International Conference ‘Computational and Corpus-based Phraseology’
 
Malaga, 25-27 September 2019
 
 SECOND CALL FOR PAPERS
 
The forthcoming international conference ‘Computational and Corpus-based 
Phraseology’ (EUROPHRAS 2019) will take place in Malaga on 25, 26 and 27 
September 2019.
 
Conference topics



The conference will focus on interdisciplinary approaches to phraseology and 
invites submissions on a wide range of topics, covering, but not limited to: 
computational, corpus-based, psycholinguistic and cognitive approaches to the 
study of phraseology, and
 practical applications in computational linguistics, translation, lexicography 
and language learning, teaching and assessment. 

 
These topics cover include the following:
 
Computational approaches to the study of multiword expressions, e.g. automatic 
detection, classification and extraction
 of multiword expressions; automatic translation of multiword expressions; 
computational treatment of proper names; multiword expressions in NLP tasks and 
applications such as parsing, machine translation, text summarisation, term 
extraction, web search;
 
Corpus-based approaches to phraseology, e.g. corpus-based empirical studies of 
phraseology, task-orientated typologies
 of phraseological units (e.g. for annotation, lexicographic representation, 
etc.), annotation schemes, applications in applied linguistics and more 
specifically translation, interpreting, lexicography, terminology, language 
learning, teaching and assessment
 (see also below);
 
Phraseology in mono- and bilingual lexicography and terminography, e.g. new 
forms of presenting phraseological units in
 dictionaries and other lexical resources based on corpus-based and 
corpus-driven approaches; domain-specific terminology;
 
Phraseology in translation and cross-linguistic studies, e.g. use parallel and 
comparable corpora for translating phraseological
 units; phraseological units in computer-aided translation; study of 
phraseology across languages;

 
Phraseology in specialised languages and language dialects, e.g. phraseology of 
specialised languages, study of phraseological
 use in different dialects or varieties of a specific language;
 
Phraseology in language learning, teaching and assessment: e.g. second 
language/bilingual processing of phraseological
 units and formulaic language; phraseological units in learner language;
 
Theoretical and descriptive approaches to phraseology, e.g. phraseological 
units and the lexis-grammar interface, the
 relevance of phraseology for theoretical models of grammar, the representation 
of phraseological units in constituency and dependency theories, phraseology 
and its interaction with semantics;
 
Cognitive and psycholinguistic approaches: e.g. cognitive models of 
phraseological unit comprehension and production;
 on-line measures of phraseological unit processing (e.g. eye tracking, 
event-related potentials, self-paced reading); phraseology and language 
disorders; phraseology and text readability;
 
The above list is indicative and not exhaustive. Any submission presenting a 
study related to the alternative terms of phraseological units, multiword 
expressions, multiword units, formulaic
 language, or polylexical expressions, will be considered.




Submissions and publication
 
The conference invites submissions reporting original unpublished work.

Europhras 2019 invites three types of submissions: regular papers, short papers 
and poster presentations.
 

·        
Regular papers should not exceed 15 pages including references; their minimum 
length is 12 pages. All accepted regular papers will be published in a
Springer LNAI volume, which will be available at the time of the conference. 
Regular
 papers must be written in English.

·        
Short papers should not exceed 7 pages excluding references; they should be at 
least 5
pages long. All accepted short papers will be published in conference 
e-proceedings with an ISBN identifier and will also be made available at the 
time of the conference. Short papers can be written
 in either English or Spanish.

·        
Poster presentations should not exceed 4 pages excluding references. All 
accepted papers for poster presentations will be included in the conference 
e-proceedings alongside short
 papers. Poster presentations can be written in either English or Spanish.

 
The conference will not consider the submission and evaluation of abstracts 
only.
Each submission will be reviewed by at least three members of the Programme 
Committee.
All submissions must be made online using the Softconf START conference 
management system. For further instructions, please refer to the
submission guidelines.

Authors of accepted papers will receive further instructions on how to produce 
camera-ready versions of their papers for inclusion in the proceedings.
In addition, a call for follow-up papers will be
announced after the conference and the accepted papers reporting these new 
studies will be published in a peer-reviewed and indexed volume and/or special 
issue of an indexed journal.

 
 
Schedule
 
1 May 2019 – deadline for submitting papers
25 June 2019 – author notification
10 July 2019  – deadline for camera-ready versions of regular papers
10 August 2019 – deadline for camera-ready versions of short and poster papers
25-27 September 2019 – EUROPHRAS 2019 conference
 
Keynote Speakers
 
Sylviane Granger, Université Catholique de Louvain
Miloš Jakubíček, Lexical Computing
Natalie Kübler, Paris Diderot University
Kathrin Steyer, Institute of German Language
Aline Villavicencio, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul and University of 
Essex
 
 
Programme Committee



Co-Chairs
 
Gloria Corpas Pastor, University
 of Malaga

Ruslan Mitkov, University of Wolverhampton
 
The Programme Committee features experts in various aspects of corpus-based and 
computational phraseology and includes:
 
Mariangela Albano, University
 Dokuz Eylül of Izmir

Verginica Barbu Mititelu, Romanian Academy Research Institute for Artificial 
Intelligence

Nicoletta Calzolari, Institute for Computational Linguistics

María Luisa Carrió Pastor, Polytechnic University of Valencia

Sheila Castilho, Dublin City University

Cristina Castillo Rodríguez, University of Malaga

Ken Church, Baidu

Jean-Pierre Colson, Université Catholique de Louvain

Anna Čermáková, Charles University

Dmitrij Dobrovolskij, Russian Language Institute

Peter Ďurčo, University of St. Cyril and Methodius

Jesse Egbert, Northern Arizona University

Natalia Filatkina, University of Trier

Thierry Fontenelle, Translation Centre for the Bodies of the European Union

José Enrique Gargallo, University of Barcelona

Sylviane Granger, Université Catholique de Louvain

Kleanthes Grohmann, University of Cyprus

Ulrich Heid, University of Hildesheim

Miloš Jakubíček, Lexical Computing

Simon Krek, University of Ljubjana

Natalie Kübler, Paris Diderot University

Alessandro Lenci, University of Pisa

Rocío Luque, University of Udine

Elvira Manero, University of Murcia

Carmen Mellado Blanco, University of Santiago de Compostela

Flor Mena Martínez, University of Murcia

Pedro Mogorrón Huerta, University of Alicante

Johanna Monti, “L’Orientale” University of Naples

Esteban T. Montoro, University of Granada

Sara Moze, University of Wolverhampton

Michael Oakes, University of Wolverhampton

Inés Olza, University of Navarra

Petya Osenova, Sofia University

Stéphane Patin, Paris Diderot University

Alain Polguère, University of Lorraine

Encarnación Postigo Pinazo, University of Malaga

Carlos Ramisch, Laboratoire d’Informatique Fondamentale de Marseille

Mª Ángeles Recio Ariza, University of Salamanca

Omid Rohanian, University of Wolverhampton

Ute Römer, Georgia State University

Leonor Ruiz Gurillo, University of Alicante

María Sagrario del Río Zamudio, University of Udine

Agata Savary, François Rabelais University

Miriam Seghiri Domínguez, University of Malaga

Julia Sevilla Muñoz, Complutense University of Madrid

Kathrin Steyer, Institute of German Language

Joanna Szerszunowicz, University of Bialystok

Shiva Taslimipoor, University of Wolverhampton

Cristina Toledo Báez, University of Malaga

Yukio Tono, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies

Cornelia Tschichold, Swansea University

Benjamin Tsou, City University of Hong Kong

Agnès Tutin, University of Stendhal

Aline Villavicencio, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul and University of 
Essex

Tom Wasow, Stanford University

Eric Wehrli, University of Geneva

Juan Jesús Zaro Vera, University of Malaga

Michael Zock, French National Centre for Scientific Research
 
 
Organisation and sponsors



The forthcoming international conference ‘Computational and Corpus-based 
Phraseology’ is jointly organised by the European Association for Phraseology 
EUROPHRAS, the University of Malaga (Research Group in Lexicography and 
Translation),
 the University of Wolverhampton (Research Group in Computational Linguistics), 
and the Association for Computational Linguistics - Bulgaria.


EUROPHRAS and The Sketch Engine are the official sponsors of the conference.
 
Accompanying events
 
The 4th edition of the Workshop on Multiword Units in Machine Translation and 
Translation Technology (MUMTTT 2019)
 will take place as part of EUROPHRAS 2019.

In addition, a special Sketch Engine tutorial will be given by Miloš Jakubíček, 
CEO, Lexical Computing.

Further information and contact details



Registration for EUROPHRAS 2019 is now open. To register, please complete the 
registration
 form.
The conference website (http://www.lexytrad.es/europhras2019)
 will be updated on a regular basis. For further information, please email us 
at 
europhras2...@gmail.com.

 
 
 
 


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