*** Last Call for Demos, DC and Tutorials ***
The 25th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent
Systems (AAMAS 2026)
May 25-29, 2026, 5* Coral Beach Hotel & Resort, Paphos, Cyprus
https://cyprusconferences.org/aamas2026/<http://www.cs.ucy.ac.cy/~george/GPLists_2021/lm.php?tk=Y29ycG9yYQkJCWNvcnBv…>
AAMAS 2026 received 1455 full paper submissions for the Main Track, after an initial
submission of 1800 abstracts. This is by far the highest number of submissions (around
50% more than the previous highest number) in the 25 years of AAMAS.
We still welcome submissions to the Demo Track, the DC Track as well as for tutorials.
The Demo Track allows participants from both academia and industry to showcase their
latest developments in agent-based and robotic systems.
The DC (Doctoral Consortium) is an opportunity to interact closely with established
researchers in your field as well as other PhD students to receive feedback on your work
and to get advice on managing your career.
Tutorials will be half-day long and will be in person — online/remote versions will not be
accepted. A few full-day tutorials may be considered, but the proponents need to motivate
their request when submitting their proposal.
More information about the above calls, is available on the AAMAS 2026 web site.
Important Dates (AoE)
Demo Track
• Submission Deadline: January 9, 2026
• Author Notification: February 6, 2026
• Camera-Ready Deadline: February 25, 2026
• Author Registration Deadline: March 31, 2026
• Demonstrations: May 27-29, 2026
Doctoral Consortium
• Abstract Deadline: January 19, 2026
• Submission Deadline: January 23, 2026
• Author Notification: February 23, 2026
• Camera-Ready Deadline: March 2, 2026
• Author Registration Deadline: March 31, 2026
Tutorials
• Proposal Submission: January 16, 2026
• Organiser Notifications: January 30, 2026
• Tutorial Site Online: March 4, 2026
• Tutorial Forum: May 25-26, 2026
Organizing Committee
AAMAS 2026 General Chairs
• Viviana Mascardi, University of Genova, Italy
• John Thangarajah, RMIT University, Australia
AAMAS 2026 Program Chairs
• Chris Amato, Northeastern University, United States of America
• Louise Dennis, University of Manchester, United Kingdom
AAMAS 2026 Local Chairs
• George A. Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus, Cyprus (Chair)
• Panayiotis Kolios, University of Cyprus, Cyprus (Vice Chair)
Call for Participation: CLEF eRisk 2026: Early Risk Prediction on the
Internet
_Are you passionate about leveraging AI for societal good? We are
pleased to announce that registration and submissions are now open for
eRisk 2026, the tenth edition of the CLEF associated evaluation lab of
early risk prediction on the Internet!!. Full details are available on
the eRisk website._
_Tasks for eRisk 2026 (All the info available at
https://erisk.irlab.org/)_
_*Task 1: Conversational Depression Detection with LLMs_
_Participants will interact with fine-tuned LLM personas that will be
released on Hugging Face. Each persona simulates a different depression
severity. Systems must decide whether the persona is depressed, estimate
its overall depression level, and detect active depressive symptoms._
_*Task 2: Contextualised Early Detection of Depression _
_A continuation of last year's contextual detection task: systems
analyze full multi-participant conversational contexts arriving
sequentially, and make early predictions about depression risk,
balancing timeliness and accuracy._
_*Task 3: ADHD Symptom Sentence Ranking (ASRS-v1.1) _
_A novel task expanding beyond depression. Participants will rank
sentences by their relevance to each of the 18 symptoms in the ASRS-v1.1
scale. The setup follows the classical ranking-task format, offering no
annotated training set at launch (zero-shot setup)._
_ _
_- Why Participate?_
_Publication & Visibility: Accepted contributions will be featured in
CEUR-WS (Workshop Proceedings) and acknowledged at CLEF 2026 (Jena,
Germany, 21-24 September 2026), offering wide academic and community
exposure._
_Interdisciplinary Impact: eRisk blends information retrieval, NLP,
computational psychiatry, and social data science: a unique opportunity
for collaboration._
_Leading-Edge Challenges: With conversational agents and symptom-level
retrieval, eRisk 2026 targets more realistic, fine-grained, and
clinically relevant tasks than ever before._
_ _
_- Key Dates _
_ _
_- Datasets Release:_
_ -T1 and T2: 19th December 2026 for training collection and 9th
February 2026 beginning of test stage (servers are open)_
_ -T3: no training data, 19th December 2026 release of test
collection, and 9th February 2026 beginning of test stage (servers are
open)_
_ _
_ _
_- Submission Deadlines:_
_ -T1: 20th April 2026 end of test stage_
_ -T2: 13th April 2026 end of test stage (server closes)_
_ -T3: 1st April 2026 for submitting participants' results to FTP_
_ _
_ _
_- CLEF 2026 Conference: 21-24 September 2026, Jena, Germany. _
_ _
_How to Sign Up & Contribute_
_1. Register: Sign up through the [CLEF 2026 Labs Registration
site](https://clef-labs-registration.dipintra.it/ [1])_
_2. Submit Agreements: Complete the user agreement form to access
datasets. _
_3. Join the Community: Join our Google Groups
https://groups.google.com/g/erisk-clef [2] !_
_After evaluation, submit a workshop paper describing your approach and
results for publication in CEUR-WS._
_ _
_ _
_We encourage you (and your research group) to join us in advancing the
state of early risk detection. Please feel free to forward this message
to any colleagues who may be interested._
_Best regards,_
_Javier Parapar, Anxo Pérez, Xi Wang, Fabio Crestani_
_eRisk organizers"_
Links:
------
[1] https://clef-labs-registration.dipintra.it/
[2] https://groups.google.com/g/erisk-clef
Join us as a student volunteer at the prestigious 19th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics (EACL 2026). We're seeking dedicated students, both for in-person and online roles, to contribute to the success of this event.
What You Gain:
Selected volunteers will receive complimentary registration to the main conference, workshops, tutorials, and social events. Shifts are designed to optimize your access to conference events.
Roles and Responsibilities:
Volunteer tasks encompass various aspects such as assisting at the registration desk, on-boarding briefs to delegates checking in, problem solving, providing directional support at the conference venue, organizing delegate packs, overseeing poster sessions, coordinating volunteers, and providing AV/technical support, including social media management and aiding with conference events. If you apply and are selected as a virtual volunteer your roles and responsibilities will be monitoring content on platforms such as RocketChat; Underline, MiniConf etc. As a virtual attendee you will report content issues on publications and escalate issue to the on-site technical support team. With this knowledge, please make sure you possess the skills to handle such requirements during the conference.
Selection Criteria:
Candidates will be assessed based on their application package (details below). Preference will be given to students presenting papers at the main conference or affiliated workshops without alternative travel support.
Application Process:
*
Applicants must be full-time students.
*
Submission requires a completed application form at https://forms.gle/FQsaESw61dZGCcyX8 with a few questions and a concise one-page CV (resume).
*
Travel and accommodations should be arranged independently, regardless of the application outcome. Special Rate Lodging is secured by ACL Months in advance to the conference. The discounted rates can be seen and secured by going to the Conference website, Participant Info, Accommodations.
Application Instructions:
Please refrain from registering for the ACL Conference until you receive a confirmation of acceptance into the Volunteer Service. Upon acceptance, you'll receive a dedicated registration link. Additionally, access will be provided to a Volunteer Website with essential information, FAQs, training materials, and a scheduling system to choose volunteer days and roles. To receive a complimentary registration for the ACL Event, it's crucial to note that a minimum of 10 hours of volunteer work at the event is mandatory. These hours can be divided across several shifts on different days or completed in a single shift. Failure to meet the volunteer commitment will result in being charged the in-person conference fee.
In the event of non-acceptance, the Registrar will assist in securing early registration fee rates. For late volunteer registration reimbursements, students need to provide receipts for paid registration fees to the 2026 ACL Reimbursement Link which will be provided to you by the Volunteer Chairs.
Additional Financial Support:
Once more, volunteering grants you complimentary registration solely for the ACL Conference. If you require further financial assistance for lodging, airfare, or daily expenses, it's advisable to apply for Diversity and Inclusion Subsidies. You have the liberty to seek both a Volunteer subsidy and a D&I subsidy simultaneously, as there are no restrictions against receiving both. To review the criteria for D&I Subsidies, please refer to the Call for D&I Post, which includes selection criteria.
Important Dates:
*
Application Opens: December 22, 2025
*
Application Deadline: January 23, 2026
*
Acceptance Notifications: February 9, 2026
*** First Call for Papers (Industry Track) ***
37th IEEE International Symposium on Software Reliability Engineering
(ISSRE 2026)
October 20-23, 2026, 5* St. Raphael Resort and Marina
Limassol, Cyprus
https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/<http://www.cs.ucy.ac.cy/~george/GPLists_2021/lm.php?tk=Y29ycG9yYQkJCWNvcnBv…>
The ISSRE Industry Track gathers industry representatives as well as researchers from,
within or in collaboration with industry to discuss software reliability, quality assurance as
well as experiences and lessons learned. This year we will bring experiences from self-
made tools, usage of AI, generative AI and machine learning in relation to software
reliability.
Industry track papers are expected to be of interest to software development
professionals, as well as to anyone researching or working in the area of software
reliability, software quality, and process improvement groups, with concrete relevance to
industrial problems and practical applications.
All presenters of accepted papers will be required to attend the conference in person.
Participating in the conference would give a chance to meet and discuss with a wide
selection of researchers and other industry experts in the area.
Topics of Interest
Topics of interest include development, analysis methods and models throughout the
software development lifecycle, from an industrial and practitioner-oriented perspective.
Ask yourself this: Is the work grounded in real-world systems, operational experience, or
industrial practice, and does it address reliability or dependability concerns? If it is, you
have found the right conference track. For a more detailed list check out the detailed
topics list for the research track on this site.
• Use cases, practical experiences, lessons learned, improvement programs in reliability
or dependability.
• Foundations of reliability and dependability, including process, technology, methods,
metrics and lessons learned.
• Design for reliability or dependability, failure and incident case studies, including
experiences in security, testing, verification, and related practices in the field.
• Reliability in AI-driven and autonomic systems or AI techniques used for Reliability
Engineering.
• Software reliability in any system domain.
• Trustworthiness, security, and Responsible Software Engineering.
• Human-centric focus on reliability and dependability.
• Adoption of reliability standards, measurements and similar experiences.
We look for papers with good evaluation, honest data, new insights and practical
experiences that can be used to help others. We also encourage submissions reporting
negative results, unexpected outcomes, and lessons learned from real-world practice.
Submission Guidelines and Instructions
We invite three kinds of submissions to the Industry Track:
• Enlightening Talk or Tool Demo: 1-2 page abstract (OR a Power Point presentation OR a
video for a tool demo).
• Short paper: 4-pages (including references).
• Full paper: 6-pages (including references).
All the submissions will be reviewed by members of the Industry Track Program
Committee. Accepted papers (with an abstract) will be included in the ISSRE Supplemental
Proceedings and submitted for publication to IEEE Xplore.
Submissions must adhere to the IEEE Computer Society Format Guidelines (for more
Information, please refer to the relevant part on the conference website:
https://cyprusconferences.org/issre2026/industry-track/<http://www.cs.ucy.ac.cy/~george/GPLists_2021/lm.php?tk=Y29ycG9yYQkJCWNvcnBv…>).
Note that:
• A paper must include the title, the name and affiliation of each author, an abstract of up
to 150 words, and up to 4 keywords. Thus, submissions are not anonymous.
• Reviewers will use the abstract during the bidding process for peer-review. Thus, the
abstract should state the paper goals clearly, along with the means used to achieve them.
• The first page is not a separate page, but is a part of the paper (i.e., it has technical
material in it). Thus, this page counts toward the total page budget for the paper.
• Symbols and labels used in the graphs should be readable as printed, without requiring
on-screen magnification.
• Limit the file size to less than 15 MB (for Video’s – provide a live link).
Papers that exceed the page limits specified, on topics not in the scope of ISSRE, or that do
not follow the formatting guidelines will be rejected without review.
Authors of accepted papers will have the chance to present their work at ISSRE 2026.
Submission implies the willingness of at least one of the authors to register for the
conference and to give the talk, if the paper is accepted.
Best Paper Awards
The Industry Program Chair will select three candidates among top-ranked papers
presenting and motivating novel and disruptive ideas that address problems relevant for
industry. Selection will be based on the reviewers’ feedback, novelty and potential impact
of the results.
The final selection of the best paper will be done by the audience attending the
presentation of the candidate papers. Eligible papers must be (1) full papers accepted to
the industry track, and (2) co-authored by at least one author whose primary affiliation is
in Industry.
Important Dates (AoE)
• Abstract Submission Deadline: June 28, 2026 & July 3, 2026
• Paper Submission Deadline: July 5, 2026 & July 12, 2026
• Notification to Authors: August 12, 2026
• Camera Ready Papers: August 19, 2026
• Enlightening Talks or Tool Demos (without abstract; not to appear in the proceedings): August 15, 2026
• Author Registration Deadline (Industry Track): August 19, 2026
Organisation
General Chairs
• Leonardo Mariani, University of Milano - Bicocca, Italy
• George A. Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Program Coordinator
• Roberto Natella, GSSI, Italy
Research Program Committee Chairs
• Domenico Cotroneo, UNC Charlotte, USA
• Jie M. Zhang, King's College London, UK
Industry Program Chairs
• Jinyang Liu, Bytedance, USA
• Sigrid Eldh, Ericsson AB, Sweden
Workshop Chairs
• Georgia Kapitsaki, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
• August Shi, The University of Texas at Austin, USA
Doctoral Symposium Chairs
• Stefan Winter, LMU Munich, Germany
• Lili Wei, McGill University, Canada
Fast Abstract Chairs
• Luigi Lavazza, University of Insubria, Italy
• Yintong Huo, SMU, Singapore
JIC2 Chair
• Helene Waeselynck, LAAS-CNRS, France
Publicity Chairs
• Allison K. Sulivan, The University of Texas at Arlington, USA
• Jose D'Abruzzo Pereira, University of Coimbra, Portugal
Publication Chairs
• Sherlock Licorish, Otago Business School, New Zealand
• Maria Teresa Rossi, GSSI, Italy
Artifact Evaluation Chairs
• Naghmeh Ivaki, University of Coimbra, Portugal
• Fumio Machida, University of Tsukuba, Japan
Diversity and Inclusion Chair
• Eleni Constantinou, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Financial Chair
• Costas Pattichis, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Web Chairs
• Michalis Ioannides, Easy Conferences LTD
• Elena Masserini, University of Milano - Bicocca, Italy
Registration Chair
• Easy Conferences LTD
ArchEHR-QA 2026 (pronounced ��Archer��): CL4Health @LREC 2026 Shared Task on Grounded Question Answering (QA) from Electronic Health Records (EHRs)
Website: https://archehr-qa.github.io/
Dataset (PhysioNet): https://doi.org/10.13026/zzax-sy62
Responding to patients�� inbox messages through patient portals is a major contributor to clinician workload. ArchEHR-QA focuses on automatically answering patients�� health-related questions using their own EHR notes, with an emphasis on producing answers that are grounded in (and explicitly linked to) supporting clinical evidence in the notes.
Task Overview
ArchEHR-QA 2026 is the second iteration of this shared task (following the ACL 2025 BioNLP edition). This year expands the dataset and introduces four complementary subtasks. Teams may participate in any subset of subtasks, and separate leaderboards will be maintained for each subtask.
Subtasks:
1) Subtask 1 �� Question Interpretation:
Transform a free-text patient-authored question into a concise clinician-interpreted question (�� 15 words).
2) Subtask 2 �� Evidence Identification:
Select the minimal set of sentence IDs from the provided note excerpt that supports answering the question.
3) Subtask 3 �� Answer Generation:
Generate an answer grounded in the provided note excerpt (�� 75 words).
4) Subtask 4 �� Evidence Alignment:
For each answer sentence, identify the supporting note sentence(s) (sentence-level answer�Cevidence alignment).
This year��s shared task follows a staged test data release schedule, with separate deadlines for Subtask 1, Subtasks 2�C3, and Subtask 4.
Important Dates (Tentative)
* First call for participation / Release of development dataset: January 2 (Friday), 2026
* Test dataset release:
* Subtask 1: January 19 (Monday), 2026
* Subtasks 2�C3: January 26 (Monday), 2026
* Subtask 4: February 16 (Monday), 2026
* Submission of system responses:
* Subtask 1: January 26 (Monday), 2026
* Subtasks 2�C3: February 16 (Monday), 2026
* Subtask 4: March 2 (Monday), 2026
* Submission of shared task papers (optional): March 13 (Friday), 2026
* Notification of acceptance: March 24 (Tuesday), 2026
* Camera-ready system papers due: March 31 (Tuesday), 2026
* CL4Health Workshop Date (LREC 2026): May 12 (Tuesday), 2026
For more information about participation and submission, please visit the shared task website.
Join our Google Group (recommended)
Google Group: https://groups.google.com/g/archehr-qa
For questions, please use the Google Group or email: sarvesh.soni(a)nih.gov<mailto:sarvesh.soni@nih.gov>
Program Committee
We are also looking for people to join the program committee (responsibilities include reviewing papers). If you are interested, please email sarvesh.soni(a)nih.gov<mailto:sarvesh.soni@nih.gov>.
Looking forward to your participation,
Organizers:
Sarvesh Soni, U.S. National Library of Medicine, NIH
Dina Demner-Fushman, U.S. National Library of Medicine, NIH
𝗧𝗵𝗶𝗿𝗱 𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗙𝗶𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗖𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗣𝗮𝗽𝗲𝗿𝘀 - 𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗦𝗲𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗱 𝗪𝗼𝗿𝗸𝘀𝗵𝗼𝗽 𝗼𝗻 𝗟𝗮𝗻𝗴𝘂𝗮𝗴𝗲 𝗠𝗼𝗱𝗲𝗹𝘀 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗟𝗼𝘄-𝗥𝗲𝘀𝗼𝘂𝗿𝗰𝗲 𝗟𝗮𝗻𝗴𝘂𝗮𝗴𝗲𝘀
[Workshop website - https://loreslm.github.io/home]
[CFP - https://loreslm.github.io/cfp]
[Submissions - https://openreview.net/group?id=eacl.org/EACL/2026/Workshop/LoResLM]
Neural language models have revolutionised natural language processing (NLP) and have provided state-of-the-art results for many tasks. However, their effectiveness is largely dependent on the pre-training resources. Therefore, language models (LMs) often struggle with low-resource languages in both training and evaluation. Recently, there has been a growing trend in developing and adopting LMs for low-resource languages. Supporting this important shift, LoResLM aims to provide a forum for researchers to share and discuss their ongoing work on LMs for low-resource languages.
𝗧𝗼𝗽𝗶𝗰𝘀
LoResLM 2026 invites submissions on a broad range of topics related to the development and evaluation of neural language models for low-resource languages. We welcome research that explores modalities beyond text and encourage work on low-resource dialects in addition to major language varieties. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
• Building language models for low-resource languages.
• Adapting/extending existing language models/large language models for low-resource languages.
• Corpora creation and curation technologies for training language models/large language models for low-resource languages.
• Benchmarks to evaluate language models/large language models in low-resource languages.
• Prompting/in-context learning strategies for low-resource languages with large language models.
• Review of available corpora to train/fine-tune language models/large language models for low-resource languages.
• Multilingual/cross-lingual language models/large language models for low-resource languages.
• Multimodal language models/large language models for low-resource languages
• Applications of language models/large language models for low-resource languages (i.e. machine translation, chatbots, content moderation, etc.)
𝗦𝘂𝗯𝗺𝗶𝘀𝘀𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝗚𝘂𝗶𝗱𝗲𝗹𝗶𝗻𝗲𝘀
We follow the EACL 2026 standards for submission format and guidelines. LoResLM 2026 invites submissions of long papers up to 8 pages and short papers up to 4 pages. These page limits only apply to the main body of the paper. At the end of the paper (after the conclusions but before the references), papers need to include a mandatory section discussing the limitations of the work and, optionally, a section discussing ethical considerations. Papers can include unlimited pages of references and an appendix.
To prepare your submission, please make sure to use the EACL 2026 style files available here:
• LaTeX - https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files
• Overleaf - https://www.overleaf.com/latex/templates/association-for-computational-ling…
Papers should be submitted through OpenReview using the following link: https://openreview.net/group?id=eacl.org/EACL/2026/Workshop/LoResLM
𝗜𝗺𝗽𝗼𝗿𝘁𝗮𝗻𝘁 𝗗𝗮𝘁𝗲𝘀
• Paper submission: 6th January 2026
• Notification of acceptance: 28th January 2026
• Camera-ready submission: 3rd February 2026
• Workshop: 29th March 2026 @ EACL
𝗩𝗲𝗻𝘂𝗲
LoResLM 2026 will be held in conjunction with EACL 2026 in Rabat, Morocco.
𝗣𝗿𝗼𝗰𝗲𝗲𝗱𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀
Proceedings of the workshop will appear in the ACL Anthology. For the past proceedings, please refer https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=rvm3HOgAAAAJ&hl=en
𝗞𝗲𝘆𝗻𝗼𝘁𝗲 𝗦𝗽𝗲𝗮𝗸𝗲𝗿
Prof Barbara Plank - Full professor and chair for AI and Computational Linguistics at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Head of the Munich AI and NLP (MaiNLP) lab, and co-director of the Centre for Information and Language Processing (CIS)
𝗣𝗿𝗼𝗴𝗿𝗮𝗺𝗺𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗖𝗼𝗺𝗺𝗶𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗲
David Ifeoluwa Adelani - McGill School of Computer Science, Canada
Idris Abdulmumin - University of Pretoria, South Africa
Godfred Agyapong - University of Florida, USA
Isuri Anuradha - Lancaster University, UK
Laura Bernardy - University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Ana-Maria Bucur - University of Lugano, Switzerland
Eleftheria Briakou - Google
Tommaso Caselli - University of Groningen, Netherlands
Çağrı Çöltekin - University of Tübingen, Germany
Charibeth Ko Cheng - De La Salle University, Philippines
Claudiu Creanga - University of Bucharest
Sourabh Deoghare - Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay, India
Bosheng Ding - Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Alphaeus Dmonte - George Mason University, USA
Daan van Esch - Google
Ignatius Ezeani - Lancaster University, UK
Anna Furtado - University of Galway, Ireland
Ona de Gibert - University of Helsinki, Finland
Amal Htait - Aston University, UK
Diptesh Kanojia - University of Surrey, UK
Jaroslav Kopčan - Kempelen Institute of Intelligent Technologies, Slovakia
Constantine Lignos - Brandeis University, USA
Cedric Lothritz - Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology, Luxembourg
Anne-Marie Lutgen - University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Sheng Li - Institute of Science Tokyo, Japan
Veronika Lipp - Hungarian Research Centre for Linguistics, Hungary
Vukosi Marivate - University of Pretoria, South Africa
Muhidin Mohamed - Aston University, UK
Simon Münker - Trier University, Germany
Abiodun Modupe - University of Pretoria, South Africa
Fred Philippy - University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Md Nishat Raihan - George Mason University, USA
Mariana Romanyshyn - Grammarly
Guokan Shang - Mohamed bin Zayed University of Artificial Intelligence, France
Ravi Shekhar - University of Essex, UK
Archchana Sindhujan - University of Surrey, UK
Hristo Tanev - Joint Research Centre, European Commission
Uthayasanker Thayasivam - University of Moratuwa, Sri Lanka
Raúl Vázquez - University of Helsinki, Finland
Taro Watanabe - Nara Institute of Science and Technology, Japan-
Zheng Xin Yong - Brown University, USA
Alexandra Zbaganu - University of Bucharest, Romania
𝗢𝗿𝗴𝗮𝗻𝗶𝘀𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗖𝗼𝗺𝗺𝗶𝘁𝘁𝗲𝗲
Hansi Hettiarachchi – Lancaster University, UK
Tharindu Ranasinghe – Lancaster University, UK
Alistair Plum – University of Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Damith Premasiri – Lancaster University, UK
Fiona Anting Tan – National University of Singapore, Singapore
Lasitha Uyangodage – University of Münster, Germany
𝗔𝗱𝘃𝗶𝘀𝗼𝗿𝘀
Paul Rayson – Lancaster University, UK
Ruslan Mitkov – Lancaster University, UK
Mohamed Gaber – Queensland University of Technology, Australia
𝗦𝘂𝗽𝗽𝗼𝗿𝘁𝗲𝗱 𝗯𝘆
The workshop is supported in part by the Artificial Intelligence Journal, which promotes and disseminates AI research.
𝗖𝗼𝗻𝘁𝗮𝗰𝘁 𝘂𝘀
Contact us through loreslm.contact(a)gmail.com.
Follow us on social media
• LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/loreslm/
• X - https://x.com/LoResLM2026
• BlueSky - https://bsky.app/profile/loreslm.bsky.social
Best Regards
Tharindu Ranasinghe, on behalf of the organising committee, LoResLM 2026
Dr Tharindu Ranasinghe | Lecturer in Security and Protection Science
School of Computing and Communications | Lancaster University
www.lancaster.ac.uk<https://www.lancaster.ac.uk/>
There are two open PhD positions in Natural Language Processing available at the Institute for Computer Science at Leipzig University, in the group of Leonie Weissweiler.
Potential research topics include but aren’t limited to:
- Linguistic Interpretability
- Multilingual Evaluation
- Computational Typology
Positions are fully funded for at least three years and will be affiliated with the ScaDS.AI graduate school. Ideal PhD candidates have a master's degree in computational linguistics, computer science or a related discipline.
Positions: Full-time (TV-L E13) for 3 years
Preferred start date: 1st of April 2026
More information: https://leonieweissweiler.github.io/phd_leipzig.pdf
Application deadline: 15th of January 2026