Dear all,
Please join us for a free Lancaster webinar on a very current topic (critical reflection on current developments and challenges in the use of AI): <https://x.com/danagablas/status/1955682624455819296>
[??] Navigating Challenges in the use of AI and GenAI in Applied Linguistics by Prof Tony McEnery
19 August 2025 | 2-3pm (UK time)
https://forms.office.com/e/uppRBrE5AF<https://t.co/cTo7mg8AVj>
Abstract: In the webinar, we will focus on the current developments in the use of GenAI and AI in applied linguistics. In particular, Prof Tony McEnery will explore the impact of AI on applied linguistics, reflecting on the alignment of contemporary AI research with the epistemological, ontological, and ethical traditions of applied linguistics. The talk will discuss the potential affordances of AI and GenAI for applied linguistics as well as some of the challenges that we face when employing AI and GenAI as part of applied linguistics research processes. The goal of this talk is to attempt to align perspectives in these disparate fields and forge a fruitful way ahead for further critical interrogation and integration of AI and GenAI into applied linguistics.
Best,
Vaclav
Professor Vaclav Brezina
Professor of Corpus Linguistics
Co-Director of the ESRC Centre for Corpus Approaches to Social Science
Lancaster, LA1 4YD
Office: County South, room C05
T: +44 (0)1524 510828
@vaclavbrezina
[cid:ccadda37-dda8-4733-be3d-82f902ed9aea]<http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/arts-and-social-sciences/about-us/people/vaclav-…>
In this newsletter:
LDC at Interspeech 2025
Fall 2025 LDC data scholarship program
New publications:
Mixer 6 - ChiME 8 Transcribed Calls and Interviews<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2025S07>
Abstract Meaning Representation 2.0 - Machine Translations<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2025T10>
KAIROS Phase 1 Quizlet<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2025T11>
________________________________
LDC at Interspeech 2025
LDC will be exhibiting at Interspeech 2025<https://www.interspeech2025.org/>, held this year August 17-21 in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Stop by our booth to say hello and learn about the latest developments at the Consortium. Also be on the lookout for the following presentations, posters, and special sessions featuring LDC work:
Comparative Evaluation of Acoustic Feature Extraction Tools for Clinical Speech Analysis
Monday, August 18, 11:00-13:00 - Area5-Oral1 - Speech Analysis, Detection and Classification 1
Reasoning-Based Approach with Chain-of-Thought for Alzheimer's Detection Using Speech and Large Language Models
Tuesday, August 19, 13:30-15:30 - Area1-Poster2B - Databases and Progress in Methodology
Special Session: Challenges in Speech Collection, Curation and Annotation<https://sites.google.com/view/speech-data-cca-is25/>
Wednesday, August 20, 13:30-15:30 - Area14-SS7 - Part 1
Wednesday, August 20, 16:00-18:00 - Area14-SS8 - Part 2
TELVID: A Multilingual Multi-modal Corpus for Speaker Recognition
Thursday, August 21, 13:30-15:30 - AREA4-Oral8 - Speaker Recognition
LDC also supported the Interspeech 2025 URGENT Challenge<https://urgent-challenge.github.io/urgent2025/> which aims to bring more attention to constructing Universal, Robust, and Generalizable speech EnhancemeNT models.
LDC will post conference updates via our social media platforms. We look forward to seeing you in Rotterdam!
Fall 2025 LDC data scholarship program
Student applications for the Fall 2025 LDC data scholarship program are being accepted now through September 15, 2025. This program provides eligible students with no-cost access to LDC data. Students must complete an application consisting of a data use proposal and letter of support from their advisor. For application requirements and program rules, visit the LDC Data Scholarships page<https://www.ldc.upenn.edu/language-resources/data/data-scholarships>.
________________________________
New publications:
Mixer 6 - CHiME 8 Transcribed Calls and Interviews<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2025S07> was developed for the 7th and 8th CHiME (Computational Hearing in Multisource Environments)<https://www.chimechallenge.org/> challenges. It contains 80 hours of English interviews and telephone speech from Mixer 6 Speech (LDC2013S03)<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2013S03> with transcripts developed for the CHiME challenges divided into training, development, and test sets. This data was used in CHiME 7 Task 1<https://www.chimechallenge.org/challenges/chime7/task1/index> and CHiME 8 Task 1<https://www.chimechallenge.org/challenges/chime8/task1/>, both of which focused on transcription and segmentation across varied recording conditions such as interviews, meetings, and dinner parties, with an emphasis on generalization across recording device types and array topologies.
The data includes audio from Mixer 6 Speech recorded on 13 microphones for a total of 1063 hours (corresponding to 80 hours of speech). The development and test sets are speaker-disjoint from the training data and consist of fully transcribed, multi-microphone interviews. Each transcript segment was labeled with the speaker, the uttered text, and the start and end times in seconds for that segment.
2025 members can access this corpus through their LDC accounts. Non-members may license this data for a fee.
*
Abstract Meaning Representation 2.0 - Machine Translations<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2025T10> was developed at the University of Edinburgh, School of Informatics <https://www.ed.ac.uk/informatics> and the University of Zurich,<https://www.uzh.ch/en.html> Department of Computational Linguistics<https://www.cl.uzh.ch/en.html>. It consists of Spanish, German, Italian, and Mandarin Chinese automatic translations of the source English and professionally-translated Spanish, German, Italian, and Mandarin Chinese sentences in Abstract Meaning Representation 2.0 - Four Translations (LDC2020T07)<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2020T07>. The translations were collected through Google Translate between May 2018 and March 2024.
The source English sentences are a subset (1,371 sentences) of the sentences contained in Abstract Meaning Representation (AMR) Annotation Release 2.0 (LDC2017T10)<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2017T10>, a semantic treebank of over 39,000 English natural language sentences from broadcast conversations, newswire, and web text.
Translations were from each of the five languages (English, Spanish, German, Italian, and Mandarin Chinese) to the other four languages (Spanish, German, Italian, and Mandarin Chinese) covering 20 language pairs. The dataset contains 1371 source sentences in each language, each with a professionally translated source sentence and multiple dated translations by Google Translate.
2025 members can access this corpus through their LDC accounts. Non-members may license this data for a fee.
*
KARIOS Phase 1 Quizlet<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2025T11> was developed by LDC and contains English and Spanish text, video, and image data and annotations used for pre-evaluation research and system development during Phase 1 of the DARPA KAIROS program. KAIROS Quizlets were a series of narrowly defined tasks designed to explore specific evaluation objectives enabling KAIROS system developers to exercise individual system components on a small data set prior to the full program evaluation. This corpus contains the complete set of Quizlet data used in Phase 1 which focused on two real-world complex events (CEs) within the Improvised Explosive Device bombing scenario: CE1001 (2018 Caracas drone attack) and CE1002 (Utah High School backpack bombing).
Source data was collected from the web; 30 root web pages were collected and processed, yielding 29 text data files, 216 image files and 5 video files. Annotation steps included labeling scenario-relevant events and relations for each document to develop a structured representation of temporally ordered events, relations, and arguments and generating a reference knowledge graph.
The DARPA KAIROS (Knowledge-directed Artificial Intelligence Reasoning Over Schemas) program aimed to build technology capable of understanding and reasoning about complex real-world events in order to provide actionable insights to end users. KAIROS systems utilized formal event representations in the form of schema libraries that specified the steps, preconditions, and constraints for an open set of complex events; schemas were then used in combination with event extraction to characterize and make predictions about real-world events in a large multilingual, multimedia corpus.
2025 members can access this corpus through their LDC accounts. Non-members may license this data for a fee.
To unsubscribe from this newsletter, log in to your LDC account<https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/login> and uncheck the box next to "Receive Newsletter" under Account Options or contact LDC for assistance.
Membership Coordinator
Linguistic Data Consortium<ldc.upenn.edu>
University of Pennsylvania
T: +1-215-573-1275
E: ldc(a)ldc.upenn.edu<mailto:ldc@ldc.upenn.edu>
M: 3600 Market St. Suite 810
Philadelphia, PA 19104
The 3rd Summer School on Deep Learning and Large Language Models for NLP
Call for Participation
Website - https://ranlp2025-summer-school.github.io/
We invite everyone interested in Machine Learning and Natural Language Processing to attend the 3rd Summer School on Deep Learning and Large Language Models (LLMs) for Natural Language Processing (NLP), which will be held from September 3–5, 2025, in Varna, Bulgaria, as part of RANLP 2025.
Building on the success of the 1st and 2nd RANLP summer schools in 2019 and 2023 respectively, RANLP 2025 summer school will explore a broad spectrum of NLP topics with a special emphasis on LLMs.
Each day will feature morning lectures that focus on theoretical foundations, followed by afternoon lab sessions dedicated to hands-on implementation and experimentation. Participants will also have the opportunity to compete in a competition, with awards presented to the top performers.
The summer school will feature talks by leading researchers in NLP and deep learning from both academia and industry.
Summer School Lecturers
* Dr Salima Lamsiyah (Luxembourg University, Luxembourg)
* Dr Burcu Can Buglalilar (University of Sterling, UK)
* Dr Hansi Hettiarachchi (Lancaster University, UK)
* Dr Andrei Mikheev (Daxtra Technologies, UK)
* Dr Max Müller-Eberstein (IT University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
* Dr Tharindu Ranasinghe (Lancaster University, UK)
Summer School Tutors
* Maram Alharbi (Lancaster University, UK)
* Isuri Nanomi Arachchige (Lancaster University, UK)
* Salmane Chafik (Mohammed VI Polytechnic University, Morocco)
*
Ernesto Luis Estevanell (University of Alicante, Spain)
*
Alexander Mikheev (Daxtra Technologies, UK)
*
Damith Dola Mullage Premasiri (Lancaster University, UK)
Programme
Day 1
NLP/ DL Foundation
Day 2
LLM Foundation
Day 3
LLM Applications
09:00 – 10:30
Introduction to NLP and Deep Learning
Dr Tharindu Ranasinghe
Introduction to LLMs
Dr Burcu Can
Training a Danish LLM: Lessons Learned
Dr Max Müller-Eberstein
10:30 – 11:00
Coffee/ Tea Break
11:00 – 12:30
Language Models and Beyond
Dr Hansi Hettiarachchi
Evaluating and Benchmarking LLMs
Dr Salima Lamsiyah
LLMs in Recruitment Sector (Tentative)
Dr Andrei Mikheev and Alexander Mikheev
12:30 – 2:00
Lunch
2:00 – 3:00
Practical Session I:
Word embeddings and Deep Learning in NLP
Practical Session III:
Prompting and finetuning LLMs
Practical Session V:
Implementing LLMs in the Legal Domain
3:00 – 3:30
Introducing the Summer School Competition, Your Teams and Mentors
3:30 – 4:00
Coffee/ Tea Break
4:00 – 5:30
Practical Session II:
Transformers in NLP
Practical Session IV:
Tools for LLMs: LangGraph
Practical Session VI:
LLMs for Code Generation
5:30 – 6:00
Open Session with Mentors and Teams
Open Session with Mentors and Teams
Awards and Closing
We are looking forward to your participation!
The organisers of RANLP 2025 Summer School
[Apologies for cross-posting]
Dear colleagues,
It’s time again for the …
Joint Call for Workshops Proposals (EACL/ACL) 2026
The Association for Computational Linguistics, the European Language Resource Association and International Committee on Computational Linguistics invite proposals for workshops to be held in conjunction with EACL 2026 or ACL 2026. We solicit proposals in all areas of computational linguistics, broadly conceived to include related disciplines such as linguistics, speech, information retrieval, and multimodal processing.
Workshops will be held at one of the following conference venues:
* EACL 2026 (The 19th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics) which will be held as a hybrid conference, and physically held in Rabat, Morocco, from March 24-29, 2026
* ACL 2026 (The 64th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics), which will be held as a hybrid conference, and physically held in San Diego, California, from July 2-7, 2026
The workshop and tutorial co-chairs will work together to assign workshops to the conferences. They will take into account location preferences and technical constraints provided by the workshop proposers.
A second call will be made in the fall for workshops colocated with conferences later in the year (e.g., EMNLP and AACL). This call thus exclusively centres EACL and ACL 2026.
Important Dates
EACL/ACL 2026 shared dates:
Proposal submission deadline
September 5, 2025
Notification of acceptance
September 22, 2025
All deadlines are 11:59PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on Earth”).
Submission Information
Proposals should be submitted as PDF documents. Note that submissions should be ready to be turned into a Call for Papers to the workshop within one week of notification.
The proposals should be at most two pages for the main proposal and at most two additional pages for information about the organizers, program committee, and references. Thus, the whole proposal should not be more than four pages long. Please use the LaTeX template<https://www.overleaf.com/read/ytktkdvzgshk> for your submission.
The two pages for the main proposal must include:
* A title, short name / acronym, and a brief description of the workshop topic and content.
* Some conferences might take place only or partially virtually. We request submissions to contain a brief discussion on measures planned to make sure a workshop is successful and productive in case of a hybrid or virtual-only attendance.
* A description of special requirements and technical needs.
* A description of any limitations that would restrict the workshop to a specific venue (EACL or ACL). For example: if the workshop is compatible with only one of these events, logistically, thematically or otherwise, or if the workshop cannot be held at a venue for logistical reasons.
* Diversity and Inclusion Efforts (see more details below)
* If the workshop has been held before, a note specifying: how many prior editions occurred, where previous workshops were held, how many submissions the workshop received in the last iteration and how many papers were accepted (also specify if they were not regular papers, e.g., shared task system description papers), and an estimate of how many in-person posters the workshop attracted.
* (Optional/If Known) A list of invited speakers, with an indication of which ones have already agreed and which are tentative, and sources of funding for the speakers.
* (Optional) A description of any shared tasks associated with the workshop, and estimate of the number of participants. Having a shared task is optional.
The submission form will request information that does not factor into the decision process, but are necessary for logistical reasons:
* An estimate of the maximum number of attendees at one given time
* Number of estimated in-person posters
* Preferred Venue (first and second preference). Providing a second preferred venue is optional, and we assume that providing a second preference indicates its compatibility for the workshop. While we will do our best to adhere to these preferences, we cannot guarantee that they will be satisfied.
* Duration of the workshop (1-day / 2-day workshop)
Note that the only financial support available to workshops is a single free workshop registration for an invited speaker. The workshop organizers must bear all other costs independently, including registration for more than one invited speaker.
The two pages for information about organizers, program committee, and references must include:
* The names, affiliations, and email addresses of the organizers, with a brief statement (2-5 sentences) of their research interests, areas of expertise, and experience in organizing workshops and related events.
* A list of Program Committee members, with an indication of which members have already agreed. Organizers should do their best to estimate the number of submissions (especially for recurring workshops) in order to (a) ensure a sufficient number of reviewers so that each paper receives 3 reviews, and (b) anticipate that no one is committed to reviewing more than 3 papers. This practice is likely to ensure on-time and thoughtful reviews.
* An indication whether the workshop will consider papers submitted through ACL Rolling Review (ARR); use OpenReview as a platform (both to take papers from ARR and for their own review); or whether the workshop will only use START as a platform, and will not use ARR. In making this choice, please pay careful attention to the ARR deadlines and conference notifications.
* References
Submission is electronic at the following link: https://softconf.com/p/acl-workshops2026/track/ACL_EACL
Diversity and Inclusion
The proposals should describe the ways in which the workshop will support diversity in NLP. We suggest organizers consider the following points, while developing the proposal:
* Contribution to academic diversity: The proposals could explain how the subject matter of the workshop will contribute to the diversity of the field, e.g. use of multilingual data, indications of how the described methods scale up to various languages or domains, accessibility of resources, supporting underrepresented communities of NLP and so on.
* Diversifying representation: Following the WiNLP<http://www.winlp.org/winlp-2020-workshop/> initiative, we recognize the current problems of demographic imbalance in the field. Therefore, we particularly encourage submissions including members of under-represented groups in computational linguistics. The proposals should describe how their selection of invited speakers, panelists, organizers, and program committee promotes diverse representation (for example, considering underrepresented demographics based on gender, ethnicity, nationality, and so on). We also suggest including speakers and panelists, who have not appeared as a keynote speaker or panelist in recent conferences.
* Diversifying participation: The proposals could describe how the call-for-papers and outreach will encourage people from marginalized groups to attend and submit to the workshop. Some examples include providing mentoring, subsidies, coordinating with affinity groups, diversifying the selection of papers and so on.
Organizer Responsibilities
The organizers of the accepted proposals will be responsible for publicizing and running the workshop, including reviewing submissions, producing the camera-ready workshop proceedings, organizing the meeting days, and playing their part to ensure that all participants are aware of ACL’s anti-harassment policy. It is crucial that organizers commit to all deadlines. In particular, failure to produce the camera-ready proceedings on time will lead to the exclusion of the workshop from the unified proceedings and author indexes. Workshop organizers cannot accept submissions for publication that will be (or have been) published
elsewhere, although they are free to set their own policies on simultaneous submission and review. However, it is worth noting that workshops may also accept non-archival submissions, such as findings papers, for presentation, which are allowed in this case. Since the conferences will occur at different times, the timelines for the submission and reviewing of workshop papers, and the preparation of camera-ready copies, will be different for each conference. Suggested timelines for each of the conferences are given below. The workshop organizers are free to deviate from the proposed schedule for all dates that are not marked as inflexible, though changes should be made in consultation with the relevant workshop chairs.
In submitting a proposal, workshop chairs will be asked to agree to the workshop non-compliance policy<https://docs.google.com/document/u/0/d/1hhocb0fXBBJhqJHoOfZtx1V1kcTATpA4IMU…>. All workshops must agree to this policy, which states that egregious cases of not living up to the responsibilities of running a workshop will be penalized by a 1-year ban on the organizers from submitting another workshop proposal. Workshop proposals for which all authors do not agree to this policy will be desk-rejected.
The ACL has a set of policies on workshops. You can find the ACL’s general policies on workshops, the financial policy for workshops, and the financial policy for SIG workshops in the Conference Handbook<http://aclweb.org/adminwiki/index.php?title=Conference_Handbook>.
Review Process
Workshop proposals will be holistically reviewed by a committee of workshop chairs and the ACL workshop officers based on: their originality and impact, the experience of the Organizing and Program Committees, and the ethical considerations presented and adherence of the workshop proposal to ACL’s code of ethics. This committee will also allocate workshops to the conferences included in the call, taking into account location preferences and technical constraints given in the workshop proposal. However, the aim of the review process is to accept as many high-quality workshops as possible. Given space limitations at conference venues and the increasing number of workshop proposals, the review committee can not guarantee that a proposal will be co-located with their preferred venue in lieu of extenuating circumstances.
The review process will have three possible outcomes: accept, in which case the workshop will be co-located with either EACL or ACL; revise and resubmit, where the organizing committee is encouraged to incorporate reviewer feedback and resubmit to the next call for workshops for AACL and EMNLP; or reject, in which the workshop proposal should not be submitted the next call, and will be desk rejected if submitted.
Tentative Workshop Timelines
EACL
First call for workshop papers
October 15, 2025
Second call for workshop papers
November 12, 2025
Third call for papers
December 5, 2025
Direct Submission deadline
December 19, 2025
Pre-reviewed (ARR) submission deadline
January 2, 2026
Notification of acceptance
January 23, 2026
Camera-ready paper due
February 3, 2026
Proceedings due (hard deadline)
February 24, 2026
Pre-recorded video due (hard deadline)
February 27, 2026
Workshop dates
March 24-29, 2026
ACL
First call for workshop papers
December 10, 2025
Second call for workshop papers
January 15, 2026
Third call for workshop papers
February 20, 2026
Direct paper submission deadline
March 5, 2026
Pre-reviewed ARR commitment deadline
March 24, 2026
Notification of acceptance
April 28, 2026
Camera-ready paper due
May 12, 2026
Proceedings due (hard deadline)
June 1, 2026
Pre-recorded video due (hard deadline)
June 4, 2026
Workshop dates
July 2-3, 2026
Workshop Chairs
EACL
* Adriana Pagano
* Emmanuele Chersoni
* Julia Ive
ACL
* Loic Barrault, Meta FAIR
* Yang Zhao, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Contact e-mail: star-acl-workshops(a)googlegroups.com
*Knowledge and Natural Language Processing Track @ ACM-SAC*
Aim of the Knowledge and Natural Language Processing (KNLP) track at ACM
SAC is to investigate techniques and application of knowledge engineering
and natural language processing, focusing in particular on approaches
combining them. This is an extremely interdisciplinary emerging research
area, at the core of Artificial Intelligence, combining and complementing
the scientific results from Natural Language Processing and Knowledge
Representation and Reasoning.
Topics of interest
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
- Natural Language Processing
- NLP tasks for Knowledge Extraction
- NLP for Ontology Population and Learning
- Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining for Knowledge Applications
- Interplay between Language and Ontologies
- NLP for Explainable Knowledge
- Machine Translation techniques for Multilingual Knowledge
- NLP for the Web
- Bias detection and mitigation in small/large LM
- (Small/Large) LM and Knowledge
- Knowledge
- Knowledge to improve NLP tasks
- Knowledge for Information Retrieval
- Knowledge-based Sentiment Analysis and Opinion Mining
- Combining Knowledge and Deep Learning for NLP
- Knowledge for Text Summarization and Generation
- Knowledge for Persuasion
- Knowledge-based Machine Translation
- Knowledge for the Web
- Linked Data for NLP
- Knowledge-based NL Explainability
- LM-enhanced ontology and knowledge engineering methodologies and
tools
- LM-based agent for knowledge extraction, reasoning, and management
- Ontology evaluation via small/large LMs
- (Ontological) knowledge memorization in LMs
- Knowledge-based techniques for LMs (Retrieval Augmented Generation
based approaches, fact-checking, and bias mitigation)
- Question answering over knowledge graphs via small/large LMs
- Real-world applications that exploit Knowledge and NLP
- Real-world applications that exploit Knowledge and NLP
- Knowledge and NLP Systems for Big Data scenarios
- Knowledge and NLP technology for a diverse, equitable, and
inclusive society
- Deployment of Knowledge and NLP Systems in specific domains, such
as:
- Digital Humanities and Social Sciences
- eGovernment and public administration
- Life sciences, health, and medicine
- News and Data Streaming
Paper Submission
Submissions must not have been published or be concurrently considered for
publication elsewhere. Papers should be submitted in PDF using the ACM-SAC
proceedings format <https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2026/authorkit.php>.
Authors' names and affiliations should be entered separately at the
submission site and not appear in the submitted papers. Each submission
will be reviewed in *a DOUBLE-BLIND *process according to the ACM-SAC
Regulations. Student Research Competition (SRC) submissions are welcome
(see SAC 2026 SRC page for details
<https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2026/src_program.php>).
Initial Submission Policy
- All submissions must initially be submitted as regular papers. There
is no separate submission track for poster papers.
- Paper selection is based on originality, technical contribution,
presentation quality, and relevance to the Knowledge and Natural Language
Processing Track.
- Based on the outcome of the review process, some submissions—although
technically sound—may not be accepted as regular papers due to overall
acceptance rate constraints, and could be accepted as posters
Minimum Length for Review Consideration
- While there is no formal minimum page requirement, submissions of
fewer than four (4) full pages that do not demonstrate substantial
contributions may be subject to desk rejection without external review.
Camera-ready Page Limits
- Regular Papers (accepted for publication):
- Up to eight (8) pages are included with standard registration.
Poster Papers (recommended for acceptance):
- Up to two (2) pages are included with standard registration.
*Important Dates (check SAC website
<https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2026/#important-dates> for up-to-date dates)*
*September 26, 2025: Regular Paper & SRC Abstract Submission*
For further information, please visit the Knowledge and Natural Language
Processing Track <https://knlp.fbk.eu/> and ACM-SAC 2026
<https://www.sigapp.org/sac/sac2026/> conference websites or feel free
to contact
the Track Co-Chairs <knlp(a)fbk.eu>.
--
--
Le informazioni contenute nella presente comunicazione sono di natura
privata e come tali sono da considerarsi riservate ed indirizzate
esclusivamente ai destinatari indicati e per le finalità strettamente
legate al relativo contenuto. Se avete ricevuto questo messaggio per
errore, vi preghiamo di eliminarlo e di inviare una comunicazione
all’indirizzo e-mail del mittente.
--
The information transmitted is
intended only for the person or entity to which it is addressed and may
contain confidential and/or privileged material. If you received this in
error, please contact the sender and delete the material.
***|* Apologies if you received multiple copies ofthis CFP *|*
*
*
*================================*
*** FoIKS 2026: Third call for papers ***
*================================*
**
*The 14th International Symposium on Foundations of Information and
Knowledge Systems <https://foiks2026.github.io/>will be taking place
from 23 to 26 of March 2026 in Hanover, Germany. We are excited to
announce the invited speakers for next year’s conference.*
*
*==================*
*
** Invited Speakers **
==================
*
Giuseppe De Giacomo(University of Oxford)
*
Floris Geerts(University of Antwerp)
*
Wolfgang Nejdl(Leibniz Universität Hannover)
*
Ana Ozaki(University of Oslo)
*
*
*
We invite contributions from theoretical and applied research on
information and knowledge systems.
* *
===========
** Scope **
===========
The suggested topics include, but are not limited to:
*
Mathematical Foundations of Information and Knowledge Systems:
Discrete structures and algorithms, graphs, and formal languages.
*
Database Design and Management:
Formal models, (in)dependencies and models of transactions, concurrency
control.
*
Logics in Databases and AI:
Classical and non-classical logics, logic programming, description
logics, spatial and temporal logics, argumentation, probability logic,
fuzzy logic.
*
Knowledge Representation and Reasoning:
Logical reasoning, Non-monotonic reasoning (reasoning under inconsistency),
Reasoning under vagueness or uncertainty.
*
Foundations of neuro-symbolic reasoning:
Embedding methods for structured information, such as knowledge graphs,
mathematical expressions, grammars, logical theories.
*
Intelligent Agents:
Multi-agent systems, autonomous agents, formal models of interactions,
Boolean games, coalition formation, reputation systems, epistemic reasoning.
*
Knowledge Discovery and Information Retrieval:
Machine learning, data mining, formal concept analysis and association
rules, information extraction.
*
Security in Information and Knowledge Systems:
Identity theft, privacy, trust, intrusion detection, access control,
inference control, secure Web services, secure Semantic Web, risk
management.
*
Integrity and Constraint Management:
Verification, validation, consistent query answering, and information
cleaning.
*
Knowledge graphs and semi-structured Data:
Data modelling, data processing, data compression, and data exchange.
======================
** Submission Guidelines **
======================
Papers must be typeset using the Springer LaTeX2e style llncs for
Lecture Notes in Computer Science (for guidelines and templates,
see:https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceeding…
<https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu…>).
Submissions that deviate substantially from these guidelines may be
rejected without review. There are the following page limits according
to paper type:
*
Long papers: 16, plus additional pages for references.
*
Short papers: 10, plus additional pages for references.
Missing proofs or details can be added as an additional appendix of up
to 15 pages article style and read at the discretion of the program
committee. All papers must be original and not simultaneously submitted
to another journal or conference. Initial submissions must be in PDF
format, but authors should keep in mind that the LaTeX2e source must be
submitted for the final versions of accepted papers. Submissions in
alternate formats, such as Microsoft Word, cannot be accepted for either
initial or final versions. The submissions will be judged for scientific
quality and for suitability as a basis for broader discussion.
Submission is via the EasyChair
linkhttps://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=foiks2026
<https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=foiks2026>.
All questions about submissions should be emailed to
foiks2026(a)easychair.org.
=============
** Publication **
=============
The proceedings are planned to be published by Springer-Verlag in the
Lecture Notes in Computer Science series. After the symposium, authors
of selected papers will be invited to submit extended journal versions
of their papers for a FoIKS 2026 special issue.
=================
** Important dates **
=================
*
Submission of abstracts:September 18, 2025
*
Submission of paper: September 25, 2025
*
Notification:December 13, 2025
*
Final version due:January 06, 2026
*
Conference: March 23-26, 2026
==============
** Organization **
==============
* *PC Chairs* *
*
Anni-Yasmin Turhan(University of Paderborn, Germany)
*
Jonni Virtema(University of Sheffield, UK)
* *Local Chair* *
*
Arne Meier(Leibniz University Hannover, Germany)
*
* *Publicity Chair* *
* *Yasir Mahmood* (Universität Paderborn)
* *Local Organisers* *
* Timon Barlag (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
* Nicolas Fröhlich (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
* Vivian Holzapfel (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
* Rahel Kluge (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
* Laura Strieker (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
* Heribert Vollmer (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
* *Program Committee* *
* Ringo Baumann (Leipzig University)
* Meghyn Bienvenu (CNRS, University of Bordeaux)
* Thomas Bolander (Technical University of Denmark)
* Stefan Borgwardt (TU Dresden)
* Elena Botoeva (University of Kent)
* Willem Conradie (University of the Witwatersrand)
* Fabio Cozman (University of São Paulo)
* Thomas Eiter (TU Wien)
* Flavio Ferrarotti (Software Competence Centre Hagenberg)
* Johannes K. Fichte (Linköping University)
* Valentin Goranko (Stockholm University)
* Guido Governatori (Central Queensland University)
* Marc Gyssens (Universiteit Hasselt)
* Miika Hannula (University of Tartu)
* Jelle Hellings (McMaster University)
* Andreas Herzig (CNRS, IRIT, University of Toulouse)
* Martin Homola (Comenius University in Bratislava)
* Tomi Janhunen (Tampere University)
* Matti Järvisalo (University of Helsinki)
* Gabriele Kern-Isberner (Technische Universität Dortmund)
* Sébastien Konieczny (CRIL - CNRS, University of Artois)
* Juha Kontinen (University of Helsinki)
* Mena Leemhuis (Free University of Bozen-Bolzano)
* Joao Leite (Universidade NOVA de Lisboa)
* Sebastian Link (The University of Auckland)
* Maria Vanina Martinez (Artificial Intelligence Research Institute
(IIIA - CSIC))
* Arne Meier (Leibniz Universität Hannover)
* Thomas Meyer (University of Cape Town and CAIR)
* Daniel Neider (TU Dortmund)
* Magdalena Ortiz (Vienna University of Technology)
* Nina Pardal (University of Huddersfield)
* Elena Ravve (Ort Baude College)
* Sebastian Rudolph (TU Dresden)
* Katsuhiko Sano (Hokkaido University)
* Konstantin Schekotihin (Alpen-Adria Universität Klagenfurt)
* Klaus-Dieter Schewe (Zhejiang University)
* Guillermo R. Simari (Universidad del Sur in Bahia Blanca)
* Jan Van den Bussche (Hasselt University)
* Stefan Woltran (TU Wien)
* Thomas Ågotnes (University of Bergen)
* Mantas Šimkus (TU Vienna)
**
*** Last Call for Workshop Proposals ***
The Annual ACM Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces (IUI 2026)
March 23-26, 2026, 5* Coral Beach Hotel & Resort, Paphos, Cyprus
https://iui.hosting.acm.org/2026/
We are pleased to invite proposals for workshops to be held in conjunction
with the Annual International ACM Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces (ACM IUI
2026), Paphos, Cyprus.
Workshops aim to provide a venue for presenting research on emerging or specialized
topics of interest and to offer an informal forum for discussing research questions and
challenges. Potential workshop topics should be related to the general theme of the
conference (“Where HCI meets AI”).
We welcome proposals for a wide range of *full-day* or *half-day* workshops, including
but not limited to:
• Mini Conferences: Workshops that focus on a specific topic and may have their own
paper submission and review processes.
• Interactive Formats: Workshops that encourage active participation and hands-on
experiences through break-out sessions or group work to explore specific topics. They
may have their own paper submission and review process or target a report summarizing
the discussions and outcomes.
• Emerging Work Sessions: Workshops that foster discussion around emerging ideas.
Organizers may raise specific topics and invite position papers, late-breaking results, or
extended abstracts.
• Project-Centric Formats: Workshops tied closely to a specific existing large-scale
funded project(e.g., NSF, EU) with the goal to engage a broader community.
• Interactive Competitions: Formats that invite individuals and teams to participate in
challenges or hackathons on selected topics relevant to IUI.
Review and Oversight by Workshop Chairs
Proposals will be reviewed and evaluated by the Workshop Chairs. It is possible that
workshops may be cancelled, shortened, merged, or restructured if there are insufficient
submissions.
Workshop summaries will be included in the ACM Digital Library for ACM IUI 2026. We will
also publish joint workshop proceedings for accepted workshop submissions
(through CEUR or a similar venue).
Responsibilities of Workshop Organizers
• Coordinate the Call for Papers, including solicitation, submission handling, and peer
review process.
• Create and maintain a dedicated website with workshop information. The IUI 2026
website will link to this page.
• Prepare and communicate a Call for Participation, targeting both IUI and broader relevant
communities (e.g., via mailing lists, social media, newsgroups, or offline events).
• Facilitate the planned activities, including paper presentations, discussions, and/or
interactive elements.
• Submit a workshop summary for inclusion in the ACM Digital Library.
• Collect camera-ready papers and author agreements from workshop participants for the
joint workshop proceedings (CEUR or similar).
Note that for the joint proceedings (CEUR or similar), submissions should be peer-reviewed
and will need to meet publishers’ guidelines. CEUR, for example, requires a 5-page
minimum per contribution. Note that not all workshop formats listed above may meet
these requirements, and we may not be able to include them.
IUI 2026 is an in-person event, and we expect workshop organizers to attend, allowing the
workshop to be conducted on-site. One author per paper is expected to attend in person
to present the work.
Proposal Format
Workshop proposals should be a maximum of four pages long (single-column format).
Prepare your submission using the latest templates: Word Submission Template
(https://authors.acm.org/binaries/content/assets/publications/taps/acm_submi…),
or the LaTex Template
(https://authors.acm.org/proceedings/production-information/preparing-your-a…).
For Latex, please use “\documentclass[manuscript,review]{acmart}”.
The proposals should be organized as follows:
• Name and title: A one-word acronym and a full title. Please indicate “(Workshop)” after
the title.
• Abstract: A brief summary of the workshop.
• Description of workshop topic: Should discuss the relevance of the proposed topic to
IUI and its interest for the IUI 2026 audience. Include a concise discussion of why this
workshop is particularly relevant for the intended audience and how it will complement
and enhance topics covered at the main conference.
• Previous history: List of previous workshops on this topic, including the conferences
that hosted them and the number of participants. If available, report on past editions of
the workshop (including URLs), along with a brief statement of the workshop
series (e.g., covering topics, number of paper submissions, and participants), as well as
post-workshop publications over the years and acceptance statistics. If this is the first
edition of the workshop, describe how it differs from others on similar topics (e.g., by
including conference names and years).
• Organizer(s): Names, affiliations, emails, and web pages of the organizer(s). Provide a
brief description of the background of the organizer(s). Strong proposals normally include
organizers who bring differing perspectives on the topic and are actively connected to the
communities of potential participants. Please indicate the primary contact person and the
organizers who will attend the workshop. Also, please provide a list of other workshops
organized by workshop organizers in the past.
• Workshop program committee: Names and affiliation of the members of the (tentative)
workshop program committee that will evaluate the workshop submissions.
• Participants: Include a statement of how many participants you expect and how you plan
to invite participants for the workshop. If possible, include the names of at least 10 people
who have expressed interest in participating in the workshop or tutorial.
• Workshop activities: A brief description of the format regarding the mix of
events or activities, such as paper presentations, invited talks, panels, demonstrations,
teaching activities, hands-on practical exercises, and general discussion.
• Planned outcomes of the workshop: What are you hoping to achieve by the end of the
workshop? Please list here any planned publications or other outcomes expected.
• Length: Full-day or half-day.
Submission Platform
• All materials must be submitted electronically to PCS 2.0
http://new.precisionconference.com/~sigchi by the proposal submission deadline.
• In PCS 2.0, first click "Submissions" at the top of the page, from the dropdown menus for
society, conference, and track, select "SIGCHI", "IUI 2026", and then "IUI 2026 Workshops",
and press "Go".
We encourage both researchers and industry practitioners to submit workshop proposals.
To support diverse perspectives in the workshops, we strongly recommend including
organizers from varied institutions and backgrounds.
Furthermore, we welcome workshops with an innovative structure that can attract diverse
types of contributions and foster valuable interactions.
Prospective organizers are encouraged to contact the Workshop Chairs in
advance (workshops2026(a)iui.acm.org) to discuss ideas, receive feedback, or seek
assistance in preparing engaging proposals. Especially for workshop proposals featuring
innovative interactive formats, we are happy to help further develop and implement the
ideas.
Important Dates (AoE)
• Workshop Proposals: August 22, 2025
• Decision Notification: September 19, 2025
• Camera-ready Summaries: February 6, 2026
Workshop Chairs
Karthik Dinakar, Pienso, USA
Werner Geyer, IBM Research, USA
Patricia Kahr, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Antonela Tommasel, CONICET, Argentina
CODI-CRAC, Joint Workshop on Computational Approaches to Discourse (CODI) and Computational Models of Reference, Anaphora and Coreference (CRAC)
2025-11-8/9 - EMNLP 2025 - Suzhou
** Direct Submission deadline: August 23th, 2024 **
Direct submission: We now open submissions for papers submitted at another main conference.
Notifications will be sent on September 2 for direct submissions, and camera-ready will be due on September 12.
Website link: https://sites.google.com/view/codi2024
CODI-CRAC considers for publication papers rejected at one of the main conferences, authors will have to submit both the paper and the reviews as a supplementary pdf file. If modifications have been made since the original submission, please submit an additional file describing briefly the modifications made. The organizers will decide on the acceptance of the papers based on the quality of the paper and its fit with the workshop.
As a reminder, CODI-CRAC also invites presentations of paper accepted at another main conference. They will be included in the workshop program and handbook, but will not appear in the workshop proceedings.
Please submit your workshop papers (category: "direct submission", archival or non archival) at :
- CODI submission: https://softconf.com/emnlp2025/codi2025/
- CRAC submission: https://softconf.com/emnlp2025/crac2025/
*** Last Call for Workshop Proposals ***
The 33rd IEEE International Conference on Software Analysis, Evolution
and Reengineering (SANER 2026)
17 March, 2026, 5* St. Raphael Resort and Marina, Limassol, Cyprus
https://conf.researchr.org/track/saner-2026/saner-2026-workshops-tutorials-…
In SANER 2026, we solicit proposals for workshops to be held in conjunction with the
main conference. Workshops can be full or half-day and should highlight a specific
topic of interest related to software analysis, evolution, and reengineering. We encourage
workshop organizers to include activities that provide their participants with a true
workshop experience.
All workshops will tentatively be scheduled for the first day of the conference (March 17,
2026), the day before the main conference.
Should you be interested in joining SANER, please keep the deadlines below in mind.
Submission Instructions
Proposal submission: By August 20th, 2025 AoE, the workshop proposal (in the form of
call for papers) should be submitted to the workshops EasyChair page:
https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=saner2026 .
The submission could be a PDF file (no more than two pages) or a public link to a call for
papers webpage.
The call for papers should include:
• a workshop title,
• a description of the workshop topic and scope,
• an indication of whether the workshop will take ½ day or a full day,
• a link to the workshop website,
• and the contact information.
The website should be live and include (at least) the following information: the topic of
the workshop, its scope, list of topics of interest, names of the organizing committee
members and their affiliations, types of submissions and the important dates as follows
(all dates are 23:59h AoE):
• Abstract Submission: 12 December, 2025
• Paper Submission: 18 December, 2025
• Notification: January 14, 2026
• Camera-Ready: 20 January, 2026
Evaluation Criteria
The proposals will be evaluated by the workshops track chairs based on the novelty of
the workshop topic, its importance to the field, as well as the composition of the
organizing team.
Workshop PC and Submission System
No later than mid of-September 2025, the workshop PC should have been finalized and
the paper submission system should be live. Workshop organizers are free to select
EasyChair, HotCRP or any other commonly used paper submission system.
The workshop proceedings will be included in a separate section of the conference’s
proceedings – the companion proceedings.
SUBMISSION LINK
https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=saner2026
IMPORTANT DATES
• Workshop Proposals Submissions: 20 August, 2025
• Workshop Proposals Notification: 27 August, 2025
All dates are 23:59h AoE (anywhere on Earth).
ORGANISATION
General Chair
• Georgia Kapitsaki, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Local Organizing Chair
• George Angelos Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Workshops and Tutorials Co-Chairs
• Marcelo De Almeida Maia, Federal University of Uberlandia, Brazil
• Juri Di Rocco, University of L'Aquila, Italy
Ethical and Technical Challenges for Identity-Aware AI
Workshop at ECAI 2025 <https://ecai2025.org/workshops/>, Bologna, Italy,
October 25-30.
https://identity-aware-ai.github.io/
Workshop theme: What makes each of us unique, and which ethical and
technical challenges does this imply?
Overview
What makes us unique? Language (and thus the automatic processing of it) is
about people and what they mean. However, current practice relies on the
assumptions that the involved humans are all the same, and that if enough
data (and compute power) is present, the resulting generalizations will be
robust enough and represent the majority.
This approach often harms marginalized communities and ignores the notion
of identity in models and systems. Our interdisciplinary workshop aims to
raise the question of “what makes each of us unique?” to the AI community.
We seek to gather researchers from diverse fields to understand how the
identities of all stakeholders — e.g., the individuals projecting their
views in texts, the individuals perceiving the texts, the individuals
mentioned and those not mentioned in the texts — should be considered in
future research in AI.
Workshop Goals
-
The development of a shared and interdisciplinary understanding of
identities and how identity is treated in AI.
-
The development of new methods that push the effective, fair, and
inclusive treatment of individuals in AI to the next level.
Topics of Interest
We invite submissions on the following topics:
-
Approaches to model subjective phenomena: Personalization and
perspectivist methods that leverage disaggregated labeled data, encoding
annotator metadata on their beliefs, moral values, sociodemographic
features, or personal narratives. ML methods to address the challenges of
“learning from disagreements” both from the development of new models and
the collection of data to train such models.
-
Methods for detecting and controlling bias in models and data:
Techniques to audit fairness, enforce fairness constraints, and learn fair
representation from data, in order to enhance the fairness of models while
maintaining their predictive reliability. Ethical challenges for LLMs in
identity-aware dialog and tasks: diversity, stereotypes, harms.
-
The role of sociodemographics in LLMs: Such as which characteristics
(and disagreements) they embody and how to measure their capacity for
representing and reasoning about diverse types of identities.
-
Challenges for applying AI methods to model socio-political phenomena:
Including polarization, impact of media consumption on public opinion
formation, agenda setting, deliberation support, and how integrating
identity into AI methods can influence the accuracy for these tasks.
-
NLP work at the intersection with social psychology: The methodological
foundation for quantitative investigation of identity-related topics. The
reflection on best practices to reliably measure complex constructs such as
morals and values. Detection and analysis of personal narratives across
cultures.
-
Accountability of AI in the eye of the general public: The role of LLMs,
and the responsibilities of AI and NLP developers for ethical use of
identities.
-
NLP work at the intersection of survey science: The use of LLMs to model
and simulate individuals and subpopulations; the role of LLMs in
personalizing information elicitation; and methodological approaches to
address data contamination and response validation when LLMs are used by
either researchers or respondents.
Submission Types
We welcome the following types of submissions:
-
Long papers: Up to 8 pages (excluding references)
-
Short papers: Up to 4 pages (excluding references)
-
Non-archival submissions, student project presentations, mixed-media
submissions: No page limit
-
For non-archival submissions, we welcome creative formats including:
-
Art, poetry, music
-
Blog posts
-
Jupyter notebooks
-
Teaching materials
-
TikToks and videos
-
Findings papers
-
Late-breaking papers
-
Extended abstracts
-
For creative format submissions, please submit a PDF containing:
-
A summary or abstract of your work
-
A link to your work (if hosted externally)
-
Any additional context or documentation
Submission Guidelines
-
All submissions will be double-blind reviewed
-
Submissions should follow ECAI formatting guidelines
<https://www.ecai2024.eu/calls/main-track> with the latex template here
<https://ecai2024.eu/download/ecai-template.zip>
-
Submit your paper through EasyChair
<https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=identityawareai2025>
-
Accepted papers will be published in the workshop proceedings through
CEUR
Workshop Format
The workshop will be a half-day event featuring:
-
Keynote speeches from leading experts in the field
-
Paper presentations (oral and lightning talks)
-
Participatory design activity to develop a shared interdisciplinary
vocabulary, identify current gaps in datasets for studying identity, and
design a vision for collecting new datasets
-
Special student project session
We are committed to ensuring that our workshop is accessible to all. The
workshop will be held in a hybrid format, allowing both in-person and
virtual participation.
Important Dates
-
Submissions: 22 August 29 August
-
Notifications: 26 September
-
Camera-ready: 3 October
-
Workshop: 25 October
Diversity & Inclusion
We actively encourage submissions from underrepresented communities and
countries. The workshop organizers will provide mentorship and thorough
feedback, especially to first-time authors and reviewers.
Organizers
-
Pranav A (University of Hamburg)
-
Valerio Basile (University of Turin)
-
Neele Falk (University of Stuttgart)
-
David Jurgens (University of Michigan)
-
Gabriella Lapesa (GESIS, Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences &
Heinrich-Heine University of Düsseldorf)
-
Anne Lauscher (University of Hamburg)
-
Soda Marem Lo (University of Turin)
Contact
For queries, please contact: identity-aware-ai(a)googlegroups.com
Join us at Identity-aware AI 2025 to contribute to this important
conversation!