Participant papers at CEUR: http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-3202/

Instructions for the working notes papers:

  • System description papers should be formatted according to the uniform 1-column CEURART style. Latex and Word templates can be found in: http://ceur-ws.org/HOWTOSUBMIT.html#PREPARE
  • The minimum length of a regular paper should be 5 pages. There is no maximum page limit.
  • Papers must be written in English.
  • Each paper must include a copyright footnote on the first page of each paper: {\let\thefootnote\relax\footnotetext{Copyright \textcopyright\ 2022 for this paper by its authors. Use permitted under Creative Commons License Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). IberLEF 2022, September 2022, A Coruña, Spain.}} 
  • Eliminate the numbering in the pages of the paper, if there is one, and make sure that there are no headers or footnotes, except the mandatory copyright as a footnote on the first page.
  • Authors should be described with their name and their full affiliation (university and country). Names must be complete (no initials), e.g. “Soto Pérez” instead of “S. Pérez”.
  • Titles of papers should be in emphatic capital English notation, i.e., “Filling an Author Agreement by Autocompletion” rather than “Filling an author agreement by autocompletion”.
  • At least one author of each paper must sign the CEUR copyright agreement. Instructions and templates can be found at http://ceur-ws.org/HOWTOSUBMIT.html. The signed form must be sent along with the paper to the task organizers. Important: it must be physically signed with pencil on paper.

Papers without the copyright footnote, with page numbers, without the CEUR copyright agreement properly signed will not be considered.

Submit your paper at EasyChair. See here the submission procedure

Have a look at 2021 Meddoprof proceedings (here) and 2020 Cantemist proceedings (here).

Relevant publications

  • Gerner, Martin, Goran Nenadic, and Casey M. Bergman. “LINNAEUS: a species name identification system for biomedical literature.” BMC bioinformatics 11.1 (2010): 1-17.
  • Federhen, Scott. “The NCBI taxonomy database.” Nucleic acids research 40.D1 (2012): D136-D143.
  • Evangelos Pafilis, Sune P. Frankild, Lucia Fanini, Sarah Faulwetter, Christina Pavloudi, Aikaterini Vasileiadou, Christos Arvanitidis, and Lars Juhl Jensen. 2013. The species and organisms resources for fast and accurate identification of taxonomic names in text. PLOS ONE, 8(6):1–6
  • Schoch, Conrad L et al. “NCBI Taxonomy: a comprehensive update on curation, resources and tools.” Database : the journal of biological databases and curation vol. 2020 (2020): baaa062. doi:10.1093/database/baaa062
  • Antonio Miranda-Escalada, Eulàlia Farré-Maduell, Martin Krallinger. Named Entity Recognition, Concept Normalization and Clinical Coding: Overview of the Cantemist Track for Cancer Text Mining in Spanish, Corpus, Guidelines, Methods and Results. Proceedings of the Iberian Languages Evaluation Forum (IberLEF 2020), CEUR Workshop Proceedings. 303-323 (2020).
  • Lima-López, Salvador, Eulàlia Farré-Maduell, Antonio Miranda-Escalada, Vicent Brivá-Iglesias, & Martin Krallinger. “NLP applied to occupational health: MEDDOPROF shared task at IberLEF 2021 on automatic recognition, classification and normalization of professions and occupations from medical texts.” Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural [Online], 67 (2021): 243-256.
  • Antonio Jimeno Yepes, Ameer Albahem, and Karin Verspoor. 2021. Using Discourse Structure to Differentiate Focus Entities from Background Entities in Scientific Literature. In Proceedings of the The 19th Annual Workshop of the Australasian Language Technology Association, pages 174–178, Online. Australasian Language Technology Association.
  • Pyysalo, Sampo, et al. “Overview of the infectious diseases (ID) task of BioNLP shared task 2011.” Proceedings of BioNLP Shared Task 2011 Workshop. 2011.