Association for Computational Linguistics | |
Type: | Professional organization |
Founded Date: | 1962 |
Origins: | Association for Machine Translation and Computational Linguistics |
Area Served: | Worldwide |
Focus: | Computational linguistics and natural language processing |
Method: | Conferences, publications |
The Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL) is a scientific and professional organization for people working on natural language processing.[1] Its namesake conference is one of the primary high impact conferences for natural language processing research, along with EMNLP.[2] [3] The conference is held each summer in locations where significant computational linguistics research is carried out.
It was founded in 1962, originally named the Association for Machine Translation and Computational Linguistics (AMTCL). It became the ACL in 1968.[4] The ACL has a European (EACL),[5] a North American (NAACL),[6] and an Asian (AACL)[7] chapter.
The ACL was founded in 1962 as the Association for Machine Translation and Computational Linguistics (AMTCL). The initial membership was about 100. In 1965, the AMTCL took over the journal Mechanical Translation and Computational Linguistics. This journal was succeeded by many other journals: the American Journal of Computational Linguistics (1974–1978, 1980–1983), and then Computational Linguistics (1984–present).[8] Since 1988, the journal has been published for the ACL by MIT Press.[9] [10]
The annual meeting was first held in 1963 in conjunction with the Association for Computing Machinery National Conference.[11] The annual meeting was, for a long time, relatively informal and did not publish anything longer than abstracts. By 1968, the society took on its current name, the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). The publication of the annual meeting's Proceedings of the ACL began in 1979 and gradually matured into its modern form.[8] Many of the meetings were held in conjunction with the Linguistic Society of America, and a few with the American Society for Information Science and the Cognitive Science Society.[11]
The United States government sponsored much research from 1989 to 1994, characterized by an increase in author retention rates and an increase in research in some key topics, such as speech recognition, in ACL. By the 21st century, it was able to maintain authors at a high rate who coalesced in a more stable arrangement around individual research topics.[12]
Every year, the ACL holds the Annual Meeting of the ACL.[13] The location lies in Europe in years zero modulo three, North America in years one modulo three, and Asia–Australia in years two modulo three. In 2020, the Annual Meeting received for the first time more submissions from China than the United States.[14]
Year | Location | |
---|---|---|
2024 August 11–16 | Bangkok, Thailand | |
2023 July 9–14 | Toronto, Canada | |
2022 May 22–27 | Dublin, Ireland | |
2021 August 1–6 | ||
2020 July 5–10 | ||
2019 July 28–August 2 | Florence, Italy | |
2018 July 15–20 | Melbourne, Australia | |
2017 July 30–August 4 | Vancouver, Canada | |
2014 June 22–27 | Baltimore, Maryland | |
2011 June 19–24 | Portland, Oregon | |
2008 June 15–20 | Columbus, Ohio | |
2005 June 25–30 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | |
2002 July 7–12 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |
The ACL organizes several of the top conferences and workshops in the field of computational linguistics and natural language processing. These include:
Besides conferences, the ACL also sponsors the journals Computational Linguistics and Transactions of the Association for Computational Linguistics (TACL). Papers and other presentations at ACL and ACL-affiliated venues are archived online in the open-access ACL Anthology.[15]
ACL has a large number of Special Interest Groups (SIGs), focusing on specific areas of natural language processing. Some current SIGs within ACL are:[16]
SIG | Description |
---|---|
SIGANN | Linguistic Annotation |
SIGBIOMED | Biomedical Language Processing |
SIGDAT | Linguistic data and corpus-based approaches |
SIGDIAL | Dialogue Processing |
SIGFSM | Finite State Methods |
SIGGEN | Natural Language Generation |
SIGHAN | Chinese Language Processing |
SIGHUM | Language Technologies for the Socio-Economic Sciences and the Humanities |
SIGLEX | Lexicon: the umbrella organization for the SemEval semantic evaluations and SENSEVAL word-sense evaluations |
SIGMT | Machine Translation |
SIGMOL | Mathematics of Language |
SIGMORPHON | Computational Morphology and Phonology |
SIGNLL | Natural Language Learning |
SIGPARSE | Natural Language Parsing |
SIGSEM | Computational Semantics |
SIGSEMITIC | Computational Approaches to Semitic Languages |
SIGSLAV | NLP for Slavic Languages |
SIGSLPAT | Speech & Language Processing for Assistive Technologies |
SIGTYP | Typology |
SIGWAC | Web as Corpus |
Each year, the ACL elects a distinguished computational linguist who becomes vice-president of the organization in the next calendar year and president one year later. Recent ACL presidents are:[17]
Name | |
2022 | Tim Baldwin |
2021 | Rada Mihalcea |
2020 | Hinrich Schütze |
2019 | Zhou Ming |
2018 | Marti Hearst |
2017 | Joakim Nivre |
2016 | Pushpak Bhattacharyya |
2015 | Christopher D. Manning |
2014 | Gertjan van Noord |
2013 | Haifeng Wang |
2012 | Ken Church |
2011 | Kevin Knight |
2010 | Ido Dagan |
2009 | Steven Bird |
2008 | Bonnie Dorr |
2007 | Mark Steedman |
2006 | Jun'ichi Tsujii |
2005 | Martha Palmer |
2004 | Johanna Moore |
2003 | Mark Johnson |
2002 | John Nerbonne |
2001 | Eduard Hovy |
2000 | Wolfgang Wahlster |