Community/training
Background
After a two-year pandemic hiatus, the NLPL network and Horizon Europe project High-Performance Language Technologies (HPLT) join forces to re-launch the successful winter school series on large-scale NLP. The winter school seeks to stimulate community formation, i.e. strengthening interaction and collaboration among Nordic and European research teams in NLP and advancing a shared level of knowledge and experience in using high-performance e-infrastructures for large-scale NLP research. The 2023 edition of the winter school puts special emphasis on NLP researchers from countries who participate in the EuroHPC LUMI consortium. For additional background, please see the archival pages from the 2018, 2019, and 2020 NLPL Winter Schools.
For early 2023, HPLT will hold its winter school from Monday, February 6, to Wednesday, February 8, 2023, at a mountain-side hotel (with skiing and walking opportunities) about two hours north of Oslo. The project will organize group bus transfer from and to the Oslo airport Gardermoen, leaving the airport at 9:30 on Monday morning and returning there around 17:30 on Wednesday afternoon.
The winter school is subsidized by the HPLT project: there is no fee for participants and no charge for the bus transfer to and from the conference hotel. All participants will have to cover their own travel and accomodation at Skeikampen, however. Two nights at the hotel, including all meals, will come to NOK 3190 (NOK 2790 per person in a shared double room), to be paid to the hotel directly.
Programme
The 2023 winter school will have a thematic focus on Large-Scale Language Modeling and Neural Machine Translation with Web Data. The programme will be comprised of in-depth technical presentations (possibly including some hands-on elements) from, among others, the BigScience and Common Crawl initiatives, but also include critical reflections on working with massive, uncurated language data. The programme will be complemented with an evening ‘research bazar’ (by participants) to stimulate academic socializing and a ‘walk-through’ of available infrastructure on the shared EuroHPC LUMI supercomputer.
Confirmed presenters include:
- Emily M. Bender, University of Washington
- Philipp Koehn, Johns Hopkins University
- Teven Le Scao, Hugging Face
- Nikola Ljubešić, Jožef Stefan Institute & University of Ljubljana
- Sebastian Nagel, Common Crawl
- Anna Rogers, University of Copenhagen
- Pedro Ortiz Suarez, University of Mannheim and DFKI
- Zeerak Talat, Simon Fraser University
- Ivan Vulić, Cambridge University
Monday, February 6, 2023 | ||
---|---|---|
13:00 | 14:00 | Lunch |
14:00 | 15:30 | Session 1 |
15:30 | 15:50 | Coffee Break |
15:50 | 17:20 | Session 2 |
17:20 | 17:40 | Coffee Break |
17:40 | 19:10 | Session 3 |
19:30 | Dinner | |
21:00 | Research Bazaar Everyone: Upstairs Bar |
Tuesday, February 7, 2022 | ||
---|---|---|
Breakfast is available from 07:30 | ||
08:30 | 10:00 | Session 4 |
Lunch is available between 13:00 and 14:30 | ||
15:00 | 16:20 | Session 5 |
16:20 | 16:40 | Coffee Break |
16:40 | 18:00 | Session 6 |
18:00 | 18:10 | Coffee Break |
18:10 | 19:30 | Session 7 |
19:30 | Dinner |
Wednesday, February 8, 2020 | ||
---|---|---|
Breakfast is available from 07:30 | ||
08:30 | 10:00 | Session 8 |
10:00 | 10:30 | Coffee Break |
10:30 | 12:00 | Session 9 |
12:30 | 13:30 | Lunch |
Registration
In total, we anticipate up to 50 participants in the 2023 Winter School. Please register your intent of participation through our on-line registration form. We will process requests for participation on a first-come, first-served basis, with an eye toward regional balance. Interested parties who have submitted the registration form will be confirmed in three batches, one on December 5, another one on December 12, and finally after the closing date for registration, which is Thursday, December 15, 2022.
Once confirmed by the organizing team, participant names will be published on this page, and registration will establish a binding agreement with the hotel. Therefore, a cancellation fee will be incurred (unless we can find someone else to ‘take over’ last-minute spaces), and no-shows will be charged the full price for at least one night by the hotel.
Logistics
With a few exceptions, winter school participants travel to and from the conference hotel jointly on a chartered bus (the HPLT shuttle). The bus will leave OSL airport no later than 9:30 CET on Monday, February 6. Thus, please meet up at 9:15 and make your arrival known to your assigned ‘tour guide’ (who will introduce themselves to you by email beforehand).
The group will gather near the bus and taxi information booth in the downstairs arrivals area, just outside the international arrivals luggage claims and slightly to the right, as one exits the customs area: The yellow dot numbered (17) on the OSL arrivals map. The group will then walk over to the bus terminal, to leave the airport by 9:30. The drive to the Skeikampen conference hotel will take us about three hours, and the bus will make one stop along the way to stretch our legs and fill up on coffee.
The winter school will end with lunch on Wednesday, February 8, before the group returns to OSL airport on the HPLT shuttle. The bus will leave Skeikampen at 14:00 CET, with an expected arrival time at OSL around 17:00 to 17:30 CET.
Organization
The 2023 Winter School is organized by a team of volunteers from the NLPL and HPLT networks,
please see below.
For all inquiries regarding registration, the programme, logistics,
or such, please contact hplt-training@ifi.uio.no
.
The programme committee is comprised of (regrettably lacking in diversity)
- Hans Eide (Uninett Sigma2, Norway)
- Filip Ginter (University of Turku, Finland)
- Barry Haddow (University of Edinburgh, UK)
- Jan Hajič (Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic)
- Daniel Hershcovich (University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
- Marco Kuhlmann (Linköping University, Sweden)
- Andrey Kutuzov (University of Oslo, Norway)
- Joakim Nivre (RISE and Uppsala University, Sweden)
- Stephan Oepen (University of Oslo, Norway)
- Sampo Pyysalo (University of Turku, Finland)
- Gema Ramirez (Prompsit Language Engineering, Spain)
- Magnus Sahlgreen (AI Sweden)
- David Samuel (University of Oslo, Norway)
- Jörg Tiedemann (University of Helsinki, Finland)
Participants
- Chantal Amrhein (University of Zurich)
- Mikko Aulamo (University of Helsinki)
- Elisa Bassignana (IT University of Copenhagen)
- Emily M. Bender (University of Washington)
- Nikolay Bogoychev (Edinburgh University)
- Mehrdad Farahani (Chalmers University of Technology)
- Ona de Gibert (University of Helsinki)
- Janis Goldzycher (University of Zurich)
- Jan Hajič (Charles University in Prague)
- Jindřich Helcl (Charles University in Prague)
- Oskar Holmström (Linköping University)
- Sami Itkonen (University of Helsinki)
- Antonia Karamolegkou (University of Copenhagen)
- Marco Kuhlmann (Linköping University)
- Andrey Kutuzov (University of Oslo)
- Jelmer van der Linde (Edinburgh University)
- Max Müller-Eberstein (IT University of Copenhagen)
- Sebastian Nagel (Common Crawl)
- Graeme Nail (Edinburgh University)
- Joakim Nivre (RISE and Uppsala University)
- Stephan Oepen (University of Oslo)
- Laura Cabello Piqueras (University of Copenhagen)
- Anna Rogers (University of Copenhagen)
- Phillip Rust (University of Copenhagen)
- Lucas Charpentier (University of Oslo)
- David Samuel (University of Oslo)
- Yves Scherrer (University of Helsinki)
- Pedro Ortiz Suarez (University of Mannheim and DFKI)
- Jörg Tiedemann (University of Helsinki)
- Teemu Vahtola (University of Helsinki)
- Thomas Vakili (Stockholm University)
- Tea Vojtěchová (Charles University in Prague)
- Sondre Wold (University of Oslo)
- Jaume Zaragoza-Bernabeu (Prompsit)