Apologies for any duplicates.


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Journal of Natural Language Engineering



*** Call for special issue proposals ***





The area of Natural Language Engineering, and Natural Language Processing
in general, is following the trend of many other areas in becoming highly
specialised, with a number of application-orientated and narrow-domain
topics emerging or growing in importance. These developments, often
coinciding with a lack of related literature, necessitate and warrant the
publication of specialised volumes focusing on a specific topic of interest
to the Natural Language Processing (NLP) research community.



The Journal of Natural Language Engineering (JNLE) published by Cambridge
University Press, which now features six 160-page issues per year, invites
proposals for special issues on a competitive basis regarding any topics
surrounding applied NLP which have emerged as important recent developments
and that have attracted the attention of a number of researchers or
research groups. In recent years, Calls for Proposals for special issues
have resulted in high-quality outputs and this year we look forward to
another successful competition.



Topics could cover a variety of NLP methods, tasks and resources as well as
NLP-related applications but should preferably focus on the practical
implications of operation on a large scale. Topics covering NLP methods,
tasks and resources could include, but are not limited to: POS tagging;
parsing; semantic role labelling; word sense disambiguation; anaphora and
coreference resolution; named entity recognition; natural language
generation; speech recognition; speech synthesis; multimodal processing;
statistical methods in Natural Language Engineering; machine learning;
evaluation methodologies; corpora and ontologies. Topics covering NLP
applications could include, but are not limited to: machine translation;
translation memory and translation tools; summarisation; simplification;
information retrieval; information extraction; question answering; text and
web mining; opinion mining; and NLP for biomedical texts.



Calls for special issue proposals may be based on a successful workshop or
a body of work associated with a particular group or section of the
community. In all cases, however, the reviewing process of the accepted
proposals will be rigorous and all submissions must be reviewed by at least
three members of the Guest Editorial Board or other suitable reviewers
agreed by the JNLE Editors. In the case of papers previously submitted to
workshops, the Guest Editors will not be able to re-use previous workshop
reviews. In addition, the call for papers of the accepted proposals must be
open to all interested parties and all authors will be given equal
treatment; in the case of proposals based on previous workshops,
submissions cannot be limited to workshop participants only.



Interested editors have the option of preliminary feedback by emailing
expressions of interest accompanied by a brief description of the intended
special issue to the Executive Editor (r.mit...@wlv.ac.uk). He will give a
brief indication of whether the topic is appropriate to Natural Language
Engineering. In the case of initial positive feedback, the prospective
Guest Editors will be asked to submit a proposal for a special issue that
will be reviewed by the Editors of the Journal and by other members of the
Journal Editorial Board. At least two proposals will be selected on a
competitive basis for each call with the envisaged publication date for the
successful proposal(s) from this call on or after October 2017.



The proposal for a special issue should include a brief outline of the
field and rationale as to why it is important to launch a special issue on
the particular topic of interest. It should include a relevant literature
survey (related previous special issues, volumes, workshop and conference
proceedings) and should explain the added value of the proposed special
issue against the background of other relevant or competing publications
and volumes (if applicable).  It is desirable that a rough estimate of
expected submissions to the special issue be provided. The proposals should
also include a tentative Guest Editorial Board. It is desirable that one of
the members of the Guest Editorial Board is a JNLE Editor and at least
another member of the Guest Editorial Board should be on the JNLE Editorial
Board. The proposal should also include a tentative time-scale for the
production of the special issue and information about the prospective Guest
Editors (relevant experience, publications etc.). All special issues are
required to offer a survey of the field as its first article which can be
written either by the Guest Editors or by an invited author / authors. The
special issues should consist of 160 pages as with the regular issues;
exceptionally, 144 pages can be accepted as well.





  Time-scale



- Deadline for submission of special issue proposals:

  10 December 2015

  (proposals to be emailed to r.mit...@wlv.ac.uk with a copy to
jnl...@wlv.ac.uk )



- Notification of acceptance/rejection:

 15 January 2016



- Calls for papers related to the successful proposals:

  15 February 2016 for the first proposal

  March-September 2016 for the second proposal;

  September 2016-March 2017 for the rest of the accepted proposals (if
applicable)




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Thanks & Regards,
*Rohit Gupta*

*Marie Curie Early Stage Researcher, EXPERT Project*Research Group in
Computational Linguistics
Research Institute of Information and Language Processing
University of Wolverhampton
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