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          <string-name>CLEF Steering Committee</string-name>
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        <aff id="aff0">
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          <institution>Nicola Ferro, University of Padua</institution>
          ,
          <country country="IT">Italy</country>
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      <abstract>
        <p>The CLEF 2018 conference is the nineteenth edition of the popular CLEF campaign and workshop series which has run since 2000 contributing to the systematic evaluation of multilingual and multimodal information access systems, primarily through experimentation on shared tasks. In 2010 CLEF was launched in a new format, as a conference with research presentations, panels, poster and demo sessions and laboratory evaluation workshops. These are proposed and operated by groups of organizers volunteering their time and e ort to de ne, promote, administrate and run an evaluation activity. CLEF 20181 was jointly organized by Avignon, Marseille, and Toulon Universities and was hosted by the University of Avignon, France, 10-14 September 2018. Ten laboratories were selected and run during CLEF 2018. To identify the best proposals, besides the well-established criteria from previous years' editions of CLEF such as topical relevance, novelty, potential impact on future world a airs, likely number of participants, and the quality of the organizing consortium, this year we further stressed the connection to real-life usage scenarios and we tried to avoid as much as possible overlaps among labs in order to promote synergies and integration. Building on previous experience, the Labs at CLEF 2018 demonstrate the maturity of the CLEF evaluation environment by creating new tasks, new and larger data sets, new ways of evaluation or more languages. Details of the individual Labs are described by the Lab organizers in these proceedings. Below is a short summary of them.</p>
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      <title>-</title>
      <p>where participants submit \querying agents" that generate queries to be
submitted to a static retrieval system. E ective \querying agents" can then simulate
users towards developing dynamic search systems.</p>
      <p>CLEFeHealth5 provides scenarios which aim to ease patients and nurses
understanding and accessing eHealth information. The goals of the lab are to
develop processing methods and resources in a multilingual setting to enrich
di cult-to-understand eHealth texts, and provide valuable documentation. The
tasks include: multilingual information extraction; technologically assisted
reviews in empirical medicine; and, patient-centred information retrieval.</p>
      <p>ImageCLEF6 organizes three main tasks and a pilot task: (i) a caption
prediction task that aims at predicting the caption of a gure from the biomedical
literature based only on the gure image; (ii) a tuberculosis task that aims at
detecting the tuberculosis type, severity and drug resistance from CT (Computed
Tomography) volumes of the lung; (iii) a lifelog task (videos, images and other
sources) about daily activities understanding and moment retrieval, and (iv)
a pilot task on visual question answering where systems are asked to answer
medical questions.</p>
      <p>LifeCLEF7 aims at boosting research on the identi cation of living
organisms and on the production of biodiversity data in general. Through its
biodiversity informatics-related challenges, LifeCLEF is intended to push the boundaries
of the state of the art in several research directions at the frontier of multimedia
information retrieval, machine learning and knowledge engineering.</p>
      <p>MC28 mainly focuses on developing processing methods and resources to
mine the social media (SM) sphere surrounding cultural events such as festivals,
music, books, movies and museums. Following previous editions (CMC 2016 and
MC2 2017), the 2018 edition focused on argumentative mining and multilingual
cross SM search.</p>
      <p>PAN9 is a networking initiative for the digital text forensics, where
researchers and practitioners study technologies that analyze texts with regard
to originality, authorship, and trustworthiness. PAN o ers three tasks at CLEF
2018 with new evaluation resources consisting of large-scale corpora,
performance measures, and web services that allow for meaningful evaluations. The
main goal is to provide sustainable and reproducible evaluations so as to get a
clear view of the capabilities of state-of-the-art algorithms. The tasks are: author
identi cation; author pro ling; and author obfuscation.</p>
      <p>Early risk prediction on the Internet (eRisk)10 explores issues of
evaluation methodology, e ectiveness metrics and other processes related to early
5 https://sites.google.com/view/clef-ehealth-2018/
6 http://www.imageclef.org/2018
7 http://www.lifeclef.org/
8 https://mc2.talne.eu/
9 http://pan.webis.de/
10 http://early.irlab.org/
risk detection. Early detection technologies can be employed in di erent areas,
particularly those related to health and safety. For instance, early alerts could
be sent when a predator starts interacting with a child for sexual purposes, or
when a potential o ender starts publishing antisocial threats on a blog, forum
or social network. Our main goal is to pioneer a new interdisciplinary research
area that would be potentially applicable to a wide variety of situations and to
many di erent personal pro les. eRisk 2018 had two campaign-style tasks: early
detection of signs of depression and early detection of signs of anorexia.</p>
      <p>Personalised Information Retrieval at CLEF (PIR-CLEF)11 provides
a framework for the evaluation of Personalised Information Retrieval (PIR).
Current approaches to the evaluation of PIR are user-centric, mostly based on user
studies, i.e., they rely on experiments that involve real users in a supervised
environment. PIR-CLEF aims to develop and test a methodology for the evaluation
of personalised search that enables repeatable experiments. The main aim is to
enable research groups working on PIR to both experiment with and provide
feedback on the proposed PIR evaluation methodology.</p>
      <p>CLEF has been always backed by European projects which complement the
incredible amount of volunteering work performed by Lab Organizers and the
CLEF community with the resources needed for its necessary central
coordination, in a similar manner to the other major international evaluation initiatives
such as TREC, NTCIR, FIRE and MediaEval. Since 2014, the organisation of
CLEF no longer has direct support from European projects and are working
to transform itself into a self-sustainable activity. This is being made possible
thanks to the establishment in late 2013 of the CLEF Association12, a non-pro t
legal entity, which, through the support of its members, ensures the resources
needed to smoothly run and coordinate CLEF.</p>
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      <title>Acknowledgments</title>
      <p>We would like to thank the members of CLEF-LOC (the CLEF Lab
Organization Committee) for their thoughtful and elaborate contributions to assessing
the proposals during the selection process:
Martin Braschler, Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland
Adrian Chifu, Aix-Marseille University, France
Sebastien Fournier, Aix-Marseille Universite - CNRS LIS, France
Lorraine Goeuriot, Universite Grenoble Alpes, France
Donna Harman, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), USA
Wessel Kraaij, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Lea Laporte, INSA Lyon - LIRIS, France
Jacques Savoy, University of Neuchatel, Switzerland
11 http://www.ir.disco.unimib.it/pir-clef2018/
12 http://www.clef-initiative.eu/association
Lynda Said l'hadj, ESI, Alger, Algeria
Lynda Tamine, Paul Sabatier University, France</p>
      <p>Last but not least, without the important and tireless e ort of the
enthusiastic and creative proposal authors, the organizers of the selected labs and
workshops, the colleagues and friends involved in running them, and the
participants who contribute their time to making the labs and workshops a success,
the CLEF labs would not be possible.</p>
      <p>Thank you all very much!
July, 2018</p>
      <p>Organization
CLEF 2018, Conference and Labs of the Evaluation Forum { Experimental IR
meets Multilinguality, Multimodality, and Interaction, was hosted by the
University of Avignon and jointly co-organized by Avignon, Marseille and Toulon
Universities, France.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-3">
      <title>General Chairs</title>
      <p>Patrice Bellot, Aix-Marseille Universite - CNRS LSIS, France
Chiraz Trabelsi, University of Tunis El Manar, Tunisia</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-4">
      <title>Program Chairs</title>
      <sec id="sec-4-1">
        <title>Josiane Mothe, SIG, IRIT, France Fionn Murtagh, University of Hudders eld, United-Kingdom</title>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-5">
      <title>Lab Chairs</title>
      <sec id="sec-5-1">
        <title>Jian Yun Nie, DIRO, Universite de Montreal, Canada Laure Soulier, LIP6, UPMC, France</title>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-6">
      <title>Proceedings Chairs</title>
      <sec id="sec-6-1">
        <title>Linda Cappellato, University of Padua, Italy Nicola Ferro, University of Padua, Italy</title>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-7">
      <title>Publicity Chair</title>
      <p>Adrian Chifu, Aix-Marseille Universite - CNRS LSIS, France</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-8">
      <title>Science Outreach Program Chairs</title>
      <sec id="sec-8-1">
        <title>Aurelia Barriere, UAPV, France Mathieu FERYN, UAPV, France</title>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-9">
      <title>Sponsoring Chair</title>
      <sec id="sec-9-1">
        <title>Malek Hajjem, UAPV, France</title>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-10">
      <title>Local Organization</title>
      <sec id="sec-10-1">
        <title>Eric SanJuan, LIA, UAPV, France { chair</title>
        <p>Tania Jimenez, LIA, UAPV, France { co-chair
Sebastien Fournier, Aix-Marseille Universite - CNRS LIS, France
Herve Glotin, Universite de Toulon - CNRS LIS, France
Vincent Labatut, LIA, UAPV, France
Elisabeth Murisasco, Universite de Toulon - CNRS LIS, France
Magalie Ochs, Aix-Marseille Universite - CNRS LIS, France
Juan-Manuel Torres-Moreno, LIA, UAPV, France</p>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-11">
      <title>Steering Committee Chair</title>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-12">
      <title>Deputy Steering Committee Chair for the Conference</title>
      <sec id="sec-12-1">
        <title>Paolo Rosso, Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Spain</title>
      </sec>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-13">
      <title>Deputy Steering Committee Chair for the Evaluation Labs</title>
      <p>Martin Braschler, Zurich University of Applied Sciences, Switzerland</p>
    </sec>
    <sec id="sec-14">
      <title>Members</title>
      <sec id="sec-14-1">
        <title>Jaana Kekalainen, University of Tampere, Finland</title>
        <p>Carol Peters, ISTI, National Council of Research (CNR), Italy
(Steering Committee Chair 2000{2009)
Emanuele Pianta, Centre for the Evaluation of Language and Communication
Technologies (CELCT), Italy</p>
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