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This conference builds on a series of annual workshops and conferences on statistical machine translation, going back to 2006:

IMPORTANT DATES

Release of training data for shared tasksFebruary/March, 2022
Evaluation periods for shared tasksJune/July, 2022
Paper submission deadline7th September, 2022
Paper notification11th October, 2022
Camera-ready version due20th October, 2022
Conference7th - 8th December, 2022
All deadlines are in AoE (Anywhere on Earth). Dates are specified with respect to EMNLP 2022.

OVERVIEW

This year's conference will feature the following shared tasks:

In addition to the shared tasks, the conference will also feature scientific papers on topics related to MT. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:

We encourage authors to evaluate their approaches to the above topics using the common data sets created for the shared tasks.

REGISTRATION AND VISA INFORMATION

These will both be handled by EMNLP 2022.

SHARED TASKS

WMT has a number of MT-related shared tasks. Please consult the links at the top of the page for more details.

PAPER SUBMISSION INFORMATION

WMT accepts two types of submissions: research papers and system papers. Both types of papers are submitted electronically, have the same deadlines, and should follow EMNLP2022 formatting guidelines. WMT will participate in the ACL Rolling Review. Any ARR-reviewed paper that received all of its reviews and meta-reviews available by October 1, 2022 can be committed to WMT and will be considered for publication at the conference.

Research Papers

Research papers should describe original research corresponding to the categories listed above. Research papers that have been or will be submitted to other meetings or publications must indicate this at submission time, and must be withdrawn from the other venues if accepted and published at WMT 2022. We will not accept for publication papers that overlap significantly in content or results with papers that have been or will be published elsewhere. It is acceptable to submit work that has been made available as a technical report (or similar, e.g. in arXiv) without citing it. For the research track, papers should be anonymised, be between 6 and 10 pages in length (excluding references) and may include supplementary material.

We encourage individuals who are submitting research papers to evaluate their approaches using the training resources provided by this conference and past workshops, so that their experiments can be repeated by others using these publicly available corpora.

System Papers

System papers must describe one or more shared task submissions. System paper submissions that we cannot link to a shared task submission will be rejected without review. System papers can overlap with other published work, and do not have to follow the double submission policy. There is no maximum length for system papers, but normally a short paper (4-6 pages) is appropriate. System papers should not be anonymised.

PRESENTATION AND POSTER FORMAT

System description papers will be presentated as posters. For the in-person poster session, the poster panels are 3.28’ (1m wide) x 8.20’ (2.5m tall). We recommend to have posters that are portrait in orientation.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

If you are participating in any task, please subscribe to the Google groups mailing list for updates. You can also consult the list archives on this page. Note that there have been isues with subscribing to the mailing list in recent years. If you are unable to subscribe, or if your subscription is not approved, please contact Barry Haddow (address at the foot of the page).

INVITED TALK

Invited Talk by Ondrej Bojar on "Speech Translation: When Two Superhuman Technologies Combined Fail" (video, demo videos)

ORGANIZERS

Loïc Barrault (University of Sheffield)
Rachel Bawden (Inria)
Ondřej Bojar (Charles University)
Fethi Bougares (University of Le Mans)
Rajen Chatterjee (Apple)
Marta R. Costa-jussà (Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
Anton Dvorkovich (Neurodub)
Christian Federmann (Microsoft)
Mark Fishel (University of Tartu)
Alexander Fraser (LMU Munich)
Markus Freitag (Google)
Yvette Graham (DCU)
Roman Grundkiewicz (Microsoft)
Paco Guzman (Facebook)
Barry Haddow (University of Edinburgh)
Matthias Huck (LMU Munich)
Antonio Jimeno Yepes (IBM Research Australia)
Rebecca Knowles (NRC)
Tom Kocmi (Microsoft)
Philipp Koehn (University of Edinburgh / Johns Hopkins University)
André Martins (Unbabel)
Christof Monz (University of Amsterdam)
Makoto Morishita (NTT)
Masaaki Nagata (NTT)
Toshiaki Nakazawa (University of Tokyo)
Matteo Negri (FBK)
Aurélie Névéol (LIMSI, CNRS)
Mariana Neves (German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment)
Martin Popel (Charles University)
Matt Post (Johns Hopkins University)
Mariya Shmatova (Neurodub )
Marco Turchi (FBK)
Marcos Zampieri (Rochester Institute of Technology)

PROGRAM COMMITTEE

TBC

ANTI-HARASSMENT POLICY

WMT follows the ACL's anti-harassment policy

CONTACT

For general questions, comments, etc. please send email to phi@jhu.edu.
For task-specific questions, please contact the relevant organisers.