Human-Centered Large Language Modeling Workshop 2024 (original) (raw)

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The schedule for oral and poster sessions is now out!: Paper Sessions Schedule

Workshop Registration Information (Early Deadline: Sunday, July 21): https://2024.aclweb.org/registration

A word's meaning resides in the heart and soul of its "generator" - people. How do we include human (personal, social, cultural, situational) context, ethically, into LLMs -- the base models of our NLP systems?

Overview

Language modeling in the context of its source (author) and target (audience) can enable NLP systems to better understand human language. Advances in human-centered NLP have established the importance of modeling the human context holistically, including personal, social, cultural, and situationa factors in NLP systems. Yet, our NLP systems have become heavily reliant on large language models that do not capture the human context.

Human language is highly dependent on the rich and complex human context such as (a) who is speaking, (b) to whom, (c) where (situation/environment) and (d) when (time and place). It is additionally moderated by the changing human states of being such as their mental and emotional states.

Current large language models can possibly simulate some form of human context given their large scale of parameters and pre-training data. However, they do not explicitly process language in the higher order structure of language – connecting documents to people, the "source" of the language.

Prior work has demonstrated the benefits of including the author’s information using LLMs for downstream NLP tasks. Recent research has also shown that LLMs can benefit from including additional author context in the LM pre-training task itself. Progress in the direction of merging the two successful parallels, i.e., human-centered NLP and LLMs, drives us toward creating a vision of human-centered LLMs for the future of NLP in the era of LLMs.

With our first edition of the Human-Centered Large Language Modeling (HuCLLM) workshop, we aim to create a platform where researchers can present rising challenges and solutions in building human-centered NLP models that bring together the ideas of human and social factors adaptation into the base LLMs of our NLP systems.

Call for Papers

Human-centered large language modeling has the potential to bring promising improvements in human-centric applications through multiple domains such as healthcare, education, consumerism, etc. Simultaneously, this new research focus also brings multitudes of unexplored architectural, data, technical, fairness, and ethical challenges.

We invite submissions on topics that include, but are not limited to:

Archival Submissions

Authors are invited to submit long (8 pages) or short (4 pages) papers, with unlimited pages for references and appendices. Following the ACL conference policy, authors of approved papers will be given an additional page for the final, camera-ready versions of their papers.

Please ensure that the submissions are formatted according to the ACL template style. You can access the template here.

Non-Archival Submissions

We welcome non-archival submissions through two tracks.

Please ensure that the submissions are formatted according to the ACL template style. You can access the template here. Accepted papers in the two non-archival tracks will be given an opportunity to present the work at the workshop, but will not be published in the ACL Anthology.

Important Dates

All deadlines are 11:59 pm UTC -12h ("Anywhere on Earth").

Note: All authors must have an OpenReview profile. Please ensure profiles are complete before submission. As per OpenReview's moderation policy for newly created profiles:

If you have any questions, please contact us at: workshophucllm@googlegroups.com

Topics of Interest

The areas of interest include:

Keynote Speakers

In-Person

Cristian Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil

Cristian Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil

Cornell University, USA

Barbara Plank

Barbara Plank

LMU Munich, Germany

Vered Shwartz

Vered Shwartz

University of British Columbia, Canada

Virtual

Daniel Hershcovich

Daniel Hershcovich

University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Panelists

In-Person

Carolyn Rosé

Carolyn Rosé

Carnegie Mellon University, USA

Barbara Plank

Barbara Plank

LMU Munich, Germany

Vinodkumar Prabhakaran

Vinodkumar Prabhakaran

Google Research, USA

Vered Shwartz

Vered Shwartz

University of British Columbia, Canada

Virtual

Snigdha Chaturvedi

Snigdha Chaturvedi

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA

Kayden Jordan

Kayden Jordan

Harrisburg University of Science and Technology, USA

Debora Nozza

Debora Nozza

Bocconi University, Italy

Schedule

Time Schedule
9:00 - 9:10 Opening Remarks
9:10 - 09:55 Keynote 1 - Dr. Cristian Danescu-Niculescu-Mizil: Assisting Human-Human Communication With Artificial Conversational Intuition
09:55 - 10:30 Oral Session 1
10:30 - 11:00 Coffee Break
11:00 - 11:45 Keynote 2 - Dr. Barbara Plank: Human-centered NLP: We are (still) not paying enough attention to human label variation
11:45 - 13:45 Poster Session
12:45 - 13:45 Lunch Break
13:45 - 14:15 Keynote 3 - Dr. Daniel Hershcovich (UCPH): Reversing the Alignment Paradigm: LLMs Shaping Human Cultural Norms, Behaviors, and Attitudes
14:15 - 15:00 Oral Session 2
15:00 - 15:30 Brainstorming Session
15:30 - 16:00 Coffee Break
16:00 - 16:30 Keynote 4 - Dr. Vered Shwartz: Navigating Cultural Adaptation of LLMs: Knowledge, Context, and Consistency
16:30 - 17:25 Panel discussion: including following topics: Human-centeredness, Evaluation, Diversity of participation, Impact, challenges and effects, Future / Actions
17:25 - 17:30 Closing Remarks

Organizers

If you have any questions, please contact us at: workshophucllm@googlegroups.com

Program Committee

Volunteer