EMNLP 2016

''Enter your description here. Maybe just paste in the call for papers.''

Committees
Submission Information

We are now accepting submissions online via Softconf: http://www.softconf.com/emnlp2016/papers/

Please refer to the conference website for detailed submission instructions: http://www.emnlp2016.net/submissions.html

Long Papers

EMNLP 2016 long paper submissions must describe substantial, original, completed and unpublished work. Wherever appropriate, concrete evaluation and analysis should be included. Each submission will be reviewed by at least three program committee members. Each long paper submission consists of a paper of up to eight (8) pages of content, plus two pages for references; final versions of long papers will be given one additional page (up to 9 pages with unlimited pages for references) so that reviewers’ comments can be taken into account.

Short Papers

EMNLP 2016 also solicits short papers. Short paper submissions must describe original and unpublished work. While a short paper is not a shortened long paper, the characteristics of short papers include: a small, focused contribution; work in progress; a negative result; an opinion piece; an interesting application nugget. Each short paper submission consists of up to four (4) pages of content, plus 2 pages for references. Upon acceptance, short papers will be given five (5) pages in the proceedings and unlimited pages for references. Authors are encouraged to use this additional page to address reviewers’ comments in their final versions. Each short paper submission will be reviewed by at least three program committee members.

Formatting

Both long and short papers should follow the two-column format to be provided at the conference site. We reserve the right to reject submissions if the paper does not conform to these styles, including paper size and font size restrictions.

General Notes

As the reviewing will be blind, papers should not include the authors' names and affiliations. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the author's identity, e.g., “We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...”, should be avoided. Instead, use citations such as “Smith (1991) previously showed ...”. Submissions that do not conform to these requirements will be rejected without review. Separate author identification information is required as part of the online submission process.

EMNLP 2016 encourages submitting software and data that is described in the paper as supplementary material. EMNLP 2016 also encourages reporting preprocessing decisions, model parameters, and other details necessary for the exact replication of the experiments described in the paper. Papers may be accompanied by supplementary material, consisting of software, data, pseudo-code, detailed proofs or derivations that do not fit into the paper, lists of features or feature templates, parameter specifications, and sample inputs and outputs for a system. The paper should not rely on the supplementary material: while the paper may refer to and cite the supplementary material and the supplementary material will be available to reviewers, they will not be asked to review or even download the supplementary material.

Multiple Submission Policy

Papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or publications must indicate this at submission time, and must be withdrawn from the other venues if accepted by EMNLP 2016. We will not accept for publication or presentation papers that overlap significantly in content or results with papers that will be (or have been) published elsewhere. Authors submitting more than one paper to EMNLP 2016 must ensure that submissions do not overlap significantly (>25%) with each other in content or results.

Preprint servers such as arXiv.org and workshops that do not have published proceedings are not considered archival for purposes of submission. Authors must state in the online submission form the name of the workshop or preprint server and title of the non-archival version. The submitted version should be suitably anonymized and not contain references to the prior non-archival version. Reviewers will be told: "The author(s) have notified us that there exists a non-archival previous version of this paper with significantly overlapping text. We have approved submission under these circumstances, but to preserve the spirit of blind review, the current submission does not reference the non-archival version." Reviewers are free to do what they like with this information.

Presentation requirement

All accepted papers must be presented at the conference to appear in the proceedings. At least one author of each accepted paper must register for EMNLP 2016. Accepted papers will be presented orally or as a poster (at the discretion of the program chairs based on the nature rather than the quality of the work). There will be no distinction in the proceedings between papers presented orally or as posters.

Organizing Committee

General Chair: Jian Su (Institute for Infocomm Research - I2R)

Organizing Committee: http://www.emnlp2016.net/committees.html#oc

Program Committee

Program Co-chairs: Xavier Carreras (Xerox Research Centre Europe) and Kevin Duh (Johns Hopkins University)

Area Chairs: Information Extraction, Information Retrieval, and Question Answering: Nate Chambers (United States Naval Academy), Ruihong Huang (Texas A&M University), Min-Yen Kan (National University of Singapore), Alan Ritter (The Ohio State University), Scott Wen-Tau Yih (Microsoft Research) Language and Vision: Sanja Fidler (University of Toronto), Julia Hockenmaier (University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign) Linguistic Theories and Psycholinguistics: Suzanne Stevenson (University of Toronto) Machine Learning: Guillaume Bouchard (University College London), Kyunghyun Cho (New York University), Kuzman Ganchev (Google), Ariadna Quattoni (Xerox Research Centre Europe), Eric Ringger (Facebook) Machine Translation and Multilinguality: John DeNero (UC Berkeley), Alex Fraser (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen), Yang Liu (Tsinghua University), Dekai Wu (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology) Segmentation, Tagging, and Parsing: Michael Collins (Columbia University), Liang Huang (Oregon State University), Daisuke Kawahara (Kyoto University), André Martins (Unbabel) Semantics: Yoav Artzi (Cornell Tech), Georgiana Dinu (IBM), Ed Grefenstette (Google DeepMind), Ray Mooney (University of Texas at Austin), Laura Rimell (University of Cambridge) Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining: Dirk Hovy (University of Copenhagen), Bing Liu (University of Illinois at Chicago), Saif Mohammad (National Research Council Canada) Social Media and Computational Social Science: Tim Baldwin (University of Melbourne), Smaranda Muresan (Columbia University) Spoken Language Processing: Brian Roark (Google), Geoff Zweig (Microsoft Research) Summarization, Generation, Discourse, Dialogue: Manfred Stede (Potsdam University), Michael Strube (Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies), Lucy Vanderwende (Microsoft Research), Wei Xu (University of Pennsylvania) Text Mining and NLP Applications: Preslav Nakov (Qatar Computing Research Institute), Vivi Nastase (FBK), David Smith (Northeastern University), Joel Tetreault (Yahoo! Labs)

Contact

Program: programchairs@emnlp2016.net Local Arrangements: local@emnlp2016.net Publication: publication@emnlp2016.net General: contact@emnlp2016.net