[Apologies for cross-posting]

== Third Call for Papers and Extended Paper Update DL 20 December==

1st  Workshop on Automatic Assessment of Atypical Speech  (AAAS-2025)

We would like to invite you to submit papers to AAAS workshop co-located with 
NoDaLiDa/Baltic-HLT<https://www.nodalida-bhlt2025.eu> in Hestia Hotel Europa in 
Tallinn, Estonia on March 5th, 2025.

Workshop website:  https://teflon.aalto.fi/aaas-2025/

== Important Dates ==

Submission DL: 16 December 2024 (both papers and abstracts)
NEW: Paper Update DL 20 December 2024
Notification of acceptance: 24 January 2025
Camera-ready DL: 3 February 2025
Workshop: 5 March 2025 (full day)
All deadlines are 11:55PM UTC-12:00 ("anywhere on Earth").

== Overview ==

Automatic Assessment of Atypical Speech (AAAS) explores the assessment of 
pronunciation and speaking skills of children, language learners, people with 
speech sound disorders and methods to provide automatic rating and feedback 
using automatic speech recognition (ASR)  and large language models (LLMs).  
Automatic speaking assessment (ASA) is a rapidly growing field that answers to 
the need of developing AI tools for self-practising second and foreign language 
skills. This is not limited to pronunciation assessment, but the AI tools can 
also provide more complex feedback about fluency, vocabulary and grammar of the 
recorded speech. ASA is also very relevant for detection and quantification of 
speech disorders and for developing speech exercises that can be performed 
independent of time and place. The important applications of non-standard 
speech also include interfaces for children and elderly speakers as an 
alternative to using text input and output. The topic is timely, because the 
latest large speech models allow us now to develop ASR and classification 
methods for low-resourced data, such as atypical speech, where annotated 
training datasets are rarely available and expensive and difficult to produce 
and share. The goal of this workshop is to present the latest results in ASA 
and discuss the future work and collaboration between the researchers in Nordic 
and Baltic countries.

== Topics of Interest ==

In particular, we would like to invite students, researchers, and other experts 
and stakeholders to contribute papers and/or join the discussion on the 
following (and related) topics:
Automatic speaking assessment (ASA) for L2 (second or foreign language) 
pronunciation
ASA for spoken L2 proficiency
ASA for speech sound disorders (SSD)
Automatic speech recognition (ASR) for L2 learners
ASR for children and young L2 learners
ASA and ASR for Nordic and other low-resource languages and tasks
Spoken L2 learning and speech therapy using games
Automatic generation of verbal feedback for spoken L2 learners using LLMs

== Submission Details ==

We accept both short and long papers, as well as demo papers. The submissions 
must describe original and unpublished work.

Paper length:
Short and demo papers up to 4 pages.
Long papers up to 8 pages.
References are not included in the page count, and the camera-ready versions of 
accepted papers will be added to the page to address reviewer comments.

Papers should describe original unpublished work or work-in-progress and will 
be peer-reviewed by at least two members of the program committee in a 
double-blind fashion. All accepted papers will be collected into a proceedings 
volume to be published in the ACL anthology. All submissions must follow the 
NoDaLida template, available in both LaTeX and MS Word. The links to the 
templates can be found here:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1osWGzuRnYRQGRS70Lx_pdQKrIT-NefKS/view
https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/instructions-for-nodalida-baltic-hlt-2025-submissions/vntbxsmmzyqj

The submission will be through EasyChair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aaas2025

We also invite submissions of maximum 2-page long extended non-anonymous 
abstracts with any number of pages for references describing work in progress, 
negative results and opinion pieces.  The abstracts, which should follow the 
same formatting templates as the peer-reviewed papers, will be considered for 
presentation by the workshop organisers and the accepted ones will be posted on 
the workshop website. The abstracts can be based on results related to our 
theme and already published elsewhere. The abstracts will not be published  in 
the proceedings, but only in the workshop program.

Please also consider volunteering to review 2-3 papers.

== Invited Speakers ==

We have the pleasure to announce two invited speakers:

1. Nina R. Benway: What is so hard about AI Speech Therapy? Evidence from 
Efficacy Trials.
Nina R Benway, PhD CCC-SLP, is a Postdoctoral Fellow in Electrical and Computer 
Engineering with Dr. Carol Espy-Wilson. Nina completed her doctoral training in 
speech-language pathology (concentration: neuroscience) with Dr. Jonathan 
Preston at Syracuse University, focusing on clinical trials in children with 
chronic rhotic speech sound disorders. The three studies of her dissertation 
resulted in the curation of an open-access 175,000-utterance speech corpus, the 
engineering of audio classification algorithms predicting speech-language 
pathologist perception of rhotic speech errors, and the clinical trial 
validation of an artificial intelligence tool that fully automates a speech 
sound treatment session. Nina’s doctoral training builds upon her undergraduate 
training in linguistics (acoustic phonetics) at Cornell University, graduate 
clinical training at The College of Saint Rose, and six years of clinical 
practice. Through these experiences Nina has refined a multidisciplinary skill 
set in speech science, speech signal processing, natural language processing, 
corpus phonetics, machine learning/artificial intelligence (AI), user interface 
development, cognitive frameworks of learning, and neurocomputational 
frameworks of speech production.

2. Ari Huhta: Automatic assessment of second/foreign language speaking: Review 
of developments for examination and teaching/learning purposes.
Ari Huhta is a Professor of Language Assessment at the Centre for Applied 
Language Studies, University of Jyväskylä, Finland. His research interests 
include diagnostic foreign/second language (L2) assessment, computerised 
assessment, self-assessment, as well as the development of reading, writing and 
vocabulary knowledge in L2. He was involved in developing the large-scale 
multilingual DIALANG online assessment and feedback system in the early 2000s 
and since then he has specialised in assessments that support language 
learning. Although his research has focused on learning and assessing reading 
and writing, he has been involved in designing several rating scales for 
speaking and in evaluating rating quality and studying rater behavior. 
Recently, he has participated in research projects that are developing ASR and 
automated assessment of L2 speaking, as well as using LLMs to evaluate Finnish 
L2 learners’ proficiency level.

== Organizers ==

Mikko Kurimo (chair), Aalto University, [email protected]
Giampiero Salvi, NTNU
Sofia Strömbergsson, Karolinska Institutet
Sari Ylinen, Tampere University
Minna Lehtonen, University of Turku
Tamas Grosz, Aalto University
Ekaterina Voskoboinik, Aalto University
Yaroslav Getman, Aalto University
Nhan Phan, Aalto University

This workshop is supported by “Technology-enhanced foreign and second-language 
learning of Nordic languages (TEFLON)”  https://teflon.aalto.fi/ NordForsk 
project nr. 103893.

== Contact Information ==

For questions and comments, please email [email protected]
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