Final Exam

Between April 21 and May 12, there will be a home exam in the form of a ‘baby’ research project.  To pass the exam, students need to submit and have accepted a scientific paper to the Second IN5550 Teaching Workshop on Neural Natural Language Processing (WNNLP 2020).

Background

Final examination in this class takes the form of a ‘home exam’, i.e. a project that students can work on over a period of three weeks.  Like for the exam-qualifying obligatory assignments, group work (in teams of up to three students) is encouraged.  Team composition needs to be declared at the start of the exam period and, thus, cannot be changed after April 22, 2019.  Also, each team needs to decide beforehand which of the available tracks they want to research: named entity recognition, negation resolution, or sentiment analysis; these ‘tracks’ of the exam will be introduced in the lecture on April 21.  Further background on the tracks and supporting data and code are available through the UiO instance of Microsoft GitHub.  Please announce your team composition and choice of track no later than April 22 by emailing the course contact address in5550-help@ifi.uio.no.

The main exam period will be Tuesday, April 21, to Tuesday, May 12, 2020.  Once a team declares their track (by email, see above) they will receive a written set of suggestions for how to approach the research project.  During the exam period, there will be no lectures, but group sessions will run according to the regular schedule.  On or around April 28, project teams will be offered a mentoring session (of around 30 minutes) with one or two of the track chairs (the course instructors); these session will be organized by individual tracks.  In the following week, there will be opportunity to request an additional ‘supervisory’ session with one of the instructors.  Upon submission of the home exam (in the form of a scientific paper), there will be a peer reviewing period where we also require students to contribute feedback on submissions by others (in a double-blind, anonymous fashion); reviews will be due on or before May 18.  Each team will then be required to revise their manuscript according to the feedback from reviewers and the area chairs and submit the final, camera-ready version by May 25.  Finally, the workshop itself will be held (on-line, what else these days) in the laboratory slot on Wednesday, May 27, starting at 12:15.  Here, doctoral students (in the IN9550 variant of the class) will give a short presentation of their approach and results, and there will be an award ceremoy of the best paper(s) selected by the WNNLP programme committee.  This session will be the final gathering of the class this term.

Schedule

Start of Review Period Wednesday, May 13
End of Review Period Monday, May 18
Track Chair Decisions Wednesday, May 20
Camera-Ready Manuscripts Monday, May 25
Oral Presentations Wednesday, May 27

Submissions

Submissions must be formatted according to the standard style files of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL 2019): Please start from the ACL template files for the easy-to-use and premium-quality LaTeX typesetting system (strongly recommended) or M$ Word.  The laboratory session on May 5, 2020, will be devoted to best practices for paper writing in LaTex.  Submissions should be minimally five pages long and must not exceed nine pages in total length, including all tables and figures, but not counting the list of bibliographic references (i.e. the final, unnumbered References section).  All papers submitted for review must be anonymous, i.e. not reveal author identities.  However, for full replicability, each submission must be backed up by a private repository (in the UiO installation of Microsoft GitHub, as always) providing all code, scripts, possibly additional data, and at least minimal instructions on how to run and evaluate the system.  The code repository will only be visible to track chairs, i.e. please make sure to share it with the instructors in Microsoft GitHub.  All submission must be uploaded electronically no later than May 12 to the on-line conference management site; it will be possible to revise and resubmit, so please make your initial submission well before the deadline.

Camera-Ready Manuscripts

All submissions that have been accepted for publication are published as part of the proceedings volume for the workshop, essentially a peer-reviewed edited anthology.  Authors are required to revise their manuscript in the light of reviewer comments, seeking to address any errors, resolve any sources of potential unclarity, improve presentation and language, polish bibliographic references, and change to non-anonymous formatting.  To make these changes, final, camera-ready manuscripts can use one additional page of text, i.e. the page limit is extended to up to ten pages in total length (still not counting the bibliography).  Final manuscripts (in PDF) must be uploaded through the EasyChair submission system no later than Monday, May 25 (23:59 CEST).

Programme

The workshop features four presentations (by UiO doctoral students, who have completed the IN95550 variant of the course); all fifteen submissions that have been accepted for publication are available through the WNNLP 2020 proceedings volume.

12:15–12:20 Programme Chairs Welcome and Workshop Overview
12:20–12:35 Ping-Han Hsieh Targeted Sentiment Analysis for Norwegian Language
12:40–12:55 Maja Buljan A Replication Study in Negation Scope Resolution
13:00–13:15 Awadelrahman Mohamedelsadig Ali Ahmed Sequence to Sequence Learning for Named Entity Recognition
13:20–13:35 Ole Magnus Holter Toward multilingual Named Entity Recognition for Norwegian and English
13:40–13:50 Everyone Best Paper Award(s) Ceremony

 

Published Jan. 20, 2020 7:07 PM - Last modified May 27, 2020 11:14 AM