Student Research Workshop Collocated with EACL 2023, Dubrovnik, Croatia.
Main Conference: May 2-6, 2023
Workshop Dates: May 4, 2023
***Paper Submission Deadline: December 16, 2022 ***
Submissions should be made on the START conference system: https://softconf.com/eacl2023/SRW/user/
The EACL 2023 Student Research Workshop (SRW) provides a forum for student researchers who are investigating various areas related to Computational Linguistics and Natural Language Processing.
The workshop's goal is to aid students at multiple stages of their education: including undergraduate, masters, junior and senior PhD students.
We invite papers in two different categories:
Thesis Proposals: This category is appropriate for PhD students who have decided on a thesis topic and wish to get feedback on their proposal and broader ideas for their continuing work.
Research Papers: Papers in this category can describe completed work, or work in progress with preliminary results. For these papers, the first author **MUST BE** a current graduate or undergraduate student. Topics of interest for the SRW are the same as EACL main conference https://2023.eacl.org/calls/papers/.
Please see the submission guidelines page for more information: Submission Guidelines
All accepted papers and thesis proposals will be presented in the main conference poster session, giving students an opportunity to interact with and present their work to a large and diverse audience, including top researchers in the field and assigned mentors.
Submissions (in both categories) may either be archival or non-archival, based on the wishes of the authors. All archival papers will be published in the EACL 2023 SRW Proceedings. All non-archival papers may be submitted to any venue in the future except another SRW.
Each willing participant is also assigned a mentor - an experienced researcher - who can provide valuable advice on the submission before the camera-ready deadline and mentoring during the conference.
Paper submission deadline: 16th December 2022
Acceptance notification: 24th February 2023
Camera-ready deadline: 17th March 2023
EACL conference dates: 2nd May - 6th May 2023
All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 ("anywhere on Earth").
We accept both archival submissions (i.e., the work can be included in the conference proceedings) and non-archival submissions (the work will be presented in the workshop, but will not be part of the proceedings).
Papers can be submitted as short or long papers.
Short papers consist of up to four (4) pages of content, plus unlimited references. Upon acceptance, they will be given five (5) content pages in the proceedings.
Long papers consist of up to eight (8) pages of content, plus unlimited references. Upon acceptance, they will be given nine (9) content pages in the proceedings.
Thesis proposals consist of up to eight (8) pages of content, plus unlimited references. Upon acceptance, they will be given nine (9) content pages in the proceedings.
Authors are encouraged to use this additional page to address reviewers’ comments in their final versions.
Paper submissions must use the official EACL 2023 style templates. All submissions must be in PDF format and must conform to the official style guidelines, which are contained in these template files. The review process is blind hence all submissions must be anonymized.
The SRW invites papers on topics related to computational linguistics, including but not limited to:
Anaphora, Discourse and Pragmatics
Computational Social Science and Social Media
Dialogue and Interactive Systems
Document analysis, Text Categorization and Topic Models
Generation and Summarization
Ethical and Sustainable NLP
Information Retrieval and Search
Information Extraction
Interpretability and Model Analysis in NLP
Language Resources and Evaluation
Language Grounding and Multi-Modality
Linguistic Theories, Cognitive Modeling and Psycholinguistics
Machine Learning in NLP
Machine Translation
Multilinguality
Multidisciplinary and NLP Applications
Question Answering
Semantics: lexical
Semantics: sentence level and other areas
Sentiment Analysis and Argument Mining
Phonology, Morphology, and Word Segmentation
Tagging, Chunking, Syntax, and Parsing