TextGraphs-5: Graph-based Methods for Natural Language Processing
16th of July 2010, Uppsala, Sweden- Hierarchical bipartite spectral graph partitioning to cluster dialect varieties and determine their most important linguistic features
Martijn Wieling and John Nerbonne - Graph-based Clustering for Computational Linguistics: A Survey
Zheng Chen and Heng Ji - Robust and Efficient Page Rank for Word Sense Disambiguation
Diego De Cao, Roberto Basili, Matteo Luciani, Francesco Mesiano and Riccardo Rossi - Towards the Automatic Creation of a Wordnet from a Term-based Lexical Network
Hugo Gonçalo Oliveira and Paulo Gomes - Contextually-Mediated Semantic Similarity for Topic Segmentation
Geetu Ambwani and Anthony Davis - Experiments with CST-based Multidocument Summarization
Maria Lucia Castro Jorge and Thiago Salgueiro Pardo
- Cross-lingual comparison between distributionally determined word similarity networks
Olof Görnerup and Jussi Karlgren - Co-occurrence Cluster Features for Lexical Substitutions in Context
Chris Biemann - Aggregating Opinions: Explorations into Graphs and Media Content Analysis
Gabriele Tatzl and Christoph Waldhauser - Eliminating Redundancy by Spectral Relaxation for Multi-Document Summarization
Fumiyo Fukumoto and Yoshimi Suzuki - MuLLinG: multilevel linguistic graphs for knowledge extraction
Vincent Archer - Computing Word Senses by Semantic Mirroring and Spectral Graph Partitioning
Martin Fagerlund, Magnus Merkel, Lars Eldén and Lars Ahrenberg - A Character-Based Intersection Graph Approach to Linguistic Phylogeny
Jessica Enright - Distinguishing between Positive and Negative Opinions with Complex Network Features
Diego Amancio, Renato Fabbri, Osvaldo Oliveira Jr., Maria Nunes and Luciano Costa - An Investigation on the Influence of Frequency on the Lexical Organization of Verbs
Daniel Germann, Aline Villavicencio and Maity Siqueira - Image and Collateral Text in Support of Auto-annotation and Sentiment Analysis
Pamela Zontone, Giulia Boato, Jonathon Hare, Paul Lewis, Stefan Siersdorfer and Enrico Minack
Author Instructions for Papers Submission
- Formatting instructions
Submissions will consist of:
All submissions must be electronic in PDF and must be formatted using the ACL 2010 style files, which, together with additional author guidelines, are available at ACL 2010 Authors Information
- regular full papers of up to 8 pages of content excluding references (one additional page for the Reference section only is allowed - for a maximum of 9 pages)
- regular short papers of up to 4 pages of content excluding references (one additional page for the Reference section only is allowed - for a maximum of 5 pages)
- position papers describing new scenarios for the use of graphs for text processing, especially in the field of Opinion Mining; they should follow the same length requirements as short papers.
- Multiple-submission policy
Papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or publications must indicate this at submission time. Authors submitting multiple papers to TextGraphs-5 may not submit papers that overlap significantly (> 50%) with each other in content or results. Authors of papers accepted for presentation at Textgraphs-5 must notify the organizers immediately as to whether the paper will be presented. All accepted papers must be presented at the conference in order to appear in the proceedings.- Submission
Papers should be submitted using the START Online Submission Form.
For any questions, please contact one of the organisers or send us an email at textgraphs10 {at} gmail.com.
Important! Workshop submission is now closed. The camera ready version of the accepted papers above should be submitted through the START system by Sunday, May 16th 2010 23:59 EDT.