#SMM4H: Social Media Mining for Health Applications Workshop & Shared Task at ACL 2019

Event Dates

Aug 02, 2019 - Aug 02, 2019

Location

Florence, Italy

Submission Deadline

Apr 26, 2019

#SMM4H: Social Media Mining for Health Applications Workshop & Shared Task at ACL 2019

Location: Florence, Italy

Date: August 2, 2019

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Call for papers

Call for shared task participation

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* Apologies if you received multiple copies of this CFP *

Important links:

Workshop: https://healthlanguageprocessing.org/smm4h/

Submission link: https://www.softconf.com/acl2019/smm4h/

Shared task details: https://healthlanguageprocessing.org/smm4h/challenge/

Workshop

This workshop aims to provide a forum for the ACL community members to present and discuss NLP advances specific to social media use in the particularly challenging area of health-related research and applications, following on the success of the third iteration of #SMM4H at EMNLP in 2018. The workshop seeks to attract researchers interested in novel automatic approaches for the large-scale collection, extraction, representation, analysis, and validation of social media data for monitoring and surveillance.

The workshop will include two components—a standard workshop and a shared task:

Workshop/research forum component: For this component, we invite extended abstracts of 2-4 pages (not including references) and paper submissions of 4-8 pages (not including references) in standard ACL format. Please see submission guidelines below. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

Methods for the automatic detection and extraction of health-related concept mentions in social media

Mapping of health-related mentions in social media to standardized vocabularies

Deriving health-related trends from social media

Information retrieval methods for obtaining and classifying relevant social media data

Geographic or demographic data inference from social media discourse

Virus spread monitoring using social media

Mining health-related discussions in social media

Drug abuse and alcoholism incidence monitoring through social media

Disease incidence and disease progression studies using social media

Sentinel event detection using social media

Semantic methods in social media analysis relevant to health research

Classifying health-related messages in social media

Cohort identification from publicly available social media data

Automatic analysis of social media messages for disease surveillance and patient education

Methods for validation of social-media derived hypothesis and datasets

Shared task component: Details about the shared task can be found at the Shared Task Website. Best performing teams will be invited to submit system description papers at the workshop.

Important dates

Paper submission deadline: April 26, 2019

Notification of acceptance: May 24, 2019

Camera-ready version due: June 3, 2019

Workshop date: August 2, 2019

The shared tasks will follow a different schedule, as explained in the shared task website (https://healthlanguageprocessing.org/smm4h/challenge/).

Submission Guidelines

All workshop papers must be original and not simultaneously submitted to another journal or conference. All papers focusing on natural language processing of social media texts for health-related tasks are welcome.

Full papers must have a maximum length of 4-8 pages (plus references)

Extended Abstracts may have a maximum length of 2-4 pages (plus references)

System Descriptions (shared task participants only) may have a maximum of 2 pages (plus references). Accepted system descriptions will also be included in the workshop proceedings.

Please follow the standard submission guidelines of ACL 2019 available here: http://www.acl2019.org/EN/call-for-papers.xhtml

All submissions must be through Softconf. Submission link: https://www.softconf.com/acl2019/smm4h/

Organizing Committee

Chair – Graciela Gonzalez-Hernandez, University of Pennsylvania

Co-chair – Davy Weissenbacher, University of Pennsylvania

Michael Paul, University of Colorado-Boulder

Abeed Sarker, University of Pennsylvania

Ari Klein, University of Pennsylvania

Ashlynn Daughton, University of Colorado-Boulder

Karen O’Connor, University of Pennsylvania

Program Committee

Nigel Collier, University of Cambridge, UK

Larry Hunter, University of Colorado, USA

Hongfang Liu, Mayo Clinic Rochester, USA

Pierre Zweigenbaum, French National Center for Scientific Research, France

Cecile Paris, CSIRO, Australia

Kirk Roberts, University of Texas Houston, USA

Robert Leaman, US National Library of Medicine, USA

Azadeh Nikfarjam, Nuance Communication, USA

Ehsan Emazadeh, Google Inc., USA