International CLaDA-BG Conference 2024
This is the third edition of the CLaDA-BG conference. It aims at bringing together NLP developers, linguists, digital humanitarians, scholars and all parties interested in knowledge modeling and linking data for research.
Language Technologies and Digital Humanities: Resources and Applications (LTаDH-RA)
CLaDA-BG 2024 Conference
Sofia, Bulgaria
26-28 June 2024
Deadline is extended to 08.05.2024
Satellite event: Workshop CLASSLA-Express: Using corpora in language research (It will be held on 26.06.2024 in the morning)
Programme
Registration
The participation at the conference is free of charge. The fee for the conference dinner is 30 Euro. All participants are invited to register for the conference. The registration link is available here.
Venue
The conference will be held in Sofia. The conference will take place in the "Prof. Marin Drinov" Hall at BAS-Administration (Sofia, 1040, 1 "15 November" Str.).
The official language of the conference is English.
CLaDA-BG is the Bulgarian national research infrastructure for resources and technologies for linguistic, cultural and historical heritage, integrated within CLARIN EU and DARIAH EU. Its mission is to provide access to the necessary resources and technologies that would support the research in Social Sciences and Humanities (SS&H). Modeling and linking of various types of knowledge and its contexts is crucial for the successful research in the interdisciplinary field of resources and technologies related to language, culture and history.
This is the third edition of the CLaDA-BG conference. It aims at bringing together NLP developers, linguists, digital humanitarians, scholars and all parties interested in knowledge modeling and linking data for research.
Topics of Interest
The topics include, but are not limited to, the following ones:
- Problems in SS&H – research methods, technological support
- Language technologies for sentiment analysis, semantic technologies, trust-worthiness of knowledge graphs, ethical challenges in digital SS&H
- Knowledge Modeling and Elicitation for digital SS&H
- Specific Language Resources and Technologies for historical texts, parliamentary records, speech and multimodal corpora, social media data
- The role of digital libraries, archives and museums in digital SS&H research
- Language Interface to Knowledge Graphs in SS&H
- Knowledge-modeled and linked applications in SS&H
- Large Language Models in DH
- Best practices and new trends in Knowledge Modeling and Linking for language, culture and history
Invited Speakers
Darja Fišer, CLARIN ERIC. ParlaMint: From Democracy to Data and back
Maciej Piasecki, CLARIN-PL, Wroclaw University of Science and Technology, Poland. Large Language Models as a Generic Engine for Digital Social Sciences and Humanities
Pia Sommerauer, CLTL, VU University Amsterdam, the Netherlands. Know What You Are Modeling: Why We Need Interdisciplinary Perspectives to Understand Large Language Models
Absract: (Large) language models achieve impressive results on various NLP tasks. As such, they have become attractive tools for many humanities fields that study research questions based on (large amounts of) texts. LLMs are, however, based on purely distributional data; they still rely on learning (possibly complex and sophisticated) associations between words and their contexts. It is difficult to tell to what degree language models can reflect a human-like understanding of semantics and how specific information is reflected. Are the models nuanced enough to reflect subtle changes in word meaning over time? To what degree do models reflect social biases? Is it possible to remove specific information while leaving the rest of the model unchanged? How should we examine the model to find the information we are interested in? When using computational models to answer research questions in the humanities, it is important to understand the strengths and weaknesses of the models. In this talk, I will present work from two research directions: studying semantic change and examining social biases. Both directions illustrate how complex use cases and questions informed by humanities research can help us reach a better understanding of language models.
Tanja Wissik, ACDH-CH, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria. Terminology practices in institutional settings in the digital age: challenges and opportunities
Important Dates
Submission deadline: 28.04.2024
Notification of acceptance: 24.05.2024
Final Submission: 20.06.2024
Conference: 26-28.06.2024
Submissions
We welcome oral presentations or posters (optionally with demo). We conform to CEUR-WS.org proceedings. There are two types of papers: regular papers (at least 10 "standard" pages) and short papers (5-9 "standard" pages) in accordance with CEURART, 2-column style. A "standard" is 2500 characters.
We also accept extended abstract submissions (3-5 "standard" pages) in accordance with CEURART, 2-column style. They will be presented at the conference and will be published in a Book of Abstracts in electronic form.
Please submit your full paper or extended abstract in PDF to this EasyChair link: https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=ltdhra2024
For contacting organizers please use the following email: Този имейл адрес е защитен от спам ботове. Трябва да имате пусната JavaScript поддръжка, за да го видите.
Conference Chairs
Kiril Simov, Institute of Information and Communication Technologies, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Desislava Paneva-Marinova, Institute of Mathematics and Informatics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Dimitar Iliev, Sofia University “St Kliment Ohridski”, Bulgaria
Program Committee
Andreas Witt, Leibniz Institute for the German Language, Mannheim, Germany
Agiatis Benardou, DARIAH EU
António Branco, University of Lisbon, Portugal, tbc
Costanza Navarretta, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Desislava Paneva-Marinova, Institute of Mathematics and Informatics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Dimitar Iliev, Sofia University “St Kliment Ohridski”, Bulgaria
Dimitar Popov, Shumen University, Bulgaria
Erhard Hinrichs, University of Tuebingen, Germany
Francesca Frontini, Institute for Computational Linguistics, Italy
Inguna Skadiņa, Institute of Mathematics and Computer Science, University of Latvia, Latvia
Ivan Georgiev, IICT & IMI, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Jurgita Vaičenonienė, Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania
Kiril Simov, IICT, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Koraljka Kuzman Šlogar, Institute of Ethnology and Folklore Research, Croatia
Laurent Romary, Inria, France
Maria Gavriilidou, Institute for Language and Speech Processing - Athena R.C., Greece
Maciej Ogrodniczuk, Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland
Maciej Piasecki, Wroclaw University of Technology, Poland
Magdelena Stoyanova, CISBI-Università Ca' Foscari, Venezia, Italy, tbc
Milena Dobreva, Sofia University “St Kliment Ohridski”, Bulgaria
Monica Monachini, Institute for Computational Linguistics, Italy
Peter Stanchev, Institute of Mathematics and Informatics, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria and Kettering University, USA, tbc
Petya Osenova, Sofia University “St Kliment Ohridski” and IICT, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria
Snežana Petrović, Institute for the Serbian Language, Serbian Academy for Sciences, Serbia
Yura Konstantinova, Institute of Balkan Studies & Centre of Thracology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Bulgaria