Workshop on Language Technologies and  

Computational Social Science

Baltimore, Maryland, USA

June 26, 2014

Hosted in conjunction with ACL 2014 



 

Call for papers:


Submission website: https://www.softconf.com/acl2014/LTCSS/


This workshop invites a broad spectrum of work in the intersection between computational linguistics and social science. All submissions will be presented as posters, and active discussion of preliminary and ongoing work are especially encouraged. Topics include, but are not limited to:


  1. Inferring social relations (e.g., power dynamics, stance, accommodation) from conversation and other linguistic behavior

  2. Automatic extraction of international relations event data from news

  3. Inference of author and speaker properties (geography, age, gender, etc) from text and speech

  4. Measuring and tracking political ideology in text, including the framing and positioning of ideological content

  5. Understanding the political system, including public opinion, legislative and judicial processes, and popular unrest

  6. Relating text datasets to author social networks: for example, predicting social ties from text, or smoothing textual topics over network structure

  7. Tracking language change over time, space, and communities

  8. Measuring linguistic influence

  9. Computational analysis of literary and historical corpora

  10. Tracking the flow of information, ideas, and sentiment through social networks, include information cascades

  11. Position papers that draw implications from social science theory (sociology, political science, sociolinguistics, economics) for language technology

  12. New applications of language technology to social science research

  13. We especially welcome submissions with the potential to increase engagement between NLP researchers and social scientists, and which will help to build a community interested in language technologies and computational social science. Submissions should be no more than four pages long in the 2014 ACL format, excluding references; review will be double-blind.  On acceptance, authors will have the option of either the paper or just the abstract being included in the workshop proceedings.


We especially welcome submissions with the potential to increase engagement between NLP researchers and social scientists, and which will help to build a community interested in language technologies and computational social science. Submissions should be no more than four pages long in the 2014 ACL format (style files available here), excluding references; review will be double-blind.  At least one author of each accepted paper is expected to participate in the workshop to present the poster.


Archival policy:  On acceptance, authors will have the option of either the paper or just the abstract being included in the workshop proceedings.  Independent of the preferred archival option, the submission and reviewing process will be identical.


Submission website: https://www.softconf.com/acl2014/LTCSS/


Contact:  ltcss2014@gmail.com

Key Dates:

  1. 18 November 2013: First Call for Workshop Papers

  2. 21 March 2014  24 March 2014, 11:59PM EST Workshop Paper Due Date

  3. 11 April 2014: Notification of Acceptance

  4. 28 April 2014: Camera-ready papers due

  5. 26 June 2014: Workshop Date



Confirmed speakers:

  1. Amber Boydstun (University of California, Davis)

  2. Ed Chi (Google)

  3. Justin Grimmer (Stanford University)

  4. Lillian Lee (Cornell University)

  5. Philip Resnik (University of Maryland)

  6. Sali Tagliamonte (University of Toronto)


Workshop Organizers:

  1. Cristian Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil (Max Planck Institute SWS)

  2. Jacob Eisenstein (Georgia Institute of Technology)

  3. Kathleen McKeown (Columbia University)

  4. Noah Smith (Carnegie Mellon University)