Computational and Corpus-based PhraseologyRecent advances and interdisciplinary 
approaches 13-14 November 2017The 3rd Workshop on Multi-word Units in Machine 
Translation and Translation Technology (MUMTTT 
2017)http://rgcl.wlv.ac.uk/europhras2017/mumttt-2017/London, 14 November 2017In 
conjunction with EUROPHRAS 2017 – International Conference “Computational and 
Corpus-based Phraseology: Recent advances and interdisciplinary 
approaches“First Call for PapersFollowing the success of the two previous 
editions of the workshop on Multi-word Units in Machine Translation and 
Translation Technology – the 2013 edition at the MT Summit in Nice, France, and 
the 2015 edition at the European Society of Phraseology Conference in Malaga, 
Spain, we are announcing the third edition to be held in conjunction with the 
International Conference “Computational and Corpus-based Phraseology: Recent 
advances and interdisciplinary approaches” which is jointly organised by the 
European Association for Phraseology (EUROPHRAS), the University of 
Wolverhampton (Research Institute of Information and Language Processing) and 
the Association for Computational Linguistics – Bulgaria (London, 13-14 
November 2017).The MUMTTT workshop will be held on the second day of the 
conference, 14 November 2017. It will provide a forum for researchers and 
practitioners in the fields of (Computational) Linguistics, (Computational) 
Phraseology, Translation Studies and Translation Technology to discuss recent 
advances in the area of multi-word unit processing and to coordinate research 
efforts across disciplines in order to improve the integration of multi-word 
units in machine translation and translation technology tools.Multi-word units 
are acknowledged as one of the major challenges in natural language processing 
(NLP). In spite of the relative progress achieved for particular types of units 
such as verb-particle constructions, the identification, interpretation and 
translation of multi-word units in general still represent open challenges, 
both from a theoretical and a practical point of view. The idiosyncratic 
morpho-syntactic, semantic and translational properties of multi-word units 
pose many obstacles even to human translators, mainly because of intrinsic 
ambiguities, structural and lexical asymmetries between languages, and, 
finally, cultural differences.In recent years, growing attention has been paid 
to integrating multi-word units (MWUs) in machine translation and translation 
technology tools, as it has been acknowledged that it is not possible to create 
large scale language solutions without properly handling MWUs of all types. As 
a matter of fact, researchers are now addressing the problems posed by MWU 
processing and translation using different formalisms and techniques, such as: 
automatic recognition of MWUs in a monolingual or bilingual setting; alignment 
and paraphrasing techniques; development and use of (handcrafted) monolingual 
and bilingual language resources; creation of annotated monolingual and 
parallel corpora, development of strategies for handling syntactically flexible 
units in language analysis and translation modules, development of evaluation 
projects.The aim of the workshop is to bring together researchers and 
practitioners working on MWU processing from various perspectives, in order to 
enable cross fertilisation and foster the creation of innovative solutions that 
can only arise from interdisciplinary collaborations. In particular, the 
workshop welcomes interactions between NLP researchers working on the 
computational treatment of multi-word units, experts in (computational) 
phraseology working on challenging topics of their discipline, as well as 
translation practitioners, to the benefit of applying their latest results to 
advance the state of the art in MWU processing.Topics of InterestThe MUMTTT 
2017 workshop invites the submission of papers reporting on original and 
unpublished research on topics related to MWU processing in machine translation 
and translation technology, including:Lexical, syntactic, semantic and 
translational aspects in MWU representationTheoretical approaches to MWUs 
(e.g., collostructional analysis of MWU, cognitive approaches to processing 
MWUs, etc.Development of multilingual MWU resourcesIdentification and 
acquisition of MWUs and variantsLearning semantic information about MWUs from 
monolingual, parallel or comparable corporaDevelopment and use of MWU resources 
in machine translation and translation technologyDevelopment of corpora for the 
extraction and translation of MWUsCompilation of resources for the extraction 
and translation of multiword unitsCreation of MWU-annotated corpora with a 
focus on translation aspectsParaphrasing of MWUs applied to the improving of 
machine translationMWUs and word alignment techniquesMWUs in machine 
translationMWU-centred machine translation evaluationEvaluation of MWU 
translationMWUs in CAT toolsMultilingualism and MWU processingPsycholinguistic 
studies of MWU processing in a bilingual setting.Submission 
GuidelinesSubmissions must consist of full-text papers (6 to 8 pages long). 
They must be formatted according to the ACL 2017 style guidelines available 
both for Word and LaTeX text processor. Each submission will be reviewed by at 
least three programme committee members. As reviewing will be double blind, 
papers must not reveal authors’ identity. Accepted papers will be presented 
orally or as posters, as determined by the programme committee. There will be 
no distinction in the workshop proceedings between papers presented orally or 
as posters. The proceedings will be published as an electronic volume with ISBN 
and will be made available at the time of the conference.The submissions will 
be maintained by conference management software. Details about the submission 
page will be provided in the second call for papers.Important DatesDeadline for 
paper submission29 May 2017Acceptance notification17 July 2017Final version 
due5 September 2017MUMTTT 2017 workshop14 November 2017Workshop ChairsGloria 
Corpas Pastor, Universidad de Málaga, SpainRuslan Mitkov, University of 
Wolverhampton, United KingdomJohanna Monti, Università degli Studi di Napoli 
“L’Orientale”, Italy Violeta Seretan, Université de Genève, Switzerland (Chair 
for contacts)





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