First Call for Papers

Twitter: @MTSummitXVII

 

We are pleased to announce the first call for papers for MT Summit XVII: the 17th Machine Translation Summit, which will take place in the Helix Theatre at Dublin City University, Dublin, Ireland, from 19-23 August 2019.

 

The conference is organised by the European Association for Machine Translation (EAMT: http://eamt.org ), and overall chair of the conference is Andy Way (ADAPT Centre, Dublin City University, Ireland), supported by the following track chairs:

  • Research track co-chairs: Barry Haddow & Rico Sennrich (University of Edinburgh, UK)

  • User track: John Tinsley (Iconic Translation Machines, Ireland) & Dimitar Shterionov

  • Translator track: Celia Rico (Universidad Europea de Madrid, Spain) & Federico Gaspari (www.unistrada.it/gaspari)

  • Projects chair: Mikel L. Forcada (Universitat d'Alacant, Spain)

We are keen to solicit novel, original contributions in each of these three areas that will advance the field of MT. In addition to regular contributions, we are also seeking extended abstracts for the User and Translator tracks, which can report work-in-progress, or novel applications of technology to real application scenarios. Submissions must be unpublished, and written in English.

 

We seek submissions across the entire spectrum of MT-related research activity. Traditionally, the MT Summit is the place where researchers, developers, users and vendors all get together under one roof to discuss the issues of the day. Accordingly, we are especially interested in papers which demonstrate a clear interaction between researchers and practitioners who are applying MT technology to their specific use-cases. Thus, we particularly encourage submissions that are oriented towards building robust and practical systems, including systems where there is a user-in-the-loop, adaptation to particular domains or usage scenarios, and
utilization of available resources in real production scenarios.

 

There is little doubt that the quality of MT systems has improved significantly in recent years. In line with general overhyping of AI, we have seen some extraordinary claims about the capability of MT, so much so that translators have had cause to worry about the impact of this improved technology on their profession. In response, and as a clear attempt to bring translators and system developers closer together, the 2019 MT Summit will also feature a Translators track, where we get to hear what the issues of the day are for perhaps the largest set of users of the technology.

 

As well as the three main tracks, the conference will also feature invited talks, panel discussions, a technology showcase, tutorials and workshops, presentation of the 2019 EAMT Best Thesis Award, and presentation of the IAMT 2019 Award of Honour. More information about each of these will follow in due course.

Notification comes a full three months before the conference takes place, which should be plenty of time for conference attendees who need visas.

Submission Instructions:

Full papers for the research track must not exceed 9 (nine) pages plus unlimited pages for references, and must be formatted according to the MT Summit 2019 style guide (PDF version / LaTeX version / MS Word version). These papers will be rigorously reviewed for novelty and impact, and published in the conference proceedings. They will be presented at the conference as either oral presentations or as posters.

 

For the user and translator tracks, we will be accepting submissions of no more than 6 pages plus unlimited pages for references, also formatted according to the MT Summit 2019 style guide. These submissions can be used to report analyses of the effects of applying research technology to practical application scenarios, or descriptions of demos appearing at the technology showcase.


For the projects track, we will be accepting submissions of 1-page abstracts reporting on publicly-funded research and development projects related to machine translation.

Submitted papers must be in PDF. To allow for blind reviewing, please do not include author names and affiliations within the paper, and avoid obvious self-references. Papers must be submitted to the Easy Chair system where contributors can select the track (s)he wants to submit a paper for.

 

Topics of interest, across all tracks, include but are not limited to:

 

  • Advances in various MT paradigms: data-driven, rule-based, and hybrids

  • MT applications and embedding: translation/localization aids,
    speech-to-speech, speech-to-text, OCR, MT for communication (chats, blogs,
    social networks), multilingual applications, etc.

  • Technologies for MT deployment: quality estimation and domain adaptation

  • MT in special settings: low resources, massive resources, high volume, low
    computing resources, crisis scenarios, etc.

  • Human factors in MT and user interfaces for MT

  • Ethical issues in translation

  • Linguistic resources for MT: dictionaries, terminology banks, corpora

  • MT evaluation techniques and evaluation results

  • Empirical studies on translation data

     

Multiple Submissions:

Full papers and extended abstracts that will appear in the MT Summit proceedings must represent new work that has not been previously published. Pre-prints posted online on servers such as arXiv do not count as published papers, and thus are allowed to be submitted. Papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or publications must indicate this at submission time in the EasyChair submission form. Authors of papers accepted for presentation at MT Summit must notify the program chairs by the camera-ready deadline as to whether the paper will be presented. All accepted papers must be presented at the conference to appear in the proceedings.

 

Authors submitting more than one paper to MT Summit must ensure that submissions do not overlap significantly (>25%) with each other in content or results.

Paper Templates (click to download):​

  • MS Word

  • LibreOffice/OpenOffice.org

  •