Author: jg
Date: Wed Apr  9 16:10:13 2014
New Revision: 1586005

URL: http://svn.apache.org/r1586005
Log:
some fixes for workshop page + generated HTML

Added:
    uima/site/trunk/uima-website/docs/coling14.html
Modified:
    uima/site/trunk/uima-website/xdocs/coling14.xml

Added: uima/site/trunk/uima-website/docs/coling14.html
URL: 
http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/uima/site/trunk/uima-website/docs/coling14.html?rev=1586005&view=auto
==============================================================================
--- uima/site/trunk/uima-website/docs/coling14.html (added)
+++ uima/site/trunk/uima-website/docs/coling14.html Wed Apr  9 16:10:13 2014
@@ -0,0 +1,303 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" 
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd";>
+
+
+    <!-- 
====================================================================== -->
+    <!-- GENERATED FILE, DO NOT EDIT, EDIT THE XML FILE IN xdocs INSTEAD! -->
+    <!-- 
====================================================================== -->
+    <html>
+        <head>
+            <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; 
charset=iso-8859-1"/>
+            <style type="text/css">@import "stylesheets/base.css";</style>
+                                          <meta name="author" value="
+ UIMA dev team">
+  <meta name="email" value="uima-...@apache.org">
+                        
+            
+                        
+                        <title>Apache UIMA - UIMA Workshop at COLING 2014 in 
Dublin/Ireland</title>
+        </head>
+
+        <body>
+          <div class="topLogos">        
+            <table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="0">
+                <!-- TOP IMAGE -->
+                <tr>
+                    <td align='LEFT'>
+                      <a href="index.html">
+                                    <img style="border: 1px solid black;" 
src="./images/UIMA_banner2tlpTm.png" alt="UIMA project logo" border="0"/>
+                            </a>
+                    </td>
+                    <td align='CENTER'>
+                          <div class="pageBanner">UIMA Workshop at COLING 2014 
in Dublin/Ireland</div>
+                    </td>
+                    <td align='RIGHT'>
+                                  <a href="http://www.apache.org";>
+        <img src="./images/asf-logo-on-white-smallTm.png" alt="Apache UIMA" 
border="0"/>
+      </a>
+                          </td>
+                </tr>
+            </table>
+            <hr noshade="" size="1"/>
+            </div>
+            <table border="0" width="100%" cellspacing="4">
+              <tr>
+                <td align='RIGHT' colspan="2">
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+                    Search the site
+                    <input type="text"   name="q" size="25" maxlength="255" 
value="" />
+                    <input type="hidden" name="sitesearch" 
value="http://uima.apache.org/"; />
+                    <input name="Search" value="Search Site" type="submit"/>
+                  </form>
+                </td>
+              </tr>
+              <tr> <!-- LEFT SIDE NAVIGATION -->
+                <td width="20%" valign="top">
+
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+            <div class="navBarItem">      <div class="navPartHeading">Events 
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href="./lrec08.html">LREC 2008</a>
+                </div>
+                          <div class="navBarItem">      <a 
href="./gldv07.html">GLDV 2007</a>
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Sponsors <img src="images/offsitelink.png"/></a>
+                </div>
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href="http://www.apache.org/foundation/sponsorship.html"; target="_blank">ASF 
Sponsorship <img src="images/offsitelink.png"/></a>
+                </div>
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href="http://www.apache.org/security"; target="_blank">Security <img 
src="images/offsitelink.png"/></a>
+                </div>
+            </div>
+        </div>
+                </td>
+                <td width="80%" align="left" valign="top">
+                                                          <div 
class="sectionTable">
+      <table class="sectionTable">
+        <tr><td>
+        <a name="UIMA Workshop at COLING 2014 in Dublin/Ireland"><h1><img 
src="images/UIMA_4sq50tightCropSolid.png"/>&nbsp;UIMA Workshop at COLING 2014 
in Dublin/Ireland</h1></a>
+      </td></tr>
+      <tr><td>
+        <blockquote class="sectionBody">
+                                    <p>
+  There will be a workshop with a strong focus on UIMA, as part of the 
+  <a href="http://glicom.upf.edu/OIAF4HLT/";>Workshop on Open Infrastructures 
and Analysis Frameworks for HLT</a> 
+  at <a href="http://www.coling-2014.org/";>COLING 2014</a>, the 25th 
International Conference on Computational Linguistics.  
+  Please find the CFP below.
+</p>
+                                                <p> 
+<blockquote>
+<h1 
id="workshop-on-open-infrastructures-and-analysis-frameworks-for-hlt">Workshop 
on Open Infrastructures and Analysis Frameworks for HLT</h1>
+<p>http://glicom.upf.edu/OIAF4HLT/</p>
+<p>At the 25th International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING 
2014)<br />Helix Conference Centre at Dublin City University (DCU)<br />23-29 
August 2014</p>
+<h2 id="description">Description</h2>
+<p>Recent advances in digital storage and networking, coupled with the 
extension of human language technologies (HLT) into ever broader areas and the 
persistence of difficulties in software portability, have led to an increased 
focus on development and deployment of web-based infrastructures that allow 
users to access tools and other resources and combine them to create novel 
solutions that can be efficiently composed, tuned, evaluated, disseminated and 
consumed. This in turn engenders collaborative development and deployment among 
individuals and teams across the globe. It also increases the need for robust, 
widely available evaluation methods and tools, means to achieve 
interoperability of software and data from diverse sources, means to handle 
licensing for limited access resources distributed over the web, and, perhaps 
crucially, the need to develop strategies for multi-site collaborative work.</p>
+<p>For many decades, NLP has suffered from low software engineering standards 
causing a limited degree of re-usability of code and interoperability of 
different modules within larger NLP systems. While this did not really hamper 
success in limited task areas (such as implementing a parser), it caused 
serious problems for building complex integrated software systems, e.g., for 
information extraction or machine translation. This lack of integration has led 
to duplicated software development, work-arounds for programs written in 
different (versions of) programming languages, and ad-hoc tweaking of 
interfaces between modules developed at different sites.</p>
+<p>In recent years, two main frameworks, UIMA and GATE, have emerged that aim 
to allow the easy integration of varied tools through common type systems and 
standardized communication methods for components analysing unstructured 
textual information, such as natural language. Both frameworks offer a solid 
processing infrastructure that allows developers to concentrate on the 
implementation of the actual analytics components. An increasing number of 
members of the NLP community have adopted one of these frameworks as a platform 
for facilitating the creation of reusable NLP components that can be assembled 
to address different NLP tasks depending on their order, combination and 
configuration. Analysis frameworks also reduce the problem of reproducibility 
of NLP results by formalising solution composition and making language 
processing tools shareable.</p>
+<p>Very recently, several efforts have been devoted to the development of web 
service platforms for NLP. These platforms exploit the growing number of 
web-based tools and services available for tasks related to HLT, including 
corpus annotation, configuration and execution of NLP pipelines, and evaluation 
of results and automatic parameter tuning. These platforms can also integrate 
modules and pipelines from existing frameworks such as UIMA and GATE, in order 
to achieve interoperability with a wide variety of modules from different 
sources.</p>
+<p>Many of the issues and challenges surrounding these developments have been 
addressed individually in particular projects and workshops, but there are 
ramifications that cut across all of them. We therefore feel that this is the 
moment to bring together participants representing the range of interests that 
comprise the comprehensive picture for community-driven, distributed, 
collaborative, web-based development and use for language processing software 
and resources. This includes those engaged in development of infrastructures 
for HLT as well as those who will use these services and infrastructures, 
especially for multi-site collaborative work.</p>
+<h3 id="workshop-objectives">Workshop Objectives</h3>
+<p>The overall goal of this workshop is to provide a forum for discussion of 
the requirements for an envisaged open “global laboratory” for HLT research 
and development and establish the basis of a community effort to develop and 
support it. To this end, the workshop will include both presentations 
addressing the issues and challenges of developing, deploying, and using the 
global laboratory for distributed and collaborative efforts and discussion that 
will identify next steps for moving forward, fostering community-wide 
awareness, and establishing and encouraging communication among the various 
players.</p>
+<p>It aims at bringing together members of the NLP community specifically 
users, developers or providers of components and tools for these frameworks in 
order to explore and discuss the opportunities and challenges in using such 
platforms for modern, well-engineered NLP applications.</p>
+<p>The challenge of creating reusable and interoperable components raises 
particular interest and are affected by legal issues, such as potentially 
incompatible licenses of components and tools as well as the technical aspects 
of packaging and distribution of components. Also, tools are important, for 
example to assemble complex processing pipelines, to manage the bodies of data 
that are to be analysed and to visualize, explore, and further deploy the 
analysis results. Further challenges are involved in embedding framework based 
analysis within applications or using it in distributed computing scenarios, 
such as deployment of and access to required resources. Finally, the 
preservation of analysis results, their provenance and reproducibility are of 
particular interest to the scientific user community.</p>
+<h3 id="topics">Topics</h3>
+<p>Workshop topics include, but are not limited to:</p>
+<ul>
+<li>processing of very large data collections: scale-out, parallelization, and 
performance optimization</li>
+<li>advanced applications driven by an NLP framework</li>
+<li>sophisticated tools to build and manage complex processing pipelines</li>
+<li>analysis of results: exploration, evaluation, visualization, and 
statistical analysis</li>
+<li>experience reports combining components from different sources, as well as 
solutions to interoperability issues</li>
+<li>experience reports combining different frameworks (e.g. 
GATE/UIMA/WebLicht/etc.)</li>
+<li>UIMA components with a special focus on genericity and type-system 
independence</li>
+<li>repositories of ready-to-use components for UIMA and/or GATE</li>
+<li>distribution of components: documentation, licensing and packaging</li>
+<li>developing for UIMA or GATE: simplified APIs, debugging, unit testing, and 
limitations of the frameworks</li>
+<li>combining annotation type systems in processing frameworks (GATE, UIMA, 
etc.) with standardization efforts, such as done in the ISO TC37/SC4 or TEI 
contexts.</li>
+<li>use of NLP frameworks in real-world "industry" settings</li>
+<li>reports on current projects and frameworks, their challenges and proposed 
or implemented solutions, including efforts to address interoperability</li>
+<li>issues and challenges of multi-site collaborative projects, including 
reports of implemented or proposed strategies</li>
+<li>pipeline management, including authentication, strategies for passing 
resources through disparate tools and across hosting nodes, and licensing</li>
+<li>development and use of evaluation environments that facilitate assessment 
of HLT component performance, iterative application development, and 
replication of results</li>
+<li>community awareness and implementation of open infrastructures, including 
how to engage the community, establish confidence in the process, and promote 
use</li>
+</ul>
+<h2 id="dates">Dates</h2>
+<p>Paper Submission Deadline: 2nd May 2014<br />Author Notification Deadline: 
6th June 2014<br />Camera-Ready Paper Deadline: 27th June 2014<br />Workshop: 
23rd August 2014</p>
+<h2 id="organisers">Organisers</h2>
+<p>Nancy Ide<br />Department of Computer Science, Vassar College</p>
+<p>James Pustejovsky<br />Department of Computer Science, Brandeis 
University</p>
+<p>Eric Nyberg<br />Language Technologies Institute, School of Computer 
Science, Carnegie Mellon University</p>
+<p>Christopher Cieri<br />Linguistic Data Consortium, University of 
Pennsylvania</p>
+<p>Jonathan Wright<br />Linguistic Data Consortium, University of 
Pennsylvania</p>
+<p>Jens Grivolla<br />GLiCom, Universitat Pompeu Fabra</p>
+<p>Kalina Bontcheva<br />Department of Computer Science, University of 
Sheffield</p>
+<h2 id="program-committee">Program Committee</h2>
+<p>confirmed:</p>
+<ul>
+<li>Richard Eckart de Castilho, TU Darmstadt</li>
+<li>Peter Klügl, Universität Würzburg</li>
+<li>Jens Grivolla, Universitat Pompeu Fabra</li>
+<li>Renaud Richardet, École Polytechnique Fédérale De Lausanne</li>
+<li>Michael Tanenblatt, Thomas J. Watson Research Center</li>
+<li>Azad Dehghan, University of Manchester</li>
+<li>Leon Derczynski, University of Sheffield</li>
+<li>Horacio Saggion, Universitat Pompeu Fabra</li>
+<li>Carlos Rodríguez-Penagos, Barcelona Media</li>
+<li>Joan Codina, Universitat Pompeu Fabra</li>
+<li>Mark A. Greenwood, University of Sheffield</li>
+<li>Marie-Jean Meurs, Concordia University</li>
+<li>Kamel Nebhi, University of Geneva</li>
+<li>Bahar Sateli, Semantic Software Lab, Concordia University</li>
+<li>René Witte, Semantic Software Lab, Concordia University</li>
+<li>Graham Wilcock, Helsinki</li>
+<li>Torsten Zesch, University of Duisburg-Essen</li>
+<li>Yoshinobu Kano, PRESTO, Japan Science and Technology Agency</li>
+<li>Mohammad AL Asswad, Cornell University</li>
+</ul>
+</blockquote>
+
+</p>
+                            </blockquote>
+        </p>
+      </td></tr>
+    </table>
+                                  </td>
+                </tr>
+                <!-- FOOTER -->
+                <tr><td colspan="2">
+                  <hr noshade="" size="1"/>
+                </td></tr>
+                <tr><td colspan="2"> 
+                  <table class="pageFooter">
+                    <tr>
+                      <td><a href="index.html">Home</a></td>
+                      <td><a href="privacy-policy.html">Privacy Policy</a></td>
+                      <td style="font-size:75%">
+                Copyright &#169; 2006-2013, The Apache Software 
Foundation.<br/>
+                Apache UIMA, UIMA, the Apache UIMA logo and the Apache Feather 
logo are trademarks of The Apache Software Foundation.<br/>
+                All other marks mentioned may be trademarks or registered 
trademarks of their respective owners.
+                      </td>
+                      <td><a href="mailto:d...@uima.apache.org";>Contact 
us</a></td>
+                    </tr>
+                  </table>                    
+                </td></tr>
+            </table>
+        </body>
+    </html>
+

Modified: uima/site/trunk/uima-website/xdocs/coling14.xml
URL: 
http://svn.apache.org/viewvc/uima/site/trunk/uima-website/xdocs/coling14.xml?rev=1586005&r1=1586004&r2=1586005&view=diff
==============================================================================
--- uima/site/trunk/uima-website/xdocs/coling14.xml (original)
+++ uima/site/trunk/uima-website/xdocs/coling14.xml Wed Apr  9 16:10:13 2014
@@ -39,113 +39,75 @@ under the License.
 
 
 <p> 
-<pre>
-Workshop on Open Infrastructures and Analysis Frameworks for HLT
-================================================================
-
-http://glicom.upf.edu/OIAF4HLT/
-
-At the 25th International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING 
2014)  
-Helix Conference Centre at Dublin City University (DCU)  
-23-29 August 2014
-
-Description
------------
-
-Recent advances in digital storage and networking, coupled with the extension 
of human language technologies (HLT) into ever broader areas and the 
persistence of difficulties in software portability, have led to an increased 
focus on development and deployment of web-based infrastructures that allow 
users to access tools and other resources and combine them to create novel 
solutions that can be efficiently composed, tuned, evaluated, disseminated and 
consumed. This in turn engenders collaborative development and deployment among 
individuals and teams across the globe. It also increases the need for robust, 
widely available evaluation methods and tools, means to achieve 
interoperability of software and data from diverse sources, means to handle 
licensing for limited access resources distributed over the web, and, perhaps 
crucially, the need to develop strategies for multi-site collaborative work. 
-
-For many decades, NLP has suffered from low software engineering standards 
causing a limited degree of re-usability of code and interoperability of 
different modules within larger NLP systems. While this did not really hamper 
success in limited task areas (such as implementing a parser), it caused 
serious problems for building complex integrated software systems, e.g., for 
information extraction or machine translation. This lack of integration has led 
to duplicated software development, work-arounds for programs written in 
different (versions of) programming languages, and ad-hoc tweaking of 
interfaces between modules developed at different sites.
-
-In recent years, two main frameworks, UIMA and GATE, have emerged that aim to 
allow the easy integration of varied tools through common type systems and 
standardized communication methods for components analysing unstructured 
textual information, such as natural language. Both frameworks offer a solid 
processing infrastructure that allows developers to concentrate on the 
implementation of the actual analytics components. An increasing number of 
members of the NLP community have adopted one of these frameworks as a platform 
for facilitating the creation of reusable NLP components that can be assembled 
to address different NLP tasks depending on their order, combination and 
configuration. Analysis frameworks also reduce the problem of reproducibility 
of NLP results by formalising solution composition and making language 
processing tools shareable.
-
-Very recently, several efforts have been devoted to the development of web 
service platforms for NLP. These platforms exploit the growing number of 
web-based tools and services available for tasks related to HLT, including 
corpus annotation, configuration and execution of NLP pipelines, and evaluation 
of results and automatic parameter tuning. These platforms can also integrate 
modules and pipelines from existing frameworks such as UIMA and GATE, in order 
to achieve interoperability with a wide variety of modules from different 
sources.
-
-Many of the issues and challenges surrounding these developments have been 
addressed individually in particular projects and workshops, but there are 
ramifications that cut across all of them. We therefore feel that this is the 
moment to bring together participants representing the range of interests that 
comprise the comprehensive picture for community-driven, distributed, 
collaborative, web-based development and use for language processing software 
and resources. This includes those engaged in development of infrastructures 
for HLT as well as those who will use these services and infrastructures, 
especially for multi-site collaborative work. 
-
-
-### Workshop Objectives
-
-The overall goal of this workshop is to provide a forum for discussion of the 
requirements for an envisaged open “global laboratory” for HLT research and 
development and establish the basis of a community effort to develop and 
support it. To this end, the workshop will include both presentations 
addressing the issues and challenges of developing, deploying, and using the 
global laboratory for distributed and collaborative efforts and discussion that 
will identify next steps for moving forward, fostering community-wide 
awareness, and establishing and encouraging communication among the various 
players. 
-
-It aims at bringing together members of the NLP community specifically users, 
developers or providers of components and tools for these frameworks in order 
to explore and discuss the opportunities and challenges in using such platforms 
for modern, well-engineered NLP applications.
-
-The challenge of creating reusable and interoperable components raises 
particular interest and are affected by legal issues, such as potentially 
incompatible licenses of components and tools as well as the technical aspects 
of packaging and distribution of components. Also, tools are important, for 
example to assemble complex processing pipelines, to manage the bodies of data 
that are to be analysed and to visualize, explore, and further deploy the 
analysis results. Further challenges are involved in embedding framework based 
analysis within applications or using it in distributed computing scenarios, 
such as deployment of and access to required resources. Finally, the 
preservation of analysis results, their provenance and reproducibility are of 
particular interest to the scientific user community.
-
-### Topics
-
-Workshop topics include, but are not limited to:
-
-- processing of very large data collections: scale-out, parallelization, and 
performance optimization
-- advanced applications driven by an NLP framework
-- sophisticated tools to build and manage complex processing pipelines
-- analysis of results: exploration, evaluation, visualization, and statistical 
analysis
-- experience reports combining components from different sources, as well as 
solutions to interoperability issues
-- experience reports combining different frameworks (e.g. 
GATE/UIMA/WebLicht/etc.)
-- UIMA components with a special focus on genericity and type-system 
independence
-- repositories of ready-to-use components for UIMA and/or GATE
-- distribution of components: documentation, licensing and packaging
-- developing for UIMA or GATE: simplified APIs, debugging, unit testing, and 
limitations of the frameworks
-- combining annotation type systems in processing frameworks (GATE, UIMA, 
etc.) with standardization efforts, such as done in the ISO TC37/SC4 or TEI 
contexts.
-- use of NLP frameworks in real-world "industry" settings
-- reports on current projects and frameworks, their challenges and proposed or 
implemented solutions, including efforts to address interoperability 
-- issues and challenges of multi-site collaborative projects, including 
reports of implemented or proposed strategies
-- pipeline management, including authentication, strategies for passing 
resources through disparate tools and across hosting nodes, and licensing 
-- development and use of evaluation environments that facilitate assessment of 
HLT component performance, iterative application development, and replication 
of results 
-- community awareness and implementation of open infrastructures, including 
how to engage the community, establish confidence in the process, and promote 
use
-
-Dates
------
-Paper Submission Deadline: 2nd May 2014  
-Author Notification Deadline: 6th June 2014  
-Camera-Ready Paper Deadline: 27th June 2014  
-Workshop: 23rd August 2014
-
-Organisers
-----------
-Nancy Ide  
-Department of Computer Science, Vassar College
-
-James Pustejovsky  
-Department of Computer Science, Brandeis University
-
-Eric Nyberg  
-Language Technologies Institute, School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon 
University
-
-Christopher Cieri  
-Linguistic Data Consortium, University of Pennsylvania
-
-Jonathan Wright  
-Linguistic Data Consortium, University of Pennsylvania
-
-Jens Grivolla  
-GLiCom, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
-
-Kalina Bontcheva  
-Department of Computer Science, University of Sheffield
-
-Program Committee
------------------
-
-* Richard Eckart de Castilho, TU Darmstadt
-* Peter Klügl, Universität Würzburg
-* Jens Grivolla, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
-* Renaud Richardet, École Polytechnique Fédérale De Lausanne
-* Michael Tanenblatt, Thomas J. Watson Research Center
-* Azad Dehghan, University of Manchester
-* Leon Derczynski, University of Sheffield
-* Horacio Saggion, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
-* Carlos Rodríguez-Penagos, Barcelona Media
-* Joan Codina, Universitat Pompeu Fabra
-* Mark A. Greenwood, University of Sheffield
-* Marie-Jean Meurs, Concordia University
-* Kamel Nebhi, University of Geneva
-* Bahar Sateli, Semantic Software Lab, Concordia University
-* René Witte, Semantic Software Lab, Concordia University
-* Graham Wilcock, Helsinki
-* Torsten Zesch, University of Duisburg-Essen
-* Yoshinobu Kano, PRESTO, Japan Science and Technology Agency
-* Mohammad AL Asswad, Cornell University
-</pre>
+<blockquote>
+<h1 
id="workshop-on-open-infrastructures-and-analysis-frameworks-for-hlt">Workshop 
on Open Infrastructures and Analysis Frameworks for HLT</h1>
+<p>http://glicom.upf.edu/OIAF4HLT/</p>
+<p>At the 25th International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING 
2014)<br />Helix Conference Centre at Dublin City University (DCU)<br />23-29 
August 2014</p>
+<h2 id="description">Description</h2>
+<p>Recent advances in digital storage and networking, coupled with the 
extension of human language technologies (HLT) into ever broader areas and the 
persistence of difficulties in software portability, have led to an increased 
focus on development and deployment of web-based infrastructures that allow 
users to access tools and other resources and combine them to create novel 
solutions that can be efficiently composed, tuned, evaluated, disseminated and 
consumed. This in turn engenders collaborative development and deployment among 
individuals and teams across the globe. It also increases the need for robust, 
widely available evaluation methods and tools, means to achieve 
interoperability of software and data from diverse sources, means to handle 
licensing for limited access resources distributed over the web, and, perhaps 
crucially, the need to develop strategies for multi-site collaborative work.</p>
+<p>For many decades, NLP has suffered from low software engineering standards 
causing a limited degree of re-usability of code and interoperability of 
different modules within larger NLP systems. While this did not really hamper 
success in limited task areas (such as implementing a parser), it caused 
serious problems for building complex integrated software systems, e.g., for 
information extraction or machine translation. This lack of integration has led 
to duplicated software development, work-arounds for programs written in 
different (versions of) programming languages, and ad-hoc tweaking of 
interfaces between modules developed at different sites.</p>
+<p>In recent years, two main frameworks, UIMA and GATE, have emerged that aim 
to allow the easy integration of varied tools through common type systems and 
standardized communication methods for components analysing unstructured 
textual information, such as natural language. Both frameworks offer a solid 
processing infrastructure that allows developers to concentrate on the 
implementation of the actual analytics components. An increasing number of 
members of the NLP community have adopted one of these frameworks as a platform 
for facilitating the creation of reusable NLP components that can be assembled 
to address different NLP tasks depending on their order, combination and 
configuration. Analysis frameworks also reduce the problem of reproducibility 
of NLP results by formalising solution composition and making language 
processing tools shareable.</p>
+<p>Very recently, several efforts have been devoted to the development of web 
service platforms for NLP. These platforms exploit the growing number of 
web-based tools and services available for tasks related to HLT, including 
corpus annotation, configuration and execution of NLP pipelines, and evaluation 
of results and automatic parameter tuning. These platforms can also integrate 
modules and pipelines from existing frameworks such as UIMA and GATE, in order 
to achieve interoperability with a wide variety of modules from different 
sources.</p>
+<p>Many of the issues and challenges surrounding these developments have been 
addressed individually in particular projects and workshops, but there are 
ramifications that cut across all of them. We therefore feel that this is the 
moment to bring together participants representing the range of interests that 
comprise the comprehensive picture for community-driven, distributed, 
collaborative, web-based development and use for language processing software 
and resources. This includes those engaged in development of infrastructures 
for HLT as well as those who will use these services and infrastructures, 
especially for multi-site collaborative work.</p>
+<h3 id="workshop-objectives">Workshop Objectives</h3>
+<p>The overall goal of this workshop is to provide a forum for discussion of 
the requirements for an envisaged open “global laboratory” for HLT research 
and development and establish the basis of a community effort to develop and 
support it. To this end, the workshop will include both presentations 
addressing the issues and challenges of developing, deploying, and using the 
global laboratory for distributed and collaborative efforts and discussion that 
will identify next steps for moving forward, fostering community-wide 
awareness, and establishing and encouraging communication among the various 
players.</p>
+<p>It aims at bringing together members of the NLP community specifically 
users, developers or providers of components and tools for these frameworks in 
order to explore and discuss the opportunities and challenges in using such 
platforms for modern, well-engineered NLP applications.</p>
+<p>The challenge of creating reusable and interoperable components raises 
particular interest and are affected by legal issues, such as potentially 
incompatible licenses of components and tools as well as the technical aspects 
of packaging and distribution of components. Also, tools are important, for 
example to assemble complex processing pipelines, to manage the bodies of data 
that are to be analysed and to visualize, explore, and further deploy the 
analysis results. Further challenges are involved in embedding framework based 
analysis within applications or using it in distributed computing scenarios, 
such as deployment of and access to required resources. Finally, the 
preservation of analysis results, their provenance and reproducibility are of 
particular interest to the scientific user community.</p>
+<h3 id="topics">Topics</h3>
+<p>Workshop topics include, but are not limited to:</p>
+<ul>
+<li>processing of very large data collections: scale-out, parallelization, and 
performance optimization</li>
+<li>advanced applications driven by an NLP framework</li>
+<li>sophisticated tools to build and manage complex processing pipelines</li>
+<li>analysis of results: exploration, evaluation, visualization, and 
statistical analysis</li>
+<li>experience reports combining components from different sources, as well as 
solutions to interoperability issues</li>
+<li>experience reports combining different frameworks (e.g. 
GATE/UIMA/WebLicht/etc.)</li>
+<li>UIMA components with a special focus on genericity and type-system 
independence</li>
+<li>repositories of ready-to-use components for UIMA and/or GATE</li>
+<li>distribution of components: documentation, licensing and packaging</li>
+<li>developing for UIMA or GATE: simplified APIs, debugging, unit testing, and 
limitations of the frameworks</li>
+<li>combining annotation type systems in processing frameworks (GATE, UIMA, 
etc.) with standardization efforts, such as done in the ISO TC37/SC4 or TEI 
contexts.</li>
+<li>use of NLP frameworks in real-world &quot;industry&quot; settings</li>
+<li>reports on current projects and frameworks, their challenges and proposed 
or implemented solutions, including efforts to address interoperability</li>
+<li>issues and challenges of multi-site collaborative projects, including 
reports of implemented or proposed strategies</li>
+<li>pipeline management, including authentication, strategies for passing 
resources through disparate tools and across hosting nodes, and licensing</li>
+<li>development and use of evaluation environments that facilitate assessment 
of HLT component performance, iterative application development, and 
replication of results</li>
+<li>community awareness and implementation of open infrastructures, including 
how to engage the community, establish confidence in the process, and promote 
use</li>
+</ul>
+<h2 id="dates">Dates</h2>
+<p>Paper Submission Deadline: 2nd May 2014<br />Author Notification Deadline: 
6th June 2014<br />Camera-Ready Paper Deadline: 27th June 2014<br />Workshop: 
23rd August 2014</p>
+<h2 id="organisers">Organisers</h2>
+<p>Nancy Ide<br />Department of Computer Science, Vassar College</p>
+<p>James Pustejovsky<br />Department of Computer Science, Brandeis 
University</p>
+<p>Eric Nyberg<br />Language Technologies Institute, School of Computer 
Science, Carnegie Mellon University</p>
+<p>Christopher Cieri<br />Linguistic Data Consortium, University of 
Pennsylvania</p>
+<p>Jonathan Wright<br />Linguistic Data Consortium, University of 
Pennsylvania</p>
+<p>Jens Grivolla<br />GLiCom, Universitat Pompeu Fabra</p>
+<p>Kalina Bontcheva<br />Department of Computer Science, University of 
Sheffield</p>
+<h2 id="program-committee">Program Committee</h2>
+<p>confirmed:</p>
+<ul>
+<li>Richard Eckart de Castilho, TU Darmstadt</li>
+<li>Peter Klügl, Universität Würzburg</li>
+<li>Jens Grivolla, Universitat Pompeu Fabra</li>
+<li>Renaud Richardet, École Polytechnique Fédérale De Lausanne</li>
+<li>Michael Tanenblatt, Thomas J. Watson Research Center</li>
+<li>Azad Dehghan, University of Manchester</li>
+<li>Leon Derczynski, University of Sheffield</li>
+<li>Horacio Saggion, Universitat Pompeu Fabra</li>
+<li>Carlos Rodríguez-Penagos, Barcelona Media</li>
+<li>Joan Codina, Universitat Pompeu Fabra</li>
+<li>Mark A. Greenwood, University of Sheffield</li>
+<li>Marie-Jean Meurs, Concordia University</li>
+<li>Kamel Nebhi, University of Geneva</li>
+<li>Bahar Sateli, Semantic Software Lab, Concordia University</li>
+<li>René Witte, Semantic Software Lab, Concordia University</li>
+<li>Graham Wilcock, Helsinki</li>
+<li>Torsten Zesch, University of Duisburg-Essen</li>
+<li>Yoshinobu Kano, PRESTO, Japan Science and Technology Agency</li>
+<li>Mohammad AL Asswad, Cornell University</li>
+</ul>
+</blockquote>
 
 </p>
 


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