Workshop on Semantic Spaces at the Intersection of NLP, Physics and Cognitive Science

Event Dates

Jun 11, 2016 - Jun 11, 2016

Location

Glasgow, UK

Submission Deadline

Mar 29, 2016

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Workshop on Semantic Spaces at the Intersection of NLP,

Physics and Cognitive Science

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11th June 2016, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland

(co-located with QPL 2016)

Website: https://sites.google.com/site/semspworkshop

General enquiries: slpcs2016@easychair.org

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CALL FOR PAPERS

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Since their introduction in the early 1970s, vector space models of

meaning have evolved into a well-established area of research in Natural

Language Processing (NLP). Their probabilistic nature and ability to

exploit the abundance of large-scale resources such as the Web make them

one of the most useful tools (arguably the most successful (Turney and

Pantel, 2010)) for modeling what we broadly call meaning in language.

The geometry provided by the angular distance between the vectors has

been widely used as a representative of the degree of similarity of

meaning in NLP.

Another field in which vector space models play an important role is

physics, and especially quantum theory. Though seemingly unrelated to

language, intriguing connections have recently been uncovered. Some

examples include models of compositionality in distributional semantics

(Coecke et al. 2010), treatments of logical words in vector space models

(Widdows, 2003), reasoning about the human mental lexicon in cognitive

processes (Bruza et al., 2009), using vectors of queries and documents

in information retrieval (Van Rijsbergen, 2004), and representing the

meaning of words by density operators (Piedeleu et al., 2015). There is

also a long-standing history of vector space models in cognitive science.

Theories of categorization such as those developed by Nosofsky (1986);

Smith, Osherson, Rips, & Keane, (1988), utilise notions of distance

between concepts represented as feature vectors. More recently Gärdenfors

(2004) has developed a model of concepts in which conceptual spaces

provide geometric structures, and information is represented by points,

vectors and regions in vector spaces.

Exploiting the common ground provided by the concept of a vector space,

the workshop aims to bring together researchers working at the intersection

of NLP, cognitive science, and physics, offering to them an appropriate

forum for presenting their uniquely motivated work and ideas. The interplay

between these three disciplines will foster theoretically motivated

approaches to understanding how meanings of words interact with each

other in sentences and discourse, how diagrammatic reasoning depicts and

simplifies this interaction, how language models are determined by input

from the world, and how word and sentence meanings interact logically.

Topics of interest include (but are not restricted to):

* Reasoning in semantic spaces

* Applications of quantum logic in natural language processing

* Compositionality in semantic spaces and conceptual spaces

* Links between conceptual spaces and natural language processing

* Modeling functional words such as prepositions and relative pronouns

in compositional distributional models of meaning

* Diagrammatic reasoning for natural language processing

SUBMISSION

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We solicit papers that describe original work. The submitted papers may

consist of up to 8 pages of content (**note the new page limit**) including

references in the EPTCS format (http://style.eptcs.org/). Authors are

invited to submit their papers via EasyChair:

https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=slpcs2016

A selection of the accepted papers will be presented orally, and the rest

of them as posters. The proceedings of the workshop will be published as

an EPTCS (Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science) volume.

IMPORTANT DATES

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Paper submission deadline has been extended. All deadlines are at 23:59

Howland Island time (UTC-12).

* Extended paper submission deadline: 29 March 2016

* Reviewing period: 27 March 2016-17 April 2016

* Author notification: 24 April 2016

* Workshop: 11 June 2016

INVITED SPEAKERS

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* Hans Briegel, University of Innsbruck

* Peter Gärdenfors, University of Lund

* Dominic Widdows, Microsoft

REGISTRATION

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Restrigation is now open:

https://www.sites.google.com/site/semspworkshop/registration

PROGRAMME COMMITTEE

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* Peter Bruza, Queensland University of Technology

* Stephen Clark, University of Cambridge

* Bob Coecke, University of Oxford

* Liane Gabora, University of British Columbia

* Chris Heunen, University of Edinburgh

* Peter Hines, University of York

* Aleksandra Kislak-Malinowska, University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn

* Daniel Marsden, University of Oxford

* Glyn Morrill, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya

* Valeria de Paiva, Nuance Communications, Inc

* Stanley Peters, University of Stanford

* Stephen Pulman, University of Oxford

* Matthew Purver, Queen Mary University of London

* Sebastian Riedel, University College London

* Mehrnoosh Sadrzadeh, Queen Mary University of London

* Frank Zenker, University of Konstanz

ORGANIZATION

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* Dimitrios Kartsaklis, Queen Mary University of London

* Martha Lewis, University of Oxford

* Laura Rimell, University of Cambridge

ADVISORY COMMITTEE

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* Stephen Clark, University of Cambridge

* Bob Coecke, University of Oxford

* Mehrnoosh Sadrzadeh, Queen Mary University of London