*** Fifth Call for Papers ***
The 24th IFIP Conference e-Business, e-Services, and e-Society (I3E 2025)
September 9-11, 2025, 5* St. Raphael Resort and Marina, Limassol, Cyprus
https://cyprusconferences.org/i3e2025/
(*** Proceedings to be published by Springer in LNCS ***)
(*** Journal Special Issue with Springer's SN Computer Science ***)
Conference theme: “Pervasive digital services for people’s well-being,
inclusion and sustainable development”
OVERVIEW
Next-gen digital services contribute to people’s well-being, inclusion, and sustainable
development, re-shaping e-business, e-services, and e-society. Such services are pervasive
both since they run on a large variety of heterogeneous devices and they permeate various
aspects of daily life, by offering accessible and personalised experiences to all individuals. The
proposed theme advocates for the design, implementation and operations of novel digital
solutions that satisfy the needs of different individuals, while contributing to their well-being
and to preserving the Planet.
I3E 2025 will collect contributions about the creation and management of user-centric
accessible platforms, applications, and services that empower individuals to live healthier and
more fulfilling lives. The proposed theme aims at emphasizing how it is possible to leverage
different technologies to address pressing societal challenges such as, for instance, healthcare
access, education, poverty alleviation, sustainable usage of resources, and social equity,
towards a more inclusive and sustainable future.
TOPICS OF INTEREST
Areas of particular interest include but are not limited to:
e-Business
• Innovative e-business models
• Inter-organizational systems
• Business process integration
• Business process re-engineering
• e-Marketplaces, e-Hubs and portals
• Digital goods and products
• User behaviour modeling
• Mobile business
• Enterprise application integration
• e-Negotiations, auctioning and contracting
• Supply, demand, and value chains
• e-Commerce content management
• Dynamic pricing models
• Trust and security
• Mobile Commerce
• Business Intelligence
• Business Ontologies and Models
• E-Business Models
e-Services
• e-Service composition
• Inter-organizational services
• e-Collaboration and e-Services
• Service-oriented computing
• Web services
• Semantic web services
• Service workflows
• Virtual organizations and coalitions
• Virtual enterprises and virtual markets
• Web 2.0 applications
• Agent-oriented e-Services
• P2P co-operation models
• Ubiquitous, mobile, and pervasive services
• Application service management
• Services and service management in the cloud-edge continuum
• Next-gen AI services
• Enterprise Ontologies
• Accessibility
• Usability
e-Society
• e-Government (e.g. G2G, G2B, or G2C)
• Digital cities and regions
• e-Democracy and e-Governance
• e-Inclusion to information society
• e-Health and e-Education
• Public e-Services for citizens and enterprises
• One-stop government service integration
• Mobile public services
• Multimedia and multilingualism
• Digital culture and digital divide
• Privacy and security
• Legal societal and cultural issues
• Public-private partnerships
• International dimension of e-Gov
• E-society and AI
• Digital Transformation
• Social Computing
• Green Computing
• Sustainable Technologies
• Humanitarian & Emergency Management
• Digital Inclusion
• Digital Literacy
SUBMISSION
Authors should submit original, unpublished research papers. All papers must not
simultaneously be submitted to another journal or conference. All accepted papers will be
published in the conference proceedings. Therefore, submissions should not be under
consideration for any other conference or journal outlet. Authors should consult Springer’s
authors’ guidelines and use their proceedings templates to prepare their papers
(https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu…).
Authors can submit their proceedings articles using the EasyChair platform. Please use the
following link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=i3e2025 .
Length of papers
The most common types of papers accepted for publication are full papers (12 pages) and
short papers (7 pages). We only wish to publish papers of significant scientific content.
Journal Special Issue
Authors of selected papers will be invited to submit an extended and revised version of their
paper (with at least 30% additional material) for fast-track review and publication in Springer's
SN Computer Science (https://link.springer.com/journal/42979).
IMPORTANT DATES
• Paper Submission: May 19, 2025 (AoE)
• Author Notification: June 23, 2025
• Camera-ready: June 30, 2025
• Author Registration: June 30, 2025
ORGANISATION
Conference Chair
• George A. Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus
Conference Co-Chairs
• Yogesh K. Dwivedi, Emerging Markets Research Centre (EMaRC)
• Georgia Kapitsaki, University of Cyprus
• Matti Mäntymäki, University of Turku
• Ilias Pappas, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
• Marinos Themistocleous, University of Nicosia
Program Co-Chairs
• Achilleas Achilleos, Frederick University of Cyprus
• Stefano Forti, University of Pisa
• Angelika Kokkinaki, University of Nicosia
Hi all,
this is a really cool opportunity, and the last chance to apply. I look forward to receiving your applications!
Best,
Alexander.
The Research Training Group 2853 “Neuroexplicit Models of Language, Vision, and Action” is looking for
Multiple PhD Students - Fall 2025
Neuroexplicit models combine neural and human-interpretable (“explicit”) models in order to overcome the limitations that each model class has separately. They include neurosymbolic models, which combine neural and symbolic models, but also e.g. combinations of neural and physics-based models. In the RTG, we will improve the state of the art in natural language processing (“Language”), computer vision (“Vision”), and planning and reinforcement learning (“Action”). We also develop novel machine learning techniques for neuroexplicit models (“Foundations”). Our overarching aim is to contribute to a better understanding of the cross-cutting design principles of effective neuroexplicit models through interdisciplinary collaboration.
We are now filling the last few remaining positions to grow to a total of 24 PhD students by the end of 2025. You will join a very international crowd of sixteen PhD students and one postdoc who are already being funded by the RTG. Through the inclusion of ~15 associated PhD students and postdocs funded from other sources, it will be one of the largest research centers on neuroexplicit or neurosymbolic models in the world.
The RTG brings together researchers at Saarland University, the Max Planck Institute for Informatics, the Max Planck Institute for Software Systems, the CISPA Helmholtz Center for Information Security, and the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI). All of these institutions are collocated on the same campus in Saarbrücken, Germany.
The positions will be funded for four years at the TV-L E13 100% pay scale. They are intended to start in September 2025, but could start a little earlier or later depending on the student’s availability. You should have or be about to complete an MSc degree in computer science or a related field and have demonstrated expertise in one of the research areas of the RTG, e.g. through an excellent Master’s thesis or relevant publications.
The RTG is part of the Saarland Informatics Campus, one of the leading centers for research in computer science, artificial intelligence, and natural language processing in Europe. The Saarland Informatics Campus brings together 900 researchers and 2500 students from 81 countries. The CISPA Helmholtz Center, located on the same campus, is home to an additional 350 researchers and on track to grow to 800 by 2026. Researchers at SIC and CISPA are part of the ELLIS network and have been awarded more than 40 ERC grants.
Each PhD student in the RTG will be jointly supervised by two PhD advisors from the list of Principal Investigators below. Each student will freely define their own research topic; we encourage the choice of topics that cross the traditional boundaries of research fields. Students may be affiliated with Saarland University or with one of the participating institutes.
Vera Demberg, Saarland University - Computational Linguistics
Dietrich Klakow, Saarland University - Natural Language Processing
Alexander Koller, Saarland University - Computational Linguistics
Mariya Toneva, MPI for Software Systems - Computational Neuroscience, Machine Learning
Jörg Hoffmann, Saarland University - AI Planning
Bernt Schiele, MPI for Informatics - Computer Vision, Machine Learning
Philipp Slusallek, DFKI and Saarland University - Computer Graphics, Artificial Intelligence
Christian Theobalt, MPI for Informatics - Visual Computing, Machine Learning
Isabel Valera, Saarland University - Machine Learning
Jilles Vreeken, CISPA - Machine Learning, Causality
Joachim Weickert, Saarland University - Mathematical Data Analysis
Verena Wolf, DFKI and Saarland University - Modeling and Simulation, Reinforcement Learning
Ellie Pavlick, Brown University and Google AI, is joining us regularly as a Mercator Fellow.
Please send your application by May 7th 2025 to apply(a)neuroexplicit.org and include the reference number W2639. We aim to conduct job interviews in June 2025.
For more details on the position, including what materials to submit with your application, please see our website: https://www.neuroexplicit.org/jobs/
*CALL FOR BIDS TO HOST EACL 2026*
The European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
(EACL) invites expressions of interest to host the 2026 EACL conference,
to be held in Europe, the Middle East or Africa (EMEA) in Spring
(preferably April/May) 2026. The 2026 conference will be the 18th
meeting of the EACL. At the same time, we also invite expressions of
interest to host the 2027 EACL conference.
*At this stage, we seek draft proposals from prospective bidders.* These
will be evaluated, and promising bidders will be asked to provide
additional information for the final selection. The EACL Board will
appoint the general chair for the conference, the programme committee
co- chairs, and all other chairs (tutorial co-chairs, workshop
co-chairs, etc.), except for the local arrangements chair. *It seems we
have had a malfunction with our mailing list. Please resend your bid if
you haven't received a confirmation from us!*
Draft bid proposals (due *April 16th, 2025*) should include information
on all of the following items:
1. *Proposed dates:* in Spring (preferably March/April) 2026
2. *Location:* city and conference venue. Indicate whether the
conference would be held at a university, hotel or convention center.
Bear in mind that EACL is growing. While Gothenburg (EACL 2014) had 520
registered participants, Valencia (EACL 2017) had 680 registered
participants and EACL 2024 had over 800 participants. So please suggest
a location that could host 1000 people for plenary sessions, plus at
least 4 conference rooms hosting parallel sessions (200-250 people
each), a large poster or exhibit room; 11 rooms on the
workshops/tutorials days among which at least two host 200 people and
the others 60 persons; and rooms for demos, small meetings and
registration.
3. *Local arrangements team:* local chair/co-chair, committee, volunteer
labour (e.g. students), registration handling. The local arrangements
team will be responsible for activities such as arranging meeting rooms,
equipment, refreshments, accommodation, on-site registration,
participant internet access, the reception, the conference dinner, and
working with the other chairs and the EACL Board to develop the budget
and registration materials. Indicate whether a professional conference
organizer (PCO) will be involved in the organization. Also, indicate
whether any national/regional associations for Computational Linguistics
would be on board of the local organization
*The final bids will also include detailed information on the following
items:*
1. Computing/wifi/audiovisual: whether there will be
desktop/laptop in conference rooms and high-speed wireless Internet
access, what the audiovisual facilities are
2. Printing of conference booklet
3. Food catering including breaks, reception, poster
sessions and conference dinner
4. Accommodation options at the venue, including
low-cost student accommodation
5. Travel alternatives to the venue from Europe and
beyond
6. Social events including infrastructure for
banquet/other social event and reception
7. Potential for local sponsorships
8. Opportunities for co-location with other meetings
9. The costs related to all of the above items, which
should be indicated in the expenses spreadsheet (template provided
below).
Proposals will be evaluated with respect to a number of criteria
(unordered):
- Adequacy of conference and exhibit facilities for the anticipated
number of registrants
- Adequacy of accommodations and food services (in a range of price
categories) and proximity to the conference facilities
- Adequacy of expenses projections and expected surplus
- Appropriateness of proposed dates
- Geographical and national balance with regard to previous EACL and ACL
conferences, and other major Natural Language Processing conferences
held in EMEA
- Co-location with national/regional conferences
- Experience with the local arrangements team
- Local CL community support
- Local government and industry support
- Appropriateness of expected registration fees
- Accessibility of the proposed site
Reports, lessons learnt and successful bids from previous years:
- EACL 23 report
[1]https://www.romanklinger.de/blog-assets/2023-05-12/eacl2023-conf-report.pdf
[2]
The EACL conference handbook:
https://2024.eacl.org/downloads/handbook.pdf [3]
Please send your expressions of interest electronically to the EACL
Board:
nina.tahmasebi(a)gu.se
The EACL board encourages groups who intend to submit a proposal to ask
questions about how to prepare the proposal.
*Important Dates:*
16th April 2025: Deadline for draft bids
April 2025: Feedback to bidders, announcement of shortlist of bidders
May 2025: Deadline for final bids
June 2025: Final bid chosen (to be publicly announced in July at
ACL2025)
April/May 2026: EACL Conference
Best regards, Nina Tahmasebi
- Secretary of EACL -
Links:
------
[1]
http://aclweb.org/adminwiki/index.php?title=2017Q3_Reports:_EACL_2017
[2]
https://ems-urlprotect.trendmicro.com/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https%3a%2…
[3]
https://ems-urlprotect.trendmicro.com/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https%3a%2…
🔔 Training Set Now Available!
The training dataset for Ahasis is now live!
👉 If you're registered, access it directly via CodaBench: https://www.codabench.org/competitions/5871
👉 Not registered yet? Visit our official website to register, then head to CodaBench to get started!
😊 Sentiment Across Multi-Dialectal Arabic: A Benchmark for Sentiment Analysis in the Hospitality Domain
We invite researchers, practitioners, and NLP enthusiasts to participate in the Sentiment Across Multi-Dialectal Arabic shared task, a challenge aimed at advancing sentiment analysis for Arabic dialects in the hospitality sector.
🧠 About the Task
Arabic is one of the world’s most spoken languages, characterised by rich dialectal variation across different regions. These dialects significantly differ in syntax, vocabulary, and sentiment expression, making sentiment analysis a challenging NLP task. This task focuses on multi-dialectal sentiment detection in hotel reviews, where participants will classify sentiment as positive, neutral, or negative across multiple Arabic dialects, including Saudi, Moroccan, and Egyptian Arabic.
This shared task provides a high-quality multi-dialect parallel dataset, enabling participants to explore:
1. Dialect-Specific Sentiment Detection – Understanding how sentiment varies across dialects.
2. Cross-Linguistic Sentiment Analysis – Investigating sentiment preservation across dialects.
3. Benchmarking on Multi-Dialect Data – Evaluating models on a standardised Arabic dialect dataset.
📦 Dataset Overview
- Hotel reviews across multiple Arabic dialects.
- Balanced sentiment distribution (positive, neutral, negative).
- Multi-Dialect Parallel Dataset – Each review is available in multiple dialects, allowing for cross-linguistic comparison.
📏 Evaluation Metrics
- Primary Metric: F1-Score.
- Additional Analysis: Comparison of sentiment accuracy across dialects.
🧪 Baseline System
- Pre-trained BERT-based model (AraBERT) fine-tuned on MSA and Arabic dialect data.
- Participants are encouraged to improve upon the baseline model with their own techniques and use LLMs.
🌟 Why Participate?
- Contribute to Arabic NLP Research – Help advance sentiment analysis for Arabic dialects.
- Gain Access to a High-Quality Dataset – A unique multi-dialect benchmark for future research.
- Collaborate with the NLP Community – Engage with leading researchers and practitioners.
- Showcase Your Work – High-performing models may be featured in a post-task publication.
🗓️ Timeline
- Training data ready – April 15, 2024
- Test Evaluation starts – May 1, 2025
- Test Evaluation end – May 5, 2025
- Paper submission due – May 16, 2025
- Notification to authors – May 31, 2025
- Shared task presentation co-located with RANLP 2025 – September 11 and September 12, 2025
✅ How to Participate?
1. Register for the task via https://ahasis-42267.web.app/
2. Download the dataset and baseline system.
3. Develop and test your sentiment analysis model.
4. Submit your results for evaluation.
👥 Organising Team
- Maram Alharbi, Lancaster University, UK
- Salmane Chafik, Mohammed VI Polytechnic University, Morocco
- Professor Ruslan Mitkov, Lancaster University, UK
- Dr. Saad Ezzini, King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, Saudi Arabia
- Dr. Tharindo Ranasinghe, Lancaster University, UK
- Dr. Hansi Hettiarachchi, Lancaster University, UK
📬 For inquiries, please contact us at ahasis.task(a)gmail.com
🎉 Don’t forget to enjoy the challenge, explore the beauty of Arabic dialects, and push the boundaries of what your models can do! 🚀
The next meeting of the Edge Hill Corpus Research Group will take place online (MS Teams) on Friday 2 May 2025, 2:00-3:30 pm (BST<https://time.is/United_Kingdom>).
Topic: LLMs and Lexical Priming Theory
Speaker: Michael Pace-Sigge<https://uefconnect.uef.fi/en/person/michael.pace-sigge/> (University of Eastern Finland)
Title: Large-Language-Model Tools and the Theory of Lexical Priming: Where technology and human cognition meet and diverge
The abstract and registration link are here: https://sites.edgehill.ac.uk/crg/next
Attendance is free. Registration closes on Wednesday 30 April.
If you have problems registering, or have any questions, please send an email to: gabrielc(a)edgehill.ac.uk<mailto:gabrielc@edgehill.ac.uk>
________________________________
Edge Hill University<http://ehu.ac.uk/home/emailfooter>
Modern University of the Year, The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2022<http://ehu.ac.uk/tef/emailfooter>
University of the Year, Educate North 2021/21
________________________________
This message is private and confidential. If you have received this message in error, please notify the sender and remove it from your system. Any views or opinions presented are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Edge Hill or associated companies. Edge Hill University may monitor email traffic data and also the content of email for the purposes of security and business communications during staff absence.<http://ehu.ac.uk/itspolicies/emailfooter>
Who said EU Jobs in Brussels are only for Policy wonks? We’re looking for a talented AI Research Engineer here!
The European Commission’s Joint Research Centre (JRC), is looking for a Research Engineer to reinforce its GENESIS project, which is an enabler for research on AI and with AI, and an incubator for innovative Generative AI systems. GENESIS is an exciting project for anyone willing to be part of the “AI Revolution” and deliver tangible impact on science AND policies.
The job is based in Brussels, Belgium. (vacancy notice here : https://recruitment.jrc.ec.europa.eu/vacancy/1752)
An ideal candidate will have a minimum of several years of professional experience after Master degree, with a good mix skills: technical (practical experience in AI Systems design and implementation), organisational (project coordination, IT governance) and research (peer-reviewed papers and/or PhD are a plus).
Contract duration: 36 months initial contract with possible renewals up to maximum 6 years.
The basic monthly salary for Function Group IV (depending on years of experience): 3 555,98 - 6 593,66€. In addition to the basic salary, the candidate may be eligible for various allowances (including expatriation and household allowances). For further information, see: eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:52020XC1211(01)&from=EN<https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/PDF/?uri=CELEX:52020XC1211(0…>
As Contract Agent, the selected candidate benefits from EU statutory staff conditions for enrolment of children to childcare facilities (“crêches”, after-school) and European Schools (primary, secondary). Also, JRC allows telework from the area around Brussels and nearby cities for 2 or 3 days per week, and even telework from more remote locations in the EU up to 10 days per year, which allows for a better work-life balance. While the job is located at EU's epicentre, the selected candidate will be in close contact with our researchers based on other JRC sites, notably in Ispra (Italy) and Seville (Spain).
To apply:
1. Create a profile on one of these two application portals:
a. JRC specialised call for researchers https://recruitment.jrc.ec.europa.eu/cast OR
b. EPSO Permanent CAST https://eu-careers.europa.eu/en/Cast-Permanent (less adequate for researcher profiles, but should be considered if you are familiar/have succeeded in such competitions)
2. Once you have created your profile via one of the above portals, create your application via: https://recruitment.jrc.ec.europa.eu/vacancy/1752
!! Deadline: 24/04/2025 !!
📣 Please Share widely with your network, thank you!
Bertrand DE LONGUEVILLE, PhD
Head of the Text Mining and Analysis Competence Centre
[cid:image001.png@01DBA551.2ECBBE00]
European Commission
DG JRC – Joint Research Centre
Directorate T – Digital Transformation & Data
Unit T.5 – Text and Data Mining
CDMA 04/171
B-1049 Brussels/Belgium
+32 2 29 52555
bertrand.de-longueville(a)ec.europa.eu<mailto:name.surname@ec.europa.eu>
The University of Manchester Faculty of Humanities is advertising for a cluster of permanent positions at the Lecturer and Senior Lecturer level in "AI Trust and Security” broadly defined. People appointed will be placed into a department in whichever of the four schools across the Faculty of Humanities best suits their expertise. As noted in the formal advertisement linked to below, one highlighted area of expertise is "the analysis of large language models", and we would very much welcome applications from computational linguists working in this this or any other relevant area.
https://www.jobs.manchester.ac.uk/Job/JobDetail?JobId=31004&Source=Jobtrain…
=============================================================
DiSS 2025 - 12th Workshop on Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech
https://diss2025.inesc-id.pt <https://diss2025.inesc-id.pt/>
=============================================================
We are pleased to announce the 12th edition of DiSS workshop – Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech, which will take place in Lisbon, Portugal, on September 4-5, 2025. This year’s theme is “Disfluencies in the Age of AI: A Multidisciplinary View“. The workshop is organized as a satellite event of INTERSPEECH 2025 and is proudly sponsored by ISCA.
We invite submissions from all fields addressing disfluency, paralinguistics, and related phenomena, including (but not limited to): psychology, neuropsychology and neurocognition, psycholinguistics, linguistics, speech production and perception, conversational AI, gesture analysis, computational linguistics, speech technology, dialogue systems, human-centered AI, brain-computer interfaces, healthcare, and generative AI.
IMPORTANT DATES
- Paper submission deadline: April 26, 2025
- Notification of acceptance: May 24, 2025
- Camera-ready submission deadline: June 16, 2025
- Author registration deadline: June 23, 2025
- DiSS Workshop: September 4–5, 2025
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Please prepare your manuscript using the official Interspeech 2025 template <https://www.interspeech2025.org/author-resources> (LaTeX or Word) and submit a single PDF file. Submissions will be managed through the Microsoft CMT system <https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/diss2025>. Please use this link <https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/diss2025> to submit your paper. Authors must create a free account to submit their papers.
COMMITTEES
Organizers
- Helena Moniz, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- Elizabeth Shriberg, Ellipsis Health, USA
- Julia Hirschberg, Columbia University, USA
- Robert Eklund, Linköping University, Sweden
- Fernando Batista, ISCTE and INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
Publicity Chair
- Isabel Trancoso, University of Lisbon and INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
Local Organisation
- Ana Isabel Mata, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- Anna Havras, University of Lisbon and VoiceInteraction, Portugal
- Anna Maria Pompili, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
- Miguel Menezes, University of Lisbon and Unbabel, Portugal
- Rubén Solera Ureña, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
- Sérgio Paulo, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
Scientific Committee
- Alexandra Markó, SSNS Institute for Expert Services, Hungary
- Ana Isabel Mata, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- Anna Havras, VoiceInteraction and University of Lisbon
- Anna Maria Pompili, INESC-ID Lisbon, Portugal
- Antonio Bonafonte, SANAS AI, Barcelona, Spain
- Catarina Botelho, INESC-ID Lisbon
- Chiara Mazzocconi, Aix Marseille Université, France
- Clara Niza, University of Lisbon and INESC-ID Lisbon, Portugal
- Daniela Braga, Defined.ai, USA
- David Escudero, Universidad de Valladolid, Spain
- David Matos, University of Lisbon and INESC-ID Lisbon, Portugal
- Elizabeth Shriberg, Ellipsis Health, USA
- Eugénio Ribeiro, ISCTE and INESC-ID Lisboa
- Francesco Cutugno, Universita’ Degli Studi di Napoli, Italy
- Francisco Teixeira, INESC-ID Lisbon
- Gueorgui Nenov Hristovky, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- George Georgiou, University of Nicosia, Greece
- Harshal Shah, General Motors, USA
- Hermann Ney, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
- Ivana Didirková, Université Paul Valéry – Montpellier 3, France
- Jens Allwood, University of Götenburg, Sweden
- Jessica di Napoli, Aachen University, Germany
- Joakim Gustafson, KTH, Sweden
- João Graça, Unbabel and Widn.AI, USA
- Judit Bóna, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary
- Julia Hirschberg, Columbia University, USA
- Jürgen Trouvain, Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany
- Keikichi Hirose, University of Tokyo, Japan
- Khiet Truong, University of Twente, The Netherlands
- Kikuo Maekawa, National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Japan
- Loulou Kosmala, Université Paris-Est Créteil, France
- Mária Gosy, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary
- Mariana Julião, INESC-ID Lisbon
- Malte Belz, Humboldt-Universität, Germany
- Martin Corley, University of Edinburgh, Scotland
- Miguel Menezes, University of Lisbon and INESC-ID Lisbon, Portugal
- Paulina Peltone, University of Turku, Finland
- Petra Wagner, University of Bielefeld, Germany
- Plínio Barbosa, University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil
- Ralph Rose, Waseda University, Japan
- Robert Hartsuiker, Ghent University, Belgium
- Rubén Solera Ureña, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
- Sérgio Paulo, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
- Simon Betz, University of Bielefeld, Germany
- Štefan Beňuš, University in Nitra, Slovakia
- Vera Cabarrão, Unbabel, Portugal
- Vered Silber Varod, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Please visit our webpage for up-to-date information: https://diss2025.inesc-id.pt/ <https://diss2025.inesc-id.pt/>
Any questions should be directed to: diss2025(a)googlegroups.com <mailto:diss2025@googlegroups.com>
We look forward to welcoming you in Lisbon for an engaging and collaborative event!
— The DiSS 2025 Organizing Committee
=============================================================
DiSS 2025 - 12th Workshop on Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech
https://diss2025.inesc-id.pt<https://diss2025.inesc-id.pt/>
=============================================================
We are pleased to announce the 12th edition of DiSS workshop – Disfluency in Spontaneous Speech, which will take place in Lisbon, Portugal, on September 4-5, 2025. This year’s theme is “Disfluencies in the Age of AI: A Multidisciplinary View“. The workshop is organized as a satellite event of INTERSPEECH 2025 and is proudly sponsored by ISCA.
We invite submissions from all fields addressing disfluency, paralinguistics, and related phenomena, including (but not limited to): psychology, neuropsychology and neurocognition, psycholinguistics, linguistics, speech production and perception, conversational AI, gesture analysis, computational linguistics, speech technology, dialogue systems, human-centered AI, brain-computer interfaces, healthcare, and generative AI.
IMPORTANT DATES
- Paper submission deadline: April 26, 2025
- Notification of acceptance: May 24, 2025
- Camera-ready submission deadline: June 16, 2025
- Author registration deadline: June 23, 2025
- DiSS Workshop: September 4–5, 2025
SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Please prepare your manuscript using the official Interspeech 2025 template<https://www.interspeech2025.org/author-resources> (LaTeX or Word) and submit a single PDF file. Submissions will be managed through the Microsoft CMT system<https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/diss2025>. Please use this link<https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/diss2025> to submit your paper. Authors must create a free account to submit their papers.
COMMITTEES
Organizers
- Helena Moniz, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- Elizabeth Shriberg, Ellipsis Health, USA
- Julia Hirschberg, Columbia University, USA
- Robert Eklund, Linköping University, Sweden
- Fernando Batista, ISCTE and INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
Publicity Chair
- Isabel Trancoso, University of Lisbon and INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
Local Organisation
- Ana Isabel Mata, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- Anna Havras, University of Lisbon and VoiceInteraction, Portugal
- Anna Maria Pompili, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
- Miguel Menezes, University of Lisbon and Unbabel, Portugal
- Rubén Solera Ureña, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
- Sérgio Paulo, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
Scientific Committee
- Alexandra Markó, SSNS Institute for Expert Services, Hungary
- Ana Isabel Mata, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- Anna Havras, VoiceInteraction and University of Lisbon
- Anna Maria Pompili, INESC-ID Lisbon, Portugal
- Antonio Bonafonte, SANAS AI, Barcelona, Spain
- Catarina Botelho, INESC-ID Lisbon
- Chiara Mazzocconi, Aix Marseille Université, France
- Clara Niza, University of Lisbon and INESC-ID Lisbon, Portugal
- Daniela Braga, Defined.ai, USA
- David Escudero, Universidad de Valladolid, Spain
- David Matos, University of Lisbon and INESC-ID Lisbon, Portugal
- Elizabeth Shriberg, Ellipsis Health, USA
- Eugénio Ribeiro, ISCTE and INESC-ID Lisboa
- Francesco Cutugno, Universita’ Degli Studi di Napoli, Italy
- Francisco Teixeira, INESC-ID Lisbon
- Gueorgui Nenov Hristovky, University of Lisbon, Portugal
- George Georgiou, University of Nicosia, Greece
- Harshal Shah, General Motors, USA
- Hermann Ney, RWTH Aachen University, Germany
- Ivana Didirková, Université Paul Valéry – Montpellier 3, France
- Jens Allwood, University of Götenburg, Sweden
- Jessica di Napoli, Aachen University, Germany
- Joakim Gustafson, KTH, Sweden
- João Graça, Unbabel and Widn.AI, USA
- Judit Bóna, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary
- Julia Hirschberg, Columbia University, USA
- Jürgen Trouvain, Saarland University, Saarbrücken, Germany
- Keikichi Hirose, University of Tokyo, Japan
- Khiet Truong, University of Twente, The Netherlands
- Kikuo Maekawa, National Institute for Japanese Language and Linguistics, Japan
- Loulou Kosmala, Université Paris-Est Créteil, France
- Mária Gosy, Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary
- Mariana Julião, INESC-ID Lisbon
- Malte Belz, Humboldt-Universität, Germany
- Martin Corley, University of Edinburgh, Scotland
- Miguel Menezes, University of Lisbon and INESC-ID Lisbon, Portugal
- Paulina Peltone, University of Turku, Finland
- Petra Wagner, University of Bielefeld, Germany
- Plínio Barbosa, University of Campinas (UNICAMP), Brazil
- Ralph Rose, Waseda University, Japan
- Robert Hartsuiker, Ghent University, Belgium
- Rubén Solera Ureña, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
- Sérgio Paulo, INESC-ID Lisboa, Portugal
- Simon Betz, University of Bielefeld, Germany
- Štefan Beňuš, University in Nitra, Slovakia
- Vera Cabarrão, Unbabel, Portugal
- Vered Silber Varod, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Please visit our webpage for up-to-date information: https://diss2025.inesc-id.pt/
Any questions should be directed to: diss2025(a)googlegroups.com<mailto:diss2025@googlegroups.com>
We look forward to welcoming you in Lisbon for an engaging and collaborative event!
— The DiSS 2025 Organizing Committee
10th Symposium on Corpus Approaches to Lexicogrammar (LxGr2025)
CALL FOR PAPERS
Extended deadline for abstract submission: 20 April 2025
The symposium will take place online on Friday 11 and Saturday 12 July 2025.
LxGr primarily welcomes papers reporting on corpus-based research on any aspect of the interaction of lexis and grammar -- particularly studies that interrogate the system lexicogrammatically to get lexicogrammatical answers. However, position papers discussing theoretical or methodological issues, as well as descriptions or demonstrations of tools or resources are also welcome, as long as they are relevant to both lexicogrammar and corpus linguistics.
The theme of LxGr2025 is: Conceptions of Lexicogrammar: How can corpus linguistics shed light on its nature?
If you would like to present, send an abstract of 500 words (excluding references) to lxgr(a)edgehill.ac.uk<mailto:lxgr@edgehill.ac.uk>.
• Abstracts for research papers should specify the research focus (research questions or hypotheses), the corpus, the methodology (techniques, metrics), the theoretical orientation, and the main findings.
• Abstracts for position papers should specify the theoretical orientation and the potential contribution to both lexicogrammar and corpus linguistics.
• Abstracts for tools or resources should provide a clear description of the main functions, and specify the potential contribution to both lexicogrammar and corpus linguistics.
Full papers will be allocated 35 minutes (including 10 minutes for discussion).
Work-in-progress reports will be allocated 20 minutes (including 5 minutes for discussion).
There will be no parallel sessions.
Participation is free.
For details, visit the LxGr website: https://sites.edgehill.ac.uk/lxgr
If you have any questions, please contact lxgr(a)edgehill.ac.uk<mailto:lxgr@edgehill.ac.uk>.
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