AKBC 2019

1st Conference on Automated Knowledge Base Construction (AKBC)

May 20-22, 2019, Monday-Wednesday, Amherst, MA

www: http://www.akbc.ws ; email: i...@akbc.ws

Key dates

   -

   November 16, 2018, Friday: Conference paper submissions due
   -

   January 11, Friday: Workshop topics announced
   -

   February 15, 2019, Friday: Conference notification
   -

   May 20-21, 2019, Monday-Tuesday: Conference, UMass Amherst
   -

   May 22, 2019, Wednesday: Workshops, UMass Amherst


Knowledge Base Construction

Knowledge gathering, representation, and reasoning are among the
fundamental challenges of artificial intelligence.  Large-scale
repositories of knowledge about entities, relations, and their abstractions
are known as “knowledge bases”.  Most major technology companies now have
substantial efforts in knowledge base construction, and related scholarly
work spans many research areas, including machine learning, natural
language processing, computer vision, information integration, databases,
search, data mining, knowledge representation, human computation,
human-computer interfaces, and fairness.  The AKBC conference serves as a
research forum for all these areas, in both academia and industry.

New Conference

Nearly ten years after the first AKBC workshop in Grenoble, France, AKBC is
becoming a conference.  Why a new stand-alone conference?

   -

   Long-standing and growing interest in the area, now with too much
   material for a one-day workshop.  We have sufficient material for a two-day
   conference plus topical workshops.
   -

   We want to grow and connect the community beyond existing individual
   conference communities, bringing together ML, NLP, DB, IR, KRR, semantics,
   reasoning, common sense, QA, human computation, dialog, HCI.
   -

   We want to set our own culture, including reviewing practices, and
   meeting format. We have fond memories of the first AKBC 2010 in Grenoble: a
   two-day meeting that included an afternoon hike in the Alps with much great
   scientific discussion.
   -

   Why now?  Growing interest across many areas.  Disconnect among multiple
   relevant communities.  Growing industry and government interest.


Call For Papers

We invite the submission of papers describing previously unpublished
research, including new methodology, datasets, evaluations, surveys,
reproduced results, negative results, and visionary positions.

Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

   -

   Natural language processing, information extraction, extraction of
   entities, relations, and events, semantic parsing, coreference, machine
   reading, entailment, web mining, multilingual NLP.
   -

   Information integration, entity resolution, schema & ontology alignment,
   text and structure alignment, federated KBs, Semantic Web.
   -

   Machine learning, supervised, unsupervised, lightly-supervised and
   distantly-supervised learning, deep learning, symbolic learning, multimodal
   learning, embeddings of knowledge.
   -

   Search, question-answering, reasoning, knowledge base completion,
   queries on mixtures of structured and unstructured data; querying under
   uncertainty.
   -

   Multi-modal knowledge bases: structured data, text, images, video, audio.
   -

   Human-computer interaction, crowdsourcing, interactive learning.
   -

   Fairness, accountability, transparency, misinformation, multiple
   viewpoints, uncertainty.
   -

   Databases, probabilistic databases, distributed databases, database
   cleaning, scalable computation, distributed computation, dynamic data,
   online adaptation of knowledge.
   -

   Systems, languages and toolkits, demonstrations of existing knowledge
   bases.
   -

   Evaluation of AKBC, datasets, evaluation methodology.


Authors of accepted papers will have the option for their conference paper
to be archival (with full text in AKBC Proceedings, and be considered for
best paper awards) or non-archival (listed in AKBC Conference schedule,
with full text in OpenReview, and the flexibility to also submit
elsewhere).  Double-blind reviewing will be performed on the OpenReview
platform, with papers, reviews and comments publicly visible, much like
ICLR 2018.

Papers are restricted to a maximum of 15 pages excluding references in the
AKBC format <http://www.akbc.ws/2019/akbc-latex.zip> (JAIR-like single
column, equivalent of about 8 pages double column). Shorter submissions
will not be penalized. The reviewing is double-blind, and thus the
submissions should be anonymous. Submission site:
http://www.akbc.ws/2019/submission

Dual Submission Policy: Submissions that are identical (or substantially
similar) to versions that have been previously published, or accepted for
publication, are not allowed and violate our dual submission policy.
However, papers that cite previous related work by the authors and papers
that have appeared on non-peered reviewed websites (like arXiv) or that
have been presented at workshops (i.e., venues that do not have publication
proceedings) do not violate the policy. The policy is enforced during the
whole reviewing process period.

Invited Talks

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   Waleed Ammar <https://allenai.org/team/waleeda/> (AI2)
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   Danqi Chen <https://cs.stanford.edu/~danqi/> (Princeton)
   -

   Yejin Choi <https://homes.cs.washington.edu/~yejin/> (UW, AI2)
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   Laura Dietz <http://www.cs.unh.edu/~dietz/> (UNH)
   -

   Lise Getoor <https://getoor.soe.ucsc.edu/home> (UCSC)
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   Alexandra Meliou <https://people.cs.umass.edu/~ameli/> (UMass)
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   Ndapa Nakashole <http://nakashole.com/> (UCSD)
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   Fernando Pereira <https://ai.google/research/people/author1092> (Google)
   -

   Hoifung Poon <https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/research/people/hoifung/>
   (MSR)
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   Chris Re <https://cs.stanford.edu/people/chrismre/> (Stanford and Apple)
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   Sebastian Riedel <http://www.riedelcastro.org/> (UCL and Facebook)
   -

   Guy Van den Broeck <http://web.cs.ucla.edu/~guyvdb/> (UCLA)
   -

   Claudia Wagner <http://www.claudiawagner.info/> (Leibniz Institute for
   Social Sciences)
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   Chris Welty <https://ai.google/research/people/104789> (Google)


Workshops

In addition to the two-day conference program, we will have a one-day
collection of workshops on focused topics.  Rather than accepting disjoint
workshop proposals, this year we will have a community-driven process for
devising workshop topics and organizers.  Please visit
http://www.akbc.ws/2019/workshops/ for more details.

Organizers

General Chair Andrew McCallum <https://people.cs.umass.edu/~mccallum/>,
University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Program Co-chair Isabelle Augenstein <http://isabelleaugenstein.github.io/>,
University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Program Co-chair Sameer Singh <http://sameersingh.org/>, University of
California Irvine, USA

Workshop Co-chair Xiang Ren <http://www-bcf.usc.edu/~xiangren/>, USC, USA

Workshop Co-chair Partha Pratim Talukdar <http://talukdar.net/>, IISc,
Bangalore, India

Funding Chair Sebastian Riedel <http://www.riedelcastro.org/>, University
College London, UK

Local Co-chair Ari Kobren <https://akobre01.github.io/>, University of
Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Local Co-chair Nicholas Monath <https://people.cs.umass.edu/~nmonath/>,
University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Area Chairs

Lora Aroyo, Michael Cafarella, Kai-Wei Chang, Luna Dong, Matt Gardner, Paul
Groth, Hannaneh Hajishirzi, Roman Klinger, Max Nickel, Jay Pujara, Siva
Reddy, Tim Rocktaschel, Sunita Sarawagi, Michael Wick, Luke Zettlemoyer

Questions?  Please mail i...@akbc.ws.


-- 
Sameer Singh
Computer Science and Engineering
Univ of Washington, Seattle
http://sameersingh.org/
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