*** Last Call for Replication and Negative Results ***
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/
The Replications and Negative Results (RENE) Track has been introduced in the software
engineering community for a while and received overwhelmingly positive feedback. This
year, we establish this track at ISSRE and invite researchers to (1) replicate results from
previous papers and (2) publish studies with important and relevant negative or null
results (results that fail to show an effect, yet demonstrate the research paths that did not
pay off).
We also encourage the publication of the negative results or replicable aspects of
previously published work. For example, authors of a published paper reporting a working
solution for a given problem can document in a “negative results paper” other (failed)
attempts they made before defining the working solution they published.
• Replication studies. The papers in this category must go beyond simply re-
implementing an algorithm and/or re-running the artifacts provided by the original paper.
Such submissions should at least apply the approach to new data sets (open-source or
proprietary). A replication study should clearly report on results that the authors were
able to replicate, as well as on the aspects of the work that were not replicable.
• Negative results papers. We seek papers that report on negative results. We seek
negative results for all types of program comprehension research in any empirical area
(qualitative, quantitative, case study, experiment, etc.). For example, did your controlled
experiment not show an improvement over the baseline? Even if negative, results obtained
are still valuable when they are either not obvious or disprove widely accepted wisdom.
Evaluation Criteria
Both Replication Studies and Negative Results submissions will be evaluated according to
the following standards:
• Depth and breadth of the empirical studies
• Clarity of writing
• Appropriateness of conclusions
• Amount of useful, actionable insights
• Availability of artifacts
• Underlying methodological rigor. A negative result due primarily to misaligned
expectations or due to lack of statistical power (small samples) is not a good submission.
The negative result should be a result of a lack of effect, not a lack of methodological
rigor.
Most importantly, we expect replication studies to clearly point out the artifacts upon
which the study is built, and to provide the links to all the artifacts in the submission (the
only exception will be given to those papers that replicate the results on proprietary
datasets that can not be publicly released).
Submission Instructions
Submissions must be original, in the sense that the findings and writing have not been
previously published or under consideration elsewhere. However, as either replication
studies or negative results, some overlap with previous work is expected. Please make
clear in the paper the overlap with and difference from previous work.
All submissions must be in PDF format and conform, at time of submission, to the IEEE
Computer Society Format Guidelines:
(https://www.ieee.org/conferences/publishing/templates).
Authors are strongly encouraged to print the PDF and review it for integrity (fonts,
symbols, equations, etc.) before submission, as defective printing can undermine a
paper’s chance of success. By submitting to the ISSRE RENE Track, authors acknowledge
that they are aware of and agree to be bound by the IEEE Plagiarism FAQ. In particular,
papers submitted to the RENE track must not have been published elsewhere and must not
be under review or submitted for review elsewhere whilst under consideration for ISSRE
2026. Contravention of this concurrent submission policy will be deemed a serious breach
of scientific ethics, and appropriate action will be taken in all such cases. To check for
double submission and plagiarism issues, the chairs reserve the right to (1) share the list
of submissions with the PC Chairs of other conferences with overlapping review periods
and (2) use external plagiarism detection software, under contract to the IEEE, to detect
violations of these policies.
Submissions to the RENE Track can be made via the ISSRE RENE track submission site:
https://easychair.org/conferences?conf=issre2026 .
Submission Length: The ISSRE RENE Track accepts submissions of two lengths:
(1) New replication studies and new descriptions of negative results should have a length
of up to 10 pages, plus 2 pages which may only contain references.
(2) Negative results documented during the preparation of previously published work by
the authors should be described in up to 5 pages, plus 1 page, which may only contain
references (e.g., as previously mentioned, authors of a published paper can document
negative results they obtained while working on it, such as methodologically sound
solutions that did not work).
Important note 1: Both types of papers (replication and negative results) will be included
as part of the main conference proceedings.
Important note 2: The RENE track does not follow a double-anonymous review process.
Publication and Presentation
Upon notification of acceptance, all authors of accepted papers will receive further
instructions for preparing the camera-ready versions of their submissions. If a submission
is accepted, at least one author of the paper is required to have a full registration for ISSRE
2026, attend the conference, and present the paper in person. All accepted papers will be
published in the conference electronic proceedings. The presentation is expected to be
delivered in person, unless this is impossible due to travel limitations (e.g., related to
health or visa). Details about the presentations will follow the notifications.
The official publication date is the date the proceedings are made available in the IEEE
Digital Libraries. The official publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings
related to published work.
Purchases of additional pages in the proceedings are not allowed.
Important Dates (AoE)
• Submission deadline: July 5, 2026
• Notification of acceptance: August 12, 2026
• Camera-ready copy submission: August 19, 2026
• Author registration deadline: 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
*XVII Encontro de Linguística de Corpus (ELC)*
*XIV Escola Brasileira de Linguística Computacional (EBRALC)*
*9 a 12 de novembro de 2026, na Universidade Federal da Bahia*
*ÚLTIMA CHAMADA* para ELC/EBRALC 2026, um dos principais encontros
acadêmicos dedicados às relações entre linguagem, tecnologia e sociedade.
Nesta edição, o evento trará como tema central: *“Linguística de Corpus,
Inteligência Artificial e Transformação Digital: Dados, Métodos e Impactos
Sociais na Era Digital”.*
O evento [presencial] reunirá pesquisadores, estudantes e profissionais
interessados em discutir os desafios e as oportunidades das tecnologias
linguísticas contemporâneas, com foco em inteligência artificial, ética de
dados e análise baseada em grandes volumes de informação.
O *ELC* consolida-se como um espaço de divulgação científica e debate
acadêmico, promovendo o intercâmbio de pesquisas sobre linguagem em
contextos digitais e sociais. Já a *EBRALC* possui caráter formativo,
oferecendo oficinas e minicursos voltados à aplicação prática de
ferramentas de Linguística de Corpus e Processamento de Linguagem Natural.
Nesta edição, o encontro será realizado na *Universidade Federal da Bahia
(UFBA)*, fortalecendo a presença da pesquisa linguística baseada em dados
na região Nordeste e incentivando o diálogo interdisciplinar.
Compartilhem a chamada em suas respectivas instituições e programas de
pós-graduação!
*Indicações de temas*
● Linguística de corpus e análise baseada em dados
● Processamento de Linguagem Natural
● Modelos de linguagem e representação semântica
● Métodos computacionais e análise de dados linguísticos
● Linguagem, discurso e cultura digital
● Ética, governança e impactos sociais da IA
● Linguística de corpus aplicada
● Terminologia, Lexicografia
● Tradução
● Linguística de corpus e ensino
● Linguística de corpus e cultura digital
*Datas importantes*
*28/06/2026* – Submissão de trabalhos para ELC
*28/06/2026* – Submissão de propostas de oficinas/minicursos para EBRALC
*27/07/2026* – Resposta aos autores/proponentes
*09/08/2026* – Envio das versões finais
09 a 12/11/2026 – Realização do evento
*Submissão de propostas*
Acesse o formulário: https://forms.gle/d8uHzNY86xWSh7YSA
*Dúvidas e contato*
Site do evento <https://sites.google.com/view/elc-ebralc2026/in%C3%ADcio>.
elcebralc2026(a)gmail.com | acksoncruz(a)ufba.br <jacksoncruz(a)ufba.br>
--
We have two open PhD positions in our project on Uncertainty Quantification and Communication for Large Language Models.
Large language models (LLMs) have become immensely popular tools for laypeople and experts to find quick answers to any questions, including such that require specialized knowledge or complex reasoning. Their replies are far from always correct. Right or wrong, but often couched in a confident and persuasive tone, they may fool even experts into believing entirely false statements. Accurate and trustworthy LLM tools must know how much confidence a model has in its output and communicate this to the user in a nuanced and understandable form, respecting the principles of communication between humans. Our interdisciplinary project unites machine learning, natural language processing and linguistics. We study how LLMs acquire and verbally communicate (un)certainty, develop novel methods in Bayesian uncertainty quantification and apply them to LLMs in health applications. Using methods from linguistics, we emphasize targeted communication that gets interpreted correctly by diverse users, including laypeople and experts, and create LLMs that communicate their uncertainty according to humanlike standards.
One position is in natural language processing at the IT University of Copenhagen, supervised by me and Jes Frellsen (DTU). In this position, you will develop methods to help LLMs express their uncertainty in a way that humans understand, while matching the perceived uncertainty to the model's internal state. Application deadline 24 June (very soon!). This position was advertised before.
Apply here: https://candidate.hr-manager.net/ApplicationInit.aspx?cid=119&ProjectId=181…
The second position is in machine learning at the Technical University of Denmark, supervised by Jes Frellsen and me. In this position, you will develop efficient machine learning methods to quantify the uncertainty of large language models. This position is new. Application deadline 7 August.
Apply here: https://efzu.fa.em2.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/CandidateExperience/da/sites/CX_2…
Both positions include an extended research stay at the University of Edinburgh, the first with Prof. Hannah Rohde (Linguistics) and the second with Prof. Ivan Titov (NLP/machine learning).
--
Christian Hardmeier
Associate Professor, IT University of Copenhagen
https://christianhardmeier.rax.ch/
Call for Presentations and papers
47th Translating and the Computer Conference (TC47)
Luxembourg, 8 to 10 December 2026
https://asling.org/tc47/ [1]
AI-assisted or AI-eclipsed? Language services between promise and
pressure
AsLing invites submissions for the 47th edition of the Translating and
the Computer Conference (TC47), to be held from 8 to 10 December 2026 in
Luxembourg.
The TC conference series brings together professionals, researchers,
developers and decision-makers from the language industry, academia and
public institutions. TC47 will explore how technological innovation -
particularly AI - is reshaping multilingual communication, raising new
questions about human agency, professional ethics, and sustainable
practices in the language services sector.
Conference theme
_AI-assisted or AI-eclipsed? Language Services between Promise and
Pressure_
_ _
From Machine Translation and LLMs applied to translation, language
professionals face unprecedented change. TC47 invites reflection on how
to navigate this evolving landscape - to ensure that technology empowers
rather than eclipses, and that multilingual communication remains
inclusive, trusted and professionally grounded.
We especially welcome contributions exploring:
* Synergy between human expertise and AI-powered tools
* The role of AI in promoting or undermining inclusion and equity
* Strategies for sustainable and ethical language services
* Cross-sector collaboration between academia, industry, and
institutions
Submissions not focused on AI are equally welcome, particularly those
addressing broader trends in multilingual communication, training,
translation workflows, and evolving professional practices.
We also welcome critical reviews and discussions on:
* The broader impact of AI and automation on the language industry
* Implications for training, education and career development of
language professionals
* Coexistence of AI and traditional practices
* Impact of AI on language professionals
* Adoption barriers and risks for LSPs new to AI
* Future trends in translation, interpreting, and localisation - with
or without AI
* Responsible and sustainable development in language technologies
(environmental, social, professional)
Key areas of interest
Include, but are not limited to:
* Multilingual NLP and large language models
* Human-in-control systems vs. human-in-the-loop AI
* Terminology management and controlled language
* AI readiness and digital transformation in LSPs
* NLP, semantic technologies and linked data
* Collaborative translation tools and environments
* Quality assurance, benchmarking and evaluation
* Training, professional development and digital upskilling
* Inclusive and culturally aware AI systems
* Sustainable practices across the language lifecycle
* Language policy and digital language equality
* FAIR data, corpora and infrastructure
* Ethical implications and human oversight
* Empowering language professionals to shape - not just use - AI tools
* Non-AI innovations and evolutions in translation, interpreting,
localisation or terminology work
We invite:
* Innovative research: studies that expand the boundaries of language
technologies, multilingual NLP, or AI ethics.
* Practical applications: case studies from public or private sector
stakeholders showcasing language technology use and development.
* Workshops and panels: interactive formats encouraging dialogue on
timely, challenging or divisive issues in AI and language work.
* Critical reflections: well-argued contributions questioning current
uses of AI and proposing alternative, human-centred approaches.
* Posters and short talks: snapshots of emerging projects, tools, or
preliminary research.
Submission tracks
All submissions are for talks, within the following categories:
* Research track (Academic)
* 20-minute talk
* Followed by a paper (max. 5,000 words) presenting original,
unpublished research
* User experience track (Non-academic)
* 20-minute talk
* Optional post-facto paper (max. 5,000 words) detailing workflows,
tools or implementation cases
* Posters / Short talks
* 7-8-minute talk
* Followed by a paper (max. 2,000 words) outlining a project,
experiment, or tool
* Workshops and panels
* Interactive sessions with multiple speakers
* Moderators may submit an optional post-facto paper summarising key
takeaways
Submission instructions
Submissions must be made via the START conference submission system:
https://www.softconf.com/p/tc2026 [2]
Important dates
* Deadline for research/user experience talks: 30 June 2026
➤ Notification of acceptance: 31 August 2026
* Deadline for workshops and panels: 31 July 2026
➤ Notification of acceptance: 15 September 2026
* Deadline for posters and short talks: 15 September 2026
➤ Notification of acceptance: 30 September 2026 * Final paper
submission (except post facto workshop and panel papers): 31 October
2026
* Conference dates: 8-10 December 2026
Submission guidelines
Detailed submission guidelines, including templates and formatting
instructions, will be available on the TC47 conference website.
We look forward to your contributions that will help shape the future of
language services through innovation, collaboration, and inclusivity.
Why submit to TC47?
TC47 offers a unique opportunity to engage in a multi-stakeholder
dialogue that bridges research, practice and policy. It is a space for
shared reflection on what language professionals need, what tools
actually deliver and how we co-create a future where humans and AI work
better together.
For any questions, reporting of problems concerning submissions or the
Conference at least, please email tc47-info(a)asling.org. Let's explore,
challenge and shape the future of multilingual communication together!
--
Amal Haddad Haddad (She/her)
Facultad de Traducción e Interpretación
Universidad de Granada |https://www.ugr.es/personal/amal-haddad-haddad
Lexicon Research Group |http://lexicon.ugr.es/haddad
Co-Convenor, BAAL SIG 'Humans, Machines,
Language'|https://r.jyu.fi/humala
Event Coordinator, BAAL SIG 'Language, Learning and Teaching'
===============
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Links:
------
[1] https://asling.org/tc47/
[2] https://www.softconf.com/p/tc2026/
We are excited to announce the Computational Linguistics Fall School 2026!
From 21 September to 2 October 2026, the CL Fall School will take place at the University of Technology Nuremberg in Germany.
The Fall School is aimed at Master's students and early-stage PhD students from linguistics and computer science who want to deepen their knowledge of Computational Linguistics and Natural Language Processing. The focus is on courses covering topics that are not typically offered in regular degree programs. The event is sponsored by the German Society for Computational Linguistics and Language Technology (GSCL) and the Special Interest Group CL of the Linguistic Society of Germany (DGfS-CL).
This year, participants will join in-person courses over two weeks on the following topics:
* Programming for CL and NLP
* Corpus linguistics methodology
* Explainable NLP
* NLP and sociolinguistics
Registration is now open, with early bird registration available until 15 July 2026.
More information and registration: https://cl-fallschool-2026.github.io/
We look forward to welcoming you in Nuremberg!
---
Prof. Michael Roth [he/him]
Natural Language Understanding Lab
University of Technology Nuremberg
Technische Universität Nürnberg
Dear List Moderator
It would be great if you could forward the position below to your mailing list.
Best wishes
Mark
Dear All
The Centre for AI at Zurich University of Applied Sciences is offering a 3-year PhD position in Speech Processing for Swiss German: https://www.zhaw.ch/de/jobs/offene-stellen/stelleninserat/job/detail/3800605
Start: September 2026
Requirement: Good skills in German, but Swiss German not mandatory
Best wishes
Mark
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ZHAW Zurich University of Applied Sciences
CAI Centre for Artificial Intelligence
Prof. Dr. Mark Cieliebak
Technikumstrasse 71, TN 03.64
CH - 8401 Winterthur, Switzerland
Phone: +41 58 934 72 39
Email: ciel(a)zhaw.ch<mailto:ciel@zhaw.ch>
Web: https://www.zhaw.ch/de/ueber-uns/person/ciel
Dear colleagues,
This is a second call for papers for the Data-driven Storytelling: Bridging Semantics, AI, and Narrative (DDS 2026) workshop, co-located with ISWC 2026.
We invite submissions from researchers and practitioners in knowledge graphs, NLP, HCI, and generative AI to explore the role of semantic technologies in enhancing narrative creation and engagement.
Important Dates
Submission Deadline: July 24th, 2026 (23:59 AoE)
Notifications: August 21st, 2026
Camera-ready Version: September 18th, 2026
Workshop Dates: October 25-26, 2026
We welcome submissions of research papers, demos, and short papers addressing topics such as:
• Knowledge graphs and ontologies for storytelling
• AI-driven narrative generation (LLMs, GenAI)
• Benchmarking narrative quality and coherence
• Interactive and participatory storytelling tools
• Ethics and explainability in automated storytelling
Website and submission: https://data-driven-storytelling-workshop.replit.app/
We look forward to your contributions!
Best regards,
--
Pasquale Lisena
EURECOM, Campus SophiaTech
450 route des Chappes, 06410 Biot, France
e-mail: pasquale.lisena(a)eurecom.fr
site: http://pasqlisena.github.io/
Preliminary Call for Papers
We announce that the 32nd International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING 2027) will take place in Macau, China, May 9-14 2027. COLING 2027 invites the submission of long and short papers featuring substantial, original, and unpublished research in all aspects of computational linguistics and natural language processing. More details soon.
* Conference website: https://2027.coling-iccl.org/
Paper Submission Information
This year, COLING will adopt the ARR system for reviewing. Papers may be submitted to the ARR 2026 October cycle. Papers that have already received reviews and a meta-review from ARR from earlier cycles can also be committed to COLING 2027. Please note that NAACL 2027 will also use the October ARR cycle for reviewing.
Important Dates
* ARR submission deadline (long & short papers): October 12, 2026
* Main Conference: May 9–14, 2027
General Chairs
* Katrin Erk, University of Massachusetts Amherst
* Chengqing Zong, Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Program Chairs
* Minlie Huang, Tsinghua University
* Joakim Nivre, Uppsala University
* Alexis Palmer, University of Colorado Boulder
* Sina Zarrieß, University of Bielefeld
* Email: coling2027-pcchairs(a)googlegroups.com<mailto:coling2027-pcchairs@googlegroups.com>
När du har kontakt med oss på Uppsala universitet med e-post så innebär det att vi behandlar dina personuppgifter. För att läsa mer om hur vi gör det kan du läsa här: http://www.uu.se/om-uu/dataskydd-personuppgifter/
E-mailing Uppsala University means that we will process your personal data. For more information on how this is performed, please read here: http://www.uu.se/en/about-uu/data-protection-policy
Our WMT 2026 Shared Task on Multitask LLMs with Limited Resources, co-located with EMNLP 2026 is entering the second phase!
Task website: https://www2.statmt.org/wmt26/limited-resources-llm.html?utm_source=chatgpt…
Google Group: https://groups.google.com/g/llms-with-limited-resources-2026?utm_source=cha…
This shared task extends the WMT 2025 edition on low-resource LLMs by introducing three additional multitask settings:
* Spell Checking
* Grammar Checking
* modern evaluation of Maths Reasoning
The benchmark focuses on low-resource evaluation for three languages: Ukrainian (uk), Upper Sorbian (hsb), andLower Sorbian (dsb).
Participants are required to train a single multitask model based on the Qwen3.5-2B family and jointly evaluate it on all tasks:
* Machine Translation
* Multiple-Choice Question Answering
* Math Reasoning (new)
* Spell Checking (new)
* Grammar Checking (new)
The task aims to study:
* Cross-task transfer in compact LLMs
* Multitask learning under strict parameter constraints
* Efficient adaptation for low-resource Slavic languages
* Interactions between translation, linguistic correction, QA, and reasoning capabilities
So, if you would like to challenge yourself in developing LLMs with restricted resources -- consider our shared task!
Important dates (AoE):
* Training/development data release: Now!
* Test data release: end of June 2026
* Submission deadline: July 2026
We welcome participation from both academia and industry, especially teams interested in multilingual NLP, efficient LLM adaptation, low-resource machine translation, and multitask learning.
Organisers (in alphabetical order):
* Daryna Dementieva
* Marion Di Marco
* Lukas Edman
* Alexander Fraser
* Kathy Hämmerl
* Shu Okabe
All good vibes,
Daryna Dementieva
On behalf of LLMs with Limited Resources Shared task organisers
Two Fully Funded Doctoral Positions in Languages, linguistics and discourse analysis
The University of Eastern Finland is pleased to announce two fully funded doctoral positions within the Marie Skłodowska‑Curie Doctoral Programme (MSCA) in Finland. While the programme broadly focuses on interdisciplinary research on the sustainable forest‑based bioeconomy, two positions are specifically dedicated to language‑related research on sustainability, nature, and discourses.
Key Facts
* Application period: 11 June – 10 August 2026
* Employment duration: 48 months (fulltime)
* Mobility: International mobility required (MSCA rules apply)
* Total project duration: April 2026 – March 2031
* More information of the programme: https://sites.uef.fi/dp-fobi/
Position 1
Environmental Discourses and the Spread of Multilingual (Dis)information in Social Networks
This project invites a doctoral candidate interested in how environment‑related discourses circulate in digital social networks. The research aims to examine how discourses and (dis)information about climate, the environment, and climate‑smart solutions spread across digital media platforms.
Ideal Candidate Profile
* Master’s degree in linguistics (general or subfields), computational linguistics, translation studies, or a closely related discipline
* Competence with large‑scale datasets and computational tools such as R or Python
* Strong expertise in the nuances of language use
* Excellent written and oral English skills
* Ability to work in more than one language is an advantage
* Must meet the language requirements of the Doctoral Programme of the Philosophical Faculty at UEF (see: https://www.uef.fi/en/degree-programme/doctoral-programme-of-the-philosophi…)
Further details: https://sites.uef.fi/dp-fobi/environmental-discourses/
Position 2
Contested Conceptualizations of Forest in Bioeconomy‑Related Discourses
This project focuses on how forest and nature are conceptualized in public discourses related to bioeconomy. It examines the rhetorical, metaphorical, and affective strategies used to frame forest‑based solutions to societal and environmental challenges.
Ideal Candidate Profile
* Master’s degree in languages, translation studies, linguistics, media studies, communication studies, cultural studies, environmental humanities, or a related field
* Excellent written and oral English skills
* Must meet the language requirements of the Doctoral Programme of the Philosophical Faculty at UEF (see: https://www.uef.fi/en/degree-programme/doctoral-programme-of-the-philosophi…)
* Ability to work in more than one language is an advantage
* Prior methodological knowledge of metaphor analysis, rhetorical analysis, or other language‑data methods is beneficial but not required
Further details: https://sites.uef.fi/dp-fobi/contested-conceptualizations/
More information:
Position 1:
Prof. Mikko Laitinen (mikko.laitinen(a)uef.fi<mailto:mikko.laitinen@uef.fi>) and Prof. Maarit Koponen (maarit.koponen(a)uef.fi<mailto:maarit.koponen@uef.fi>)
Position 2:
Dr. Esa Penttilä (esa.penttila(a)uef.fi<mailto:esa.penttila@uef.fi>) and Prof. Tuija Saresma (tuija.saresma(a)uef.fi<mailto:tuija.saresma@uef.fi>)
--
Mikko Laitinen, PhD
Professor of English
mikko.laitinen(a)uef.fi
PI of COMET Weak-tie hypothesis in complex digital networks (Research Council of Finland 2024-28)
PI of FIN-CLARIAH Common Language Resources and Technology Infrastructure (2022-2029)
https://uefconnect.uef.fi/en/person/mikko.laitinen/
--