready papers due
3-4 March 2025  Workshop

PRESENTATIONS

Presentation of accepted papers will be in both oral sessions and a poster 
session. The decision on whether a presentation for a paper will be oral and/or 
poster will be made by the Organizing Committee on the advice of the Program 
Committee, taking into account the subject matter and how the content might be 
best conveyed. Oral and poster presentations will not be distinguished in the 
Proceedings.

SUBMISSIONS

In line with our goal of reaching multiple overlapping communities, we offer 
two modes of submission: extended abstract and full paper. The mode of 
submission does not influence the likelihood of acceptance. Either can be 
submitted to one of the workshop’s tracks: (a) language community perspective 
and (b) academic perspective.

All submissions must be anonymous following ACL guidelines and will be 
peer-reviewed by the scientific committee.

A. Extended Abstract:

Please submit anonymous abstracts of up to 1500 words, excluding references. 
Extended abstracts must be submitted as attached documents.

B. Full Paper:

Please submit anonymously either

a) a long paper (max. 8 pages excluding references and appendices), or

b) a short paper (max. 4 pages excluding references)

PROCEEDINGS

The authors of selected accepted full papers (long or short) will be invited by 
the Organizing Committee to submit their papers for online publication via the 
open-access ACL Anthology. Final versions of long and short papers will be 
allotted one additional page (altogether 5 and 9 pages) excluding references.

Proceedings papers should be revised and improved versions of the work that 
underwent review. Any revisions should concern responses to reviewer comments 
or the addition of relevant details and clarifications, but not entirely new, 
unreviewed content. Camera-ready versions of the articles for publication will 
be due on January 10, 2025.

SPECIAL THEME SESSION: BUILDING TOOLS TOGETHER

In addition to the Regular Session, ComputEL-8 invites self-identified 
submissions to a   Special Themed Session on “Building Tools Together.” This 
Session will focus on amplifying our shared understanding of how best to work 
together across disciplinary and cultural boundaries to build technological 
tools that support community language revitalization.

We invite presentations that: (1) Describe the development of new tools and 
technologies in collaborative teams, and/or (2) Describe or identify 
technological or computational needs within community language revitalization 
contexts, and/or propose solutions.
For presentations that describe the development of new tools and technologies 
in collaboration among language communities, academic researchers, and (in some 
cases) industry or non-governmental organizations, we encourage submissions 
which address questions such as:

a. How did the idea for the tool or technology come about?
b. How did the team members meet and come to work together?
c. What has been the impact of this tool? How are you evaluating it? How has 
the project benefitted community efforts at language maintenance and 
revitalization?
d. What are some challenges (logistical, technical, interdisciplinary, 
intercultural) that you encountered, and how did you address them?
e. How have you balanced the needs and priorities of different team members 
through the lifespan of the project?
f. What lessons have you learned that might benefit similar collaborations?

For presentations that identify technological or computational needs within 
community language revitalization contexts, and/or propose solutions, we 
encourage submissions which address questions such as:

a. What is the need that this tool would meet? Who will it serve?
b. What is the blue-sky version of this tool? What is the minimum viable 
product version?
c. What kinds of data, digital assets, or media content would be required to 
create the tool, and how would they be assembled?
d. What challenges might the team face in the development process?
e. How do you anticipate the collaborative process to best incorporate diverse 
areas of expertise from cultural and community-grounded knowledge to academic, 
technical, and production-oriented knowledge?

SUBMISSIONS to the SPECIAL THEME SESSION

Please submit anonymous extended abstracts of up to 1500 words, excluding 
references.

Submissions representing community-led collaborations are strongly encouraged.

Submissions to the Regular Session may choose to be considered for the Special 
Session as well. Same considerations will be given for publication whether 
papers are accepted to the Main Session or the Special Session. Alternatively, 
authors may submit abstracts only to the Special Session.

The deadline for submissions is 11:59pm 7 October, 2024 (Anywhere on Earth).

You may indicate that your full paper or extended abstract be considered for 
inclusion in the Special Session.

Notification of acceptance to the Special Session will be sent out by November 
22, 2024.

All authors of papers in the Special Theme Session will be invited to 
contribute to a follow-up paper that synthesizes the findings of the Session.

IMPORTANT DATES (SPECIAL SESSION)

07-Oct-2024     Deadline for submission of papers or extended abstracts
22-Nov-2024     Notification of Acceptance
10-Jan-2025     Camera-ready papers due
3-4 March 2025  Workshop with Special Session

MORE INFORMATION about Special Session submissions will follow on our website 
and subsequent calls for papers, see:

URL: https://computel-workshop.org/computel-8/

ComputEL-8 ORGANIZING COMMITTEE

Godfred Agyapong (University of Florida)
Antti Arppe (University of Alberta)
Aditi Chaudhary (Google DeepMind)
Jordan Lachler (University of Alberta)
Sarah Moeller (University of Florida)
Shruti Rijhwani (Google DeepMind)
Daisy Rosenblum (University of British Columbia)

CONTACT the OC

For further information email us at:
[email protected]

--
======================================================================
Antti Arppe - Ph.D (General Linguistics), M.Sc. (Engineering)
Professor of Quantitative Linguistics
Director, Alberta Language Technology Lab (ALTLab)
Project Director, 21st Century Tools for Indigenous Languages (21C)
Past President, ACL SIG for Endangered Languages (SIGEL)
Department of Linguistics, University of Alberta
E-mail: [email protected], [email protected]
WWW: www.ualberta.ca/~arppe<http://www.ualberta.ca/~arppe>, 
altlab.artsrn.ualberta.ca
Mānahtu ina rēdûti ihza ummânūti ihannaq - dulum ugulak úmun ingul
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