The document "SemEval 2017" was published on "2023-08-04T10:04:05" on the website "ConfIDent" under the URL https://confident-conference.org/index.php/Event:SemEval 2017.
The document "SemEval 2017" describes an event in the sense of a conference.
The document "SemEval 2017" contains information about the event "SemEval 2017" with start date "2017/08/03" and end date "2017/08/04".
The event "SemEval 2017" is part of the event series identified by [[Event Series:SemEval]]
organization
Vancouver, Canada
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International Workshop on Semantic Evaluation 2017
SemEval (Semantic Evaluation) is an ongoing series of evaluations of computational semantic analysis systems, organized under the umbrella of SIGLEX, the Special Interest Group on the Lexicon of the Association for Computational Linguistics. SemEval has evolved from the SensEval word sense disambiguation evaluation series. The SemEval wikipedia entry and the ACL SemEval Wiki provide a more detailed historical overview. SemEval-2017 will be the 11th workshop on semantic evaluation and will be collocated with the 55th annual meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). SemEval will be held in Vancouver, Canada, at the Westin Bayshore Hotel August 3rd and 4th, 2017.
Program and Proceedings
Important Dates
- Mon 01 Aug 2016: Trial data ready
- Mon 05 Sep 2016: Training data ready
- Mon 05 Dec 2016: CodaLab competitions ready
- Mon 09 Jan 2017: Evaluation start*
- Mon 30 Jan 2017: Evaluation end*
- Mon 06 Feb 2017: Results posted
- Mon 27 Feb 2017: System description paper submissions due by 23:59 GMT -12:00
- Mon 06 Mar 2017: Task description paper submissions due by 23:59 GMT -12:00
- Mon 20 Mar 2017: Paper reviews due (for both systems and tasks)
- Mon 03 Apr 2017: Author notifications
- Mon 17 Apr 2017: Camera ready submissions due
'Welcome to SemEval-2017
The Semantic Evaluation (SemEval) series of workshops focuses on the evaluation and comparison of
systems that can analyse diverse semantic phenomena in text with the aim of extending the current state
of the art in semantic analysis and creating high quality annotated datasets in a range of increasingly
challenging problems in natural language semantics. SemEval provides an exciting forum for researchers
to propose challenging research problems in semantics and to build systems/techniques to address such
research problems.
SemEval-2017 is the eleventh workshop in the series of InternationalWorkshops on Semantic Evaluation.
The first three workshops, SensEval-1 (1998), SensEval-2 (2001), and SensEval-3 (2004), focused on
word sense disambiguation, each time growing in the number of languages offered, in the number of
tasks, and also in the number of participating teams. In 2007, the workshop was renamed to SemEval,
and the subsequent SemEval workshops evolved to include semantic analysis tasks beyond word sense
disambiguation. In 2012, SemEval turned into a yearly event. It currently runs every year, but on a
two-year cycle, i.e., the tasks for SemEval-2017 were proposed in 2016.
SemEval-2017 was co-located with the 55th annual meeting of the Association for Computational
Linguistics (ACL 2017) in Vancouver, Canada. It included the following 12 shared tasks organized
in three tracks:'
Semantic comparison for words and texts
• Task 1: Semantic Textual Similarity
• Task 2: Multi-lingual and Cross-lingual Semantic Word Similarity
• Task 3: Community Question Answering
Detecting sentiment, humor, and truth
• Task 4: Sentiment Analysis in Twitter
• Task 5: Fine-Grained Sentiment Analysis on Financial Microblogs and News
• Task 6: #HashtagWars: Learning a Sense of Humor
• Task 7: Detection and Interpretation of English Puns
• Task 8: RumourEval: Determining rumour veracity and support for rumours
Parsing semantic structures
• Task 9: Abstract Meaning Representation Parsing and Generation
• Task 10: Extracting Keyphrases and Relations from Scientific Publications
• Task 11: End-User Development using Natural Language
• Task 12: Clinical TempEval
Organizers
- Steven Bethard, University of Arizona
- Marine Carpuat, University of Maryland
- Marianna Apidianaki, LIMSI, CNRS, University Paris-Saclay & University of Pennsylvania
- Saif M. Mohammad, National Research Council Canada
- Daniel Cer, Google
- David Jurgens, Stanford University
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