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SAAIP 2011 : Sentiment Analysis where AI meets Psychology

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Link: http://saaip.org/
 
When Nov 13, 2011 - Nov 13, 2011
Where Shangri-La Hotel, Chiang Mai, Thailand
Submission Deadline Jun 17, 2011
Notification Due Jul 29, 2011
Final Version Due Aug 19, 2011
Categories    NLP   sentiment analysis   opinion mining   emotion analysis
 

Call For Papers

Workshop Title: SAAIP: “Sentiment Analysis where AI meets Psychology” (http://www.saaip.org/)

IJCNLP 2011 Workshop, November 13, 2011
Chiang-Mai, Thailand
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Objectives
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In recent times, research activities in the areas of Opinion, Sentiment and/or Emotion in natural language texts and other media are gaining ground under the umbrella of subjectivity analysis and affect computing. The reason may be the huge amount of available text data in the Social Web in the forms of news, reviews, blogs, chats and even twitter. Though Sentiment analysis from natural language text is a multifaceted and multidisciplinary problem, in general, the term “sentiment” is used in reference to theautomatic analysis of evaluative text. Not only the identification of positive or negative polarity of such evaluative text, research to develop devices that recognize human affect, display and model emotions from textual contents are also being carried out. Techniques and methodologies from Artificial Intelligence play important roles in these tasks.

The main four aspects of the sentiment analysis problem are Object identification, Feature extraction, Orientation classification and Integration. The existing reported solutions or available systems are still far from perfect or fail to meet the satisfaction level of the end users. The main issue may be that there are many conceptual rules that govern sentiment and there are even more clues (possibly unlimited) that can convey these concepts from realization to verbalization of a human being. Human psychology may provide the unrevealed clues and govern the sentiment realization. Human psychology relates to social, cultural, behavioral and environmental aspects of civilization.

In the present scenario we need constant research endeavors to reveal and incorporate the human psychological knowledge into machines in the best possible ways. The important issues that need attention include how various psychological phenomena can be explained in computational terms and which AI concepts and computer modeling methodologies will prove most useful from the psychologist's point of view.

In addition to Question Answering or Information Retrieval systems, Topic-sentiment analysis can be applied as a new research method for mass opinion estimation (e.g., reliability, validity, sample bias), psychiatric treatment, corporate reputation measurement, political orientation categorization, stock market prediction, customer preference study, public opinion study and so on.
In recent times, regular research papers continue to be published in reputed conferences like ACL, EMNLP or COLING. There has been an increasing number of efforts in shared tasks such as SemEval 2007 Task#14: Affective Text, TAC 2008 Opinion Summarization task, TREC-BLOG tracks since 2006 and relevant NTCIR tracks since 6th NTCIR aimed to focus on different issues of opinion and emotion analysis. Several communities from sentiment analysis have engaged themselves to conduct relevant conferences, e.g., Affective Computing and Intelligent Interfaces (ACII) in 2009 and 2011 and workshops such as “Sentiment and Subjectivity in Text” in COLING-ACL 2006, “Sentiment Analysis – Emotion, Metaphor, Ontology and Terminology (EMOT)” in LREC 2008, Opinion Mining and Sentiment Analysis (WOMSA) 2009, “Topic-Sentiment Analysis for Mass Opinion Measurement (TSA)” in CIKM 2009, “Computational Approaches to Analysis and Generation of Emotion in Text” in NAACL 2010, Workshop on Computational Approaches to Subjectivity and Sentiment Analysis (WASSA) in ECAI 2010 and in ACL 2011, FLAIRS 2011 special track on “Affect Computing” and so on.
This workshop aims to bring together the researchers in multiple disciplines such as computer science, psychology, cognitive science, social science and many more who are interested in developing next generation machines that can recognize and respond to the sentimental states of the human users and serve the society. The workshop will consist of a set of invited talks and presentations of technical papers that will be selected after peer
review from the submissions received.

List of Topics
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We welcome original and unpublished submissions on all aspects of sentiment analysis. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

-New models of sentiment: its origin in the speaker's goals and intentions, its signaling in the text, and its relationships to the objects in question
-Psychological models for sentiment analysis
-Topic-dependent/independent sentiment identification/ Topic and sentiment studies and applications
-Mass opinion estimation based on NLP and statistical models.
-Domain, topic and genre, language dependency of sentiment analysis
-Discourse analysis of sentiment
-Opinion, Sentiment, Emotion extraction, categorization and aggregation
-Sentiment corpora and annotation
-Sentiment lexicon
-Evaluation methodologies
-Applications of sentiment analysis

Important Dates
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Submissions Deadline: June 1, 2011
Notification of Acceptances: July 29, 2011
Camera ready submissions: August 19, 2011
Workshop Date: November 13, 2011


Information for Authors
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Authors are invited to submit substantial, original and completed research work relevant to the topics of the workshop in form of regular papers. It may consist of up to 8 pages, plus 2 additional pages for references. All submissions must follow and conform to the official IJCNLP 2011 Style guidelines and they must be electronic in PDF. The style files can be downloaded from the links below:

http://www.ijcnlp2011.org/ijcnlp2011/front/show/paper-submission

Reviewing of papers will be double-blind. Therefore, the paper must not include the authors' names and affiliations. Furthermore, self-references that reveal the author's identity, e.g., "We previously showed (Smith, 1991) ...", must be avoided. Instead, citations such as "Smith (1991) previously showed ...", must be used. Papers that do not conform to these requirements will be rejected without review.

Please click here to submit:
https://www.softconf.com/ijcnlp2011/SAAIP/

Workshop Co-Chairs
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Sivaji Bandyopadhyay (Jadavpur University, India)
Professor, Computer Science and Engineering Department, Jadavpur University, Kolkata - 700032, India.
Email Address: sbandyopadhyay@cse.jdvu.ac.in, sivaji_cse_ju@yahoo.com

Manabu Okumura (Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan)
Professor, Precision and Intelligence Laboratory, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan.
Email Address: oku@pi.titech.ac.jp

Contact Person
---------------
Prof. Sivaji Bandyopadhyay
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Jadavpur University
188, Raja S.C. Mallick Road, Kolkata 700 032, India
Phone : +91 33 2414 6648 (Office)
+91 9433579595 (Mobile)
Fax : +91 33 2414 6648
E-mail: sivaji_cse_ju@yahoo.com, sbandyopadhyay@cse.jdvu.ac.in

Program Committee
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Khurshid Ahmad Trinity College Dublin (Ireland)
Alexandra Balahur DLSI, University of Alicante, (France)
Michael Gamon Microsoft Research (USA)
Choochart Haruechaiyasak The National Electronics and Computer Technology Center (Thailand)
Noriko Kando National Institute of Informatics (Japan)
Alisa Kongthon The National Electronics and Computer Technology Center (Thailand)
Rada Mihalcea University of North Texas (USA)
Alena Neviarouskaya University of Tokyo (Japan)
Vincent Ng University of Texas at Dallas, (USA)
Fuji Ren University of Tokushima (Japan)
Paolo Rosso Universidad Politécnica de Valencia (Spain)
Patrick Saint-Dizier IRIT-CNRS (France)
Yohei Seki Tsukuba University (Japan)
Swapna Somasundaran Siemens Corporate Research (SCR), (USA)
Veselin Stoyanov Cornell University (USA)
Carlo Strapparava Fondazione Bruno Kessler (FBK), (Italy)
Stan Szpakowicz University of Ottawa (Canada)
Theresa Wilson University of Edinburgh, (UK)
Michael Zock LIMSI-CNRS (France)

Organizing Committee
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Sivaji Bandyopadhyay Jadavpur University, Kolkata (India)
Manabu Okumura Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo (Japan)
Amitava Das Jadavpur University, Kolkata (India)
DipanKar Das Jadavpur University, Kolkata (India)
Hiroya Takamura Tokyo Institute of Technology (Japan)
Kritsada Sriphaew Thammasat University (Thailand)

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