skip to main content
US FlagAn official website of the United States government
dot gov icon
Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.
https lock icon
Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( lock ) or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.


Title: Proceedings of Pattern-based Approaches to NLP in the Age of Deep Learning (PAN-DL)
Message from the Organizers Welcome to the first edition of the Workshop on Pattern-based Approaches to NLP in the Age of Deep Learning (Pan-DL)! Our workshop is being organized online on October 17, 2022, in conjunction with the 29th International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING). We all know that deep-learning methods have dominated the field of natural language processing in the past decade. However, these approaches usually rely on the availability of high-quality and high- quantity data annotation. Furthermore, the learned models are difficult to interpret and incur substantial technical debt. As a result, these approaches tend to exclude users that lack the necessary machine learning background. In contrast, rule-based methods are easier to deploy and adapt; they support human examination of intermediate representations and reasoning steps; they are more transparent to subject- matter experts; they are amenable to having a human in the loop through intervention, manipulation and incorporation of domain knowledge; and further the resulting systems tend to be lightweight and fast. This workshop focuses on all aspects of rule-based approaches, including their application, representation, and interpretability, as well as their strengths and weaknesses relative to state-of-the-art machine learning approaches. Considering the large number of potential directions in this neuro-symbolic space, we emphasized inclusivity in our workshop. We received 13 papers and accepted 10 for oral presentation. This resulted in an overall acceptance rate of 77%. In addition of the oral presentations of the accepted papers, our workshop includes a keynote talk by Ellen Riloff, who has made crucial contributions to the field of natural language processing, many of which are at the intersection of rule- and neural-based methods. Further, the workshop contains a panel that will discuss the merits and limitations of rules in our neural era. The panelists will be academics with expertise in both neural- and rule-based methods, industry experts that employ these methods for commercial products, government officials in charge of AI funding, organizers of natural language processing evaluations, and subject matter experts that have used rule-based methods for domain-specific applications. We thank Ellen Riloff and the panelists for their important contribution to our workshop! Finally, we are thankful to the members of the program committee for their insightful reviews! We are confident that all submissions have benefited from their expert feedback. Their contribution was a key factor for accepting a diverse and high-quality list of papers, which we hope will make the first edition of the Pan-DL workshop a success, and will motivate many future editions. Pan-DL 2022 Organizers October 2022  more » « less
Award ID(s):
2006583
PAR ID:
10550335
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
Proceedings of the First Workshop on Pattern-based Approaches to NLP in the Age of Deep Learning
Date Published:
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Message from the Organizers Welcome to the second edition of the Workshop on Pattern-based Approaches to NLP in the Age of Deep Learning (Pan-DL)! Our workshop is being organized in a hybrid format on December 6, 2023, in conjunction with the 2023 Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP). In the past year, the natural language processing (NLP) field (and the world at large!) has been hit by the large language model (LLM) "tsunami." This happened for the right reasons: LLMs perform extremely well in a multitude of NLP tasks, often with minimal training and, perhaps for the first time, have made NLP technology extremely approachable to non-expert users. However, LLMs are not perfect: they are not really explainable, they are not pliable, i.e., they cannot be easily modified to correct any errors observed, and they are not efficient due to the overhead of decoding. In contrast, rule-based methods are more transparent to subject matter experts; they are amenable to having a human in the loop through intervention, manipulation and incorporation of domain knowledge; and further the resulting systems tend to be lightweight and fast. This workshop focuses on all aspects of rule-based approaches, including their application, representation, and interpretability, as well as their strengths and weaknesses relative to state-of-the-art machine learning approaches. Considering the large number of potential directions in this neuro-symbolic space, we emphasized inclusivity in our workshop. We received 19 submissions and accepted 10 for oral presentation. This resulted in an overall acceptance rate of 52%. Our workshop also includes 6 presentations of papers that were accepted in Findings of EMNLP. In addition to the oral presentations of the accepted papers, our workshop includes a keynote talk by Yunyao Li, who has made many important contributions to the field of symbolic approaches for natural language processing. Further, the workshop contains a panel that will discuss the merits and limitations of rules in the new LLM era. The panelists will be academics with expertise in both neural- and rulebased methods, industry experts that employ these methods for commercial products, and subject matter experts that have used rule-based methods for domain-specific applications. We thank Yunyao Li and the panelists for their important contribution to our workshop! Finally, we are thankful to the members of the program committee for their insightful reviews! We are confident that all submissions have benefited from their expert feedback. Their contribution was a key factor for accepting a diverse and high-quality list of papers, which we hope will make the first edition of the Pan-DL workshop a success, and will motivate many future editions. Pan-DL 2023 Organizers December 6, 2023 
    more » « less
  2. Imaging is increasingly used to capture information on the marine environment thanks to the improvements in imaging equipment, devices for carrying cameras and data storage in recent years. In that context, biologists, geologists, computer specialists and end-users must gather to discuss the methods and procedures for optimising the quality and quantity of data collected from images. The 4thMarine Imaging Workshop was organised from 3-6 October 2022 in Brest (France) in a hybrid mode. More than a hundred participants were welcomed in person and about 80 people attended the online sessions. The workshop was organised in a single plenary session of presentations followed by discussion sessions. These were based on dynamic polls and open questions that allowed recording of the imaging community’s current and future ideas. In addition, a whole day was dedicated to practical sessions on image analysis, data standardisation and communication tools. The format of this edition allowed the participation of a wider community, including lower-income countries, early career scientists, all working on laboratory, benthic and pelagic imaging. This article summarises the topics addressed during the workshop, particularly the outcomes of the discussion sessions for future reference and to make the workshop results available to the open public. 
    more » « less
  3. This workshop will provide strategies and techniques for designing and executing computational petrology research projects and will engage participants in using software called Rhyolite-MELTS and the Magma Chamber Simulator (MCS) to address questions about open system magma evolution. Participants will: Be introduced to petrologic and geochemical questions that can be addressed by computational tools such as Rhyolite-MELTS and MCS. Be presented with case studies that utilize these computational tools to address petrologic questions. Be introduced to computational research design strategies and data management techniques. Learn the limits of thermodynamic databases and the functionality of computational methods when applied to natural systems. Collaborate and discuss strategies to apply these techniques to petrologic scenarios provided by the conveners. Have the opportunity to pose questions to MCS and Rhyolite-MELTS experts that will aid in the set-up of their computational projects. Network and benefit from the experiences and expertise of other scientists. Petrologists of all levels are encouraged to join the workshop! If you need training on the use of these tools, we will provide Zoom sessions prior to the workshop, with dates to be determined. If you have already taken an MCS workshop or attended a MELTS short course, please consider joining us again for additional training on research project design and execution. MCS and rhyolite-MELTS can also be used as teaching tools for those interested in integration into petrology/geochemistry classes, so please sign up if you would like to use these tools in your classes. The workshop will take place Tuesday, 1st October and Wednesday, 2 October, 08:00-13:30 MST/UTC-7 on both days. Registration is done through the Goldschmidt2024 conference registration form. If you are registering for the workshop only and not participating in the conference, on the Registration Options page of the form, under "Conference Options", please select "Science Workshop Only Remote (no conference attendance)", then choose this workshop in the section "Post-Conference Science Workshop: Remote (October 2024)" before proceeding to payment. 
    more » « less
  4. As IoT devices begin to permeate our environment, our interaction with these devices are starting to have a real potential to transform our daily lives. Therefore, there exists an incredible opportunity for intelligent user interfaces to simplify the task of controlling such devices. The goal of IUIoT workshop was to serve as a platform for researchers who are working towards the design of IoT systems from an intelligent, human-centered perspective. The workshop accepted a total of five papers: two position and three extended abstracts. These papers were presented by the authors and discussed among the workshop attendees with an aim of exploring future directions and improving existing approaches towards designing intelligent User Interfaces for IoT environments. 
    more » « less
  5. The explosion of conference paper submissions in AI and related fields has underscored the need to improve many aspects of the peer review process, especially the matching of papers and reviewers. Recent work argues that the key to improve this matching is to modify aspects of the bidding phase itself, to ensure that the set of bids over papers is balanced, and in particular to avoid orphan papers, i.e., those papers that receive no bids. In an attempt to understand and mitigate this problem, we have developed a flexible bidding platform to test adaptations to the bidding process. Using this platform, we performed a field experiment during the bidding phase of a medium-size international workshop that compared two bidding methods. We further examined via controlled experiments on Amazon Mechanical Turk various factors that affect bidding, in particular the order in which papers are presented [11, 17]; and information on paper demand [33]. Our results suggest that several simple adaptations, that can be added to any existing platform, may significantly reduce the skew in bids, thereby improving the allocation for both reviewers and conference organizers. 
    more » « less