[Air-L] CFP - 19th workshop on Computational Models of Natural Argument

Jodi Schneider jschneider at pobox.com
Mon Feb 18 08:03:58 PST 2019


(with apologies for cross mailing)


** CMNA 2019, the 19th workshop on Computational Models of Natural Argument
**


9th April 2019, Limassol, Cyprus

in conjunction with Persuasive 2019


*Special theme: The Role(s) of Argument in Persuasion*



DEADLINE 20 February 2019


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CMNA 2019 will be held as part Persuasive 2019, in the beautiful Limassol,
Cyprus.


Since its inception in 2001, the CMNA workshop series focuses on the issue
of modelling “natural” argumentation, where naturalness may range across a
variety of forms, perhaps involving the use of visual rather than
linguistic means to illustrate a point, for example using graphics or
multimedia, or applying more sophisticated rhetorical devices, interacting
at various layers of abstraction, or exploiting “extra-rational”
characteristics of the audience, taking into account emotions and affective
factors.


The study of Argumentation, and in particular, argumentative behaviour
within natural, real-world communication, compliments the scope and
directions of the behaviour change communities and aligns neatly with
several aspects of the PERSUASIVE conference. Computers and related digital
technologies are tools that are increasingly used to help influence and
persuade, as well as to manage and support. Similarly, the use of computers
in argumentation has been varied, providing both a medium in which
argumentative practises can flourish, and tools with which to study those
practises. There appears however to be a natural alignment between the
notion of argument as a rational process that can underpin reasoned action,
and the idea of persuasive technologies leading to changes in behaviour and
habitual action.


Special theme for this edition is the *role(s) of argumentation in
persuasion*.

This theme would be interpreted broadly, to support both polemical
positions on, for example, whether argumentation can help or hinder
persuasion, and to enable dissemination of recent work at the intersection
of the fields. For example, recent work within the argumentation community
has considered the use of arguments in formal models of persuasion as well
as the role of argumentative dialogue in building motivation for behaviour
change.


Notwithstanding the special theme, we also solicit contribution addressing,
but not limited to, the following areas of interest:



   - The characteristics of “natural” arguments (e.g. ontological aspects,
   cognitive issues, legal aspects).
   - Rhetoric and affect in argumentation and persuasion: the role of
   emotions, personalities, etc. in argumentation.
   - The linguistic characteristics of natural argumentation, including
   discourse markers, sentence format, referring expressions, and style.
   - The generation of natural argument
   - Corpus argumentation results and techniques
   - Argumentation mining
   - The roles of licentiousness and deceit and the ethical implications of
   implemented systems demonstrating such features.
   - Natural argumentation in multi-agent systems.
   - Methods to better convey the structure of complex argument, including
   representation and summarisation.
   - Natural argumentation and media: visual arguments, multi-modal
   arguments, spoken arguments.
   - Evaluative arguments and their application in AI systems (such as
   decision-support and advice-giving).
   - Non-monotonic, defeasible and uncertain argumentation.
   - The computational use of models from informal logic and argumentation
   theory.
   - Computer supported collaborative argumentation, for pedagogy,
   e-democracy and public debate.
   - Tools for interacting with structures of argument.
   - Applications of argumentation based systems.

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We are accepting submissions of long and short papers, demonstrations and
short abstracts. CMNA19 proceedings will be published as CEUR
proceedings————————————————————————————————————————————————————

Key dates are as follows:



   - Paper submission (all categories): 20 February 2019 at this link
   https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=cmna19
   - Notification: 1 March 2019
   - Early registration: 5 March 2019 (to be done through the Persuasive
   2019 website at http://www.persuasive2019.org/
   - Final papers: 25 March 2019
   - CMNA 19: 9th April 2019


Please visit http://cmna.info//CMNA19/ <http://cmna.info//CMNA17/> for more
information.


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Floriana Grasso - University of Liverpool

Nancy Green - University of North Carolina at Greensboro

Jodi Schneider - University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign, IL

Simon Wells - Edinburgh Napier University, UK



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