From monika.bednarek at sydney.edu.au Mon Dec 5 03:35:11 2022 From: monika.bednarek at sydney.edu.au (Monika Bednarek) Date: Mon, 5 Dec 2022 08:35:11 +0000 Subject: [APCLA 10] Sydney Corpus Lab December 2022 Newsletter In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear all, With apologies for cross-posting, please find below the (edited) December newsletter from the Sydney Corpus Lab. Best, Monika From: syd-corpus-lab On Behalf Of Kelvin Lee via syd-corpus-lab Dear Sydney Corpus Lab members and affiliates, We hope this email finds you well. This is the sixth edition of our new monthly newsletter where we aim to let you know about news and updates relating to recent and upcoming corpus linguistics (and text analytics) events/resources. Apologies for any unintentional omissions. If you want us to include anything in the next newsletter, please email info at sydneycorpuslab.com. Please note that due to the holidays, there will not be a newsletter in early January. News and events from the Lab We've crowdsourced and collated introductions to Corpus Linguistics written in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, and English. You can find the complete list here. Feedback and suggestions for additions are welcome. Since there are many corpus linguistic and text analytic talks available online (but may be hard to find), we have curated 12 thematic playlists on corpus linguistics. You can find these here. Any omissions and errors are unintentional, some text analytics resources are also included. The Corpus Cast episode featuring Prof. Monika Bednarek is coming up in December. See https://robbielove.org/corpuscast/ for the video and audio for the episode. A belated update regarding two new collaborations between the Sydney Corpus Lab and other groups. We've now got informal collaborations (mutual support and sharing of information/resources) with Macquarie University's Language on the Move (sociolinguistic research group/site) and with the University of Birmingham's Centre for Corpus Research (a centre supporting the use of corpus analysis in research, teaching and learning). These new collaborations strengthen our national and international networks in sociolinguistics and corpus linguistics. Call for submissions The call for papers for the 14th International Conference on Corpus Linguistics (CILC2023) is open until 31 December 2022. The conference will take place on 10-12 May 2023 at the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Oviedo. Please visit the conference website for more information. The call for papers for the Corpus Linguistics 2023 conference (CL2023) is now open (until 6 January 2023). The conference will take place at Lancaster University on 3-6 July 2023. The main conference will be preceded by a workshop day on Sunday 2 July. More details can be found on the conference website. The call for papers for the 11th International Conference on Corpus Linguistics/Journ?es de la Linguistique de Corpus (JLC '23) is now open (until 3 February 2023). The conference will be at Grenoble Alpes University, Grenoble, France on 3-6 July 2023. For more information, please visit the conference website. The 44th annual conference of the International Computer Archive of Modern and Medieval English (ICAME44) is being hosted by the North-West University in Vanderbijlpark, South Africa on 18-21 May 2023. The conference format will be hybrid, with on-site and on-line participation possible. Please submit your abstract via EasyChair. The submission deadline for early review (before Christmas) is 2 December 2022, but otherwise, the deadline will be 23 December 2022 for review done by end of January 2023. More information will be available on the conference website. All questions about submissions or the conference should be emailed to the conference organiser, Bertus van Rooy (a.j.vanrooy at uva.nl). In addition to paper proposals, proposals for pre-conference workshops (taking place on 17 May 2023) are also welcome. Workshop proposals should be sent directly to the conference organiser, Bertus van Rooy (a.j.vanrooy at uva.nl). Workshops proposals should indicate whether the desired time allocation is for half a day (3-4 hours) or a full day (6-8 hours). Proposals of 500 words should indicate what the theme of the workshop is and the main contribution it seeks to achieve. The submission deadline for the workshop proposals will be 23 December 2022 with the notice of acceptance on 17 January 2023. ATAP/LDaCA project events The Australian Text Analytics Platform (ATAP) and the Language Data Commons of Australia (LDaCA) are collaborative projects led by the University of Queensland and supported by the Australian Research Data Commons to develop infrastructure for researchers who work with language data. At Sydney, we're involved through the Sydney Corpus Lab, the Sydney Informatics Hub, and Paradisec. The ATAP launch was held at Research Bazar Queensland (ResBazQld) earlier this month. You can access a beta version of the ATAP portal, which gives you sense of some of the things being developed here. You can find a fuller account of this launch and a summary of what has been developed so far here. The Sydney Corpus Lab participated in the ATAP-LDaCA pre-conference workshop before the Australian Linguistic Society (ALS) conference in Melbourne on Tuesday 29th November. You can find out more information about it here. ARDC will running a symposium on the HASS RDC and IRC program on 2-3 February next year in Melbourne. The symposium will showcase the research infrastructure created as part of the HASS RDC and IRC Program and the potential for improved research outcomes that it supports. Presentations will be given by partners from the HASS RDC and IRC Program. To register for the event, please visit the Eventbrite page for the symposium. The ARDC will be running a HASS RDC and IRC Computational Skills Summer School in Sydney from 7-8 February next year. The Summer School will feature skills development workshops to help researchers use the research infrastructure created as part of the HASS RDC and IRC Program. The projects from the HASS RDC and IRC Program will present workshops on using the tools and platforms. The Summer School will include skills development workshops on basic data management skills, using Jupyter Notebooks, the Australian Text Analytics Platform, and using the Indigenous Data Catalogue. To register for the event, please visit the Eventbrite page for the symposium. Other upcoming events There will be a Corpus Linguistics Workshop taking place on 13 February 2023 at the Australian National University (ANU). This is a free workshop focussing on the application of corpus linguistics in discourse and health communication studies. For further information, see the Eventbrite page. The Lancaster Summer Schools in Corpus Linguistics will be held in person at Lancaster University from 26-30 June 2023. Applications for the summer schools will open in January 2023. For more information, please visit the website for the summer school. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From monika.bednarek at sydney.edu.au Mon Dec 5 03:35:11 2022 From: monika.bednarek at sydney.edu.au (Monika Bednarek) Date: Mon, 5 Dec 2022 08:35:11 +0000 Subject: [APCLA 10] Sydney Corpus Lab December 2022 Newsletter In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Dear all, With apologies for cross-posting, please find below the (edited) December newsletter from the Sydney Corpus Lab. Best, Monika From: syd-corpus-lab On Behalf Of Kelvin Lee via syd-corpus-lab Dear Sydney Corpus Lab members and affiliates, We hope this email finds you well. This is the sixth edition of our new monthly newsletter where we aim to let you know about news and updates relating to recent and upcoming corpus linguistics (and text analytics) events/resources. Apologies for any unintentional omissions. If you want us to include anything in the next newsletter, please email info at sydneycorpuslab.com. Please note that due to the holidays, there will not be a newsletter in early January. News and events from the Lab We've crowdsourced and collated introductions to Corpus Linguistics written in Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Spanish, and English. You can find the complete list here. Feedback and suggestions for additions are welcome. Since there are many corpus linguistic and text analytic talks available online (but may be hard to find), we have curated 12 thematic playlists on corpus linguistics. You can find these here. Any omissions and errors are unintentional, some text analytics resources are also included. The Corpus Cast episode featuring Prof. Monika Bednarek is coming up in December. See https://robbielove.org/corpuscast/ for the video and audio for the episode. A belated update regarding two new collaborations between the Sydney Corpus Lab and other groups. We've now got informal collaborations (mutual support and sharing of information/resources) with Macquarie University's Language on the Move (sociolinguistic research group/site) and with the University of Birmingham's Centre for Corpus Research (a centre supporting the use of corpus analysis in research, teaching and learning). These new collaborations strengthen our national and international networks in sociolinguistics and corpus linguistics. Call for submissions The call for papers for the 14th International Conference on Corpus Linguistics (CILC2023) is open until 31 December 2022. The conference will take place on 10-12 May 2023 at the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Oviedo. Please visit the conference website for more information. The call for papers for the Corpus Linguistics 2023 conference (CL2023) is now open (until 6 January 2023). The conference will take place at Lancaster University on 3-6 July 2023. The main conference will be preceded by a workshop day on Sunday 2 July. More details can be found on the conference website. The call for papers for the 11th International Conference on Corpus Linguistics/Journ?es de la Linguistique de Corpus (JLC '23) is now open (until 3 February 2023). The conference will be at Grenoble Alpes University, Grenoble, France on 3-6 July 2023. For more information, please visit the conference website. The 44th annual conference of the International Computer Archive of Modern and Medieval English (ICAME44) is being hosted by the North-West University in Vanderbijlpark, South Africa on 18-21 May 2023. The conference format will be hybrid, with on-site and on-line participation possible. Please submit your abstract via EasyChair. The submission deadline for early review (before Christmas) is 2 December 2022, but otherwise, the deadline will be 23 December 2022 for review done by end of January 2023. More information will be available on the conference website. All questions about submissions or the conference should be emailed to the conference organiser, Bertus van Rooy (a.j.vanrooy at uva.nl). In addition to paper proposals, proposals for pre-conference workshops (taking place on 17 May 2023) are also welcome. Workshop proposals should be sent directly to the conference organiser, Bertus van Rooy (a.j.vanrooy at uva.nl). Workshops proposals should indicate whether the desired time allocation is for half a day (3-4 hours) or a full day (6-8 hours). Proposals of 500 words should indicate what the theme of the workshop is and the main contribution it seeks to achieve. The submission deadline for the workshop proposals will be 23 December 2022 with the notice of acceptance on 17 January 2023. ATAP/LDaCA project events The Australian Text Analytics Platform (ATAP) and the Language Data Commons of Australia (LDaCA) are collaborative projects led by the University of Queensland and supported by the Australian Research Data Commons to develop infrastructure for researchers who work with language data. At Sydney, we're involved through the Sydney Corpus Lab, the Sydney Informatics Hub, and Paradisec. The ATAP launch was held at Research Bazar Queensland (ResBazQld) earlier this month. You can access a beta version of the ATAP portal, which gives you sense of some of the things being developed here. You can find a fuller account of this launch and a summary of what has been developed so far here. The Sydney Corpus Lab participated in the ATAP-LDaCA pre-conference workshop before the Australian Linguistic Society (ALS) conference in Melbourne on Tuesday 29th November. You can find out more information about it here. ARDC will running a symposium on the HASS RDC and IRC program on 2-3 February next year in Melbourne. The symposium will showcase the research infrastructure created as part of the HASS RDC and IRC Program and the potential for improved research outcomes that it supports. Presentations will be given by partners from the HASS RDC and IRC Program. To register for the event, please visit the Eventbrite page for the symposium. The ARDC will be running a HASS RDC and IRC Computational Skills Summer School in Sydney from 7-8 February next year. The Summer School will feature skills development workshops to help researchers use the research infrastructure created as part of the HASS RDC and IRC Program. The projects from the HASS RDC and IRC Program will present workshops on using the tools and platforms. The Summer School will include skills development workshops on basic data management skills, using Jupyter Notebooks, the Australian Text Analytics Platform, and using the Indigenous Data Catalogue. To register for the event, please visit the Eventbrite page for the symposium. Other upcoming events There will be a Corpus Linguistics Workshop taking place on 13 February 2023 at the Australian National University (ANU). This is a free workshop focussing on the application of corpus linguistics in discourse and health communication studies. For further information, see the Eventbrite page. The Lancaster Summer Schools in Corpus Linguistics will be held in person at Lancaster University from 26-30 June 2023. Applications for the summer schools will open in January 2023. For more information, please visit the website for the summer school. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: