MATCHING WORKSHOP @ ACL 2023

July 13, 2023 in Toronto, Canada
Hybrid Format

Workshop Overview

Matching Entities from structured and unstructured sources is an important task in many  domains and applications such as HR and E-commerce. For example, in HR platforms/services, it is important to match resumes to job descriptions and job seekers to companies. Similarly in web platforms/services, it is important to match customers to businesses such as hotels and restaurant, among others. In such domains, it is also relevant to match “textual customer reviews” to customers queries, and sentences (or phrases) as answers to customer questions. Recent advances in Natural Language Processing, Natural Language Understanding, Conversational AI, Language Generation, Machine Learning, Deep Learning, Data Management, Information Extraction, Knowledge Bases/Graphs, (MultiSingle Hop/Commonsense) Inference/Reasoning, Recommendation Systems, and others, have demonstrated promising results in different Matching tasks related (but not limited) to the previously mentioned domains. We believe that there is tremendous opportunity to further exploit and explore the use of advanced NLP (and language related) techniques applied to Matching tasks. Therefore, the goal of this workshop is to bring together the research communities (from academia and industry) of these related areas, that are interested in the development and the application of novel natural-language-based approaches/models/systems to address challenges around different Matching tasks.

Find more details in our blog article.

Confirmed Invited Speakers

Dongyeop Kang
Dongyeop Kang
Assistant Professor
Bodhi Majumder
Bodhisattwa Prasad Majumder
Research Scientist at AI2
Peter Clark
Peter Clark - Distinguished Speaker
Senior Research Director at AI2
Arash Termehchy
Arash Termechy
Associate Professor at the School of EECS at Oregon State University
Shashank Srivastava
Shashank Srivastava
Assistant Professor of Computer Science at UNC Chapel Hill
Profesor Ricardo Baeza-Yates
Ricardo Baeza-Yates - Distinguished Speaker
Director of Research at the Institute for Experiential AI of Northeastern University
William W Cohen
Google Research
Sameer Singh
Department of Computer Science, University of California, Irvine
Ndapa Nakashole
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of California, San Diego
Alan Ritter
Alan Ritter
School of Interactive Computing & College of Computing, Georgia Tech
Bodhi Majumder
Bodhisattwa Prasad Majumder
Research Scientist at AI2
Peter Clark
Peter Clark - Distinguished Speaker
Senior Research Director at AI2
Arash Termehchy
Arash Termechy
Associate Professor at the School of EECS at Oregon State University
Shashank Srivastava
Shashank Srivastava
Assistant Professor of Computer Science at UNC Chapel Hill
Profesor Ricardo Baeza-Yates
Ricardo Baeza-Yates - Distinguished Speaker
Director of Research at the Institute for Experiential AI of Northeastern University
William W Cohen
Google Research
Sameer Singh
Department of Computer Science, University of California, Irvine
Ndapa Nakashole
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of California, San Diego
Alan Ritter
Alan Ritter
School of Interactive Computing & College of Computing, Georgia Tech

Call for Submissions

We invite submissions of long and short papers on original and unpublished work that address challenges around the specific task of matching information from heterogeneous sources spanning structured (e.g., databases, resume) and unstructured (e.g., online reviews, job advertisements, social media posts) data. The topics include but are not limited to:

  • Entity Alignment; 
  • Entity Matching; 
  • Entity Linking; 
  • Language-Model-based Matching; 
  • Data-driven Matching; 
  • Knowledge-graph-based matching; 
  • Rule-based Matching; 
  • Temporal Information Matching; 
  • Human-Centric AI for Matching;
  • Trust, Explainability, and Fairness in Matching;
  • Information extraction from user-generated text;
  • Robustness to noise

All machine learning, text mining, and natural language processing techniques are welcome. All regular papers and short papers should follow the ACL 2023 style guidelines:

“both long and short papers must follow the ACL 2023 two-column format, using the supplied official style files. The templates can be downloaded in Style Files and FormattingPlease do not modify these style files, nor should you use templates designed for other conferences. Submissions that do not conform to the required styles, including paper size, margin width, and font size restrictions, will be rejected without review.”

The maximum length of a regular paper is 8 pages plus unlimited number of pages for references. The maximum length of a short paper is 4 pages plus unlimited number of pages for references. At least one author of every accepted paper is expected to attend the workshop.

MATCHING is using a hybrid submission process, Authors can submit their papers using the OpenReview platform. Alternatively, authors can also commit papers and reviews from ARR. We allow parallel commitment/submission to the ACL/EACL 2023 conference and our workshop, with the requirement that if the paper is accepted at ACL/EACL 2023, it will be withdrawn from archival publication at the workshop. We ask the authors to notify MATCHING organizers if they have also committed/submitted to ACL/EACL or other workshops.

All accepted short and long papers must be presented as talk/poster/demo at the workshop, depending on the workshop schedule. At least one author of each accepted paper must register for ACL 2023 and attend the workshop.

Important Dates

  • Workshop Paper Due Date
    • direct submission via OpenReview: April 24, 2023
    • submission via ARR
      • commitment deadline: May 17, 2023
  • Notification of Acceptance: May 22, 2023
  • Camera-ready papers due: June 6, 2023
  • Pre-recorded video and posters due: June 13, 2023
  • MATCHING Workshop @ACL2023 (hybrid): July 13, 2023

Mentorship Program

We will be hosting a mentorship program to facilitate exchange between authors and experts working in areas relevant to the workshop. The goal of this program is to foster collaborations and increase the quality and impact of the submissions. Mentors are expected to guide mentees during the mentorship period as they prepare submissions for this workshop. Their interactions may include an in-depth discussion of related work to ensure submissions are well contextualized, discussions on writing and presentation of the submission, and discussions about possible extensions of the submissions. Mentees are expected to prepare the submissions by February 28, 2023 and contact their assigned mentor. Mentors and mentees are encouraged to dedicate at least 4hrs over the course of the program to maximize the benefits of the program. They can meet virtually within the first week after the mentor-mentee matching is made and set expectations for subsequent meetings. Their efforts should culminate in a final version of the paper that should be submitted by the deadline.

Applications to the mentorship program are due February 28, 2023

Application to be a mentor/mentee: Apply Here

Organizers

Sajjadur Rahman
Sajjadur Rahman
Megagon Labs
Dunja Mladenic
Jozef Stefan Institute (JSI)
Marko Grobelnik
Marko Grobelnik
Jozef Stefan Institute (JSI)
Tom Mitchell
Carnegie Mellon University & Megagon Labs
Estevam Hruschka
Megagon Labs

Contact

If you have any questions or inquiries regarding the workshop or need further information, please do not hesitate to send an email to matching-workshop@megagon.ai