Call for Participation
AthNLP 2026 - 4th ATHENS NLP SUMMER SCHOOL
============================================
** Preliminary schedule of Speakers, Labs, Events: https://athnlp.github.io/2026/schedule.html
** Info for sponsors: see here<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1J3AC6Yat2sfov0hpRXsCDXnnWLjdm9FI/view>
We invite everyone interested in Natural Language Processing and Machine Learning to participate in the 4th Athens Natural Language Processing Summer School taking place in Athens, Greece at NCSR Demokritos Campus between 2-8 September 2026: https://athnlp.github.io/2026/
Important Dates
--------------------------
* Application Deadline: June 10, 2026 May 31, 2026
* Decision Announcement: June 22, 2026 June 10, 2026
* Registration: July 12, 2026 June 30, 2026
* Summer School: September 2-8, 2026
Description
------------------
Following successful AthNLP editions in 2019, 2024, and 2025, AthNLP 2026 returns to the campus of NCSR Demokritos in Athens. The summer school is organised by NCSR Demokritos, the Athens University of Economics and Business, RC ATHENA, Heriot-Watt University and ELLIS Unit Manchester, in close collaboration with LxMLS (Lisbon, 20–25 July 2026).
The school focuses on Machine Learning methods for NLP, especially Deep Learning and Large Language Models (LLMs), offering: Morning lectures on theory, afternoon hands-on lab sessions, evening research talks, poster sessions, and demos.
Our target audience is:
* Students and researchers in NLP/Computational Linguistics and Machine Learning;
* Computer scientists with interest in NLP and ML;
* Industry professionals seeking deeper understanding of these fields.
While previous experience with the topics will be helpful, the school assumes no previous knowledge of Natural Language Processing and Machine Learning. The only background assumed is basic mathematics and Python programming.
Features of AthNLP:
* Attendance at the Social Event, daily lunch as well as morning and afternoon coffee breaks are included in the registration ee.
* Lecturers are leading researchers in Machine Learning and NLP.
* Students will be able to (optionally) show their current work in poster sessions during coffee breaks.
Confirmed Speakers
---------------------------------
* Antonis Anastasopoulos, George Mason Computer Science
* Isabelle Augenstein, University of Copenhagen
* Desmond Elliott, University of Copenhagen
* Nizar Habash, NYU Abu Dhabi
* Lingpeng Kong, University of Hong Kong
* Julia Kreutzer, Cohere
* Ryan McDonald
* Dong Nguyen, Utrecht University
* Anna Rogers, IT University of Copenhagen
* Emine Yilmaz, University College London
Participation
---------------------
To apply, please fill this<https://ijerm0co.forms.app/athens-nlp-2026-summer-school-final> form.
The fees are the following:
* 300 EUR for students
* 400 EUR for university professors or researchers at a public institute
* 500 EUR for everyone else
AthNLP Summer School Scholarship
---------------------
Applicants can apply for the scholarship through the main application form<https://ijerm0co.forms.app/athens-nlp-2026-summer-school-final>. Scholarship recipients will be selected by the Admissions Committee and notified of the outcome after the acceptance decisions have been finalized. The scholarship provided covers only the registration fee for the AthNLP Summer School. Please note that accommodation, travel expenses, and visa costs are not included and remain the responsibility of the scholarship recipients.
Any questions should be directed to: athnlp(a)athenarc.gr<mailto:athnlp@athenarc.gr>
We are looking forward to your participation!
-- The organizers of AthNLP 2026
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CALL FOR PAPERS
Sci-K – 6th International Workshop on Scientific Knowledge Representation, Discovery, and Assessment in conjunction with the International Semantic Web Conference (ISWC) 2026
October 25/26 2026, Bari, Italy (exact day TBD)
Web: https://sci-k.github.io<https://sci-k.github.io/>,
X: @scik_workshop<https://twitter.com/scik_workshop>,
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/groups/10083235/
Submission deadline: July 24th, 2026 (Extended)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aim and Scope:
Recently, we have experienced a massive increase in the volume of scientific articles and research artefacts (e.g., datasets, models, software packages). This trend is expected to continue and pose challenges, including developing large-scale machine-readable representations of scientific knowledge, making scholarly data and knowledge discoverable and accessible, and designing reliable and comprehensive metrics to assess scientific impact and measure the quality of structured scientific resources and AI-driven research support. Sci-K provides a forum for researchers and practitioners from diverse disciplines to present, educate, and guide research on scientific knowledge. Three themes cover the most important challenges in this field:
Representation. There is a need for flexible, context-sensitive, fine-grained, and machine-actionable representations of scholarly knowledge that are, at the same time, structured, interlinked, and semantically rich: Scientific Knowledge Graphs (SKGs), also known as Research Knowledge Graphs (RKGs). Even more so, in line with the recent Barcelona Declaration on Open Research Information, SKGs/RKGs can power data-driven services to navigate, analyse, and make sense of research dynamics, thus becoming the structural backbone of model scholarly communication and research intelligence, such as AI-driven research assistants. Current challenges relate to the design of ontologies or alternative representation methods that conceptualise scholarly knowledge, model its representation, both metadata as well as richer semantic content such as hypotheses, methods, claims, and research results, and enable exchange. Furthermore, supporting interdisciplinary knowledge representation and cross-domain alignment across heterogeneous scientific fields remains a key challenge. Lastly, application domains such as semantic publishing illustrate how representation approaches can be operationalised in scholarly communication, while also exposing open challenges related to usability, adoption, and the balance between structured and natural language formats.
Discoverability. Scholarly information should be easily findable, discoverable, and visible so that it can be mined and organised within SKGs/RKGs. Discovery tools should be able to crawl the Web and identify scholarly data, whether on a publisher’s website or in institutional repositories, preprint servers, or open-access repositories. This is challenging and requires a deep understanding of both the scholarly communication landscape and the needs of a range of stakeholders: researchers (across different fields and subfields), publishers, funders, and the general public. Other challenges include the discovery and extraction of entities and concepts, the integration of information from heterogeneous sources, the identification of duplicates, the identification of connections between entities, and the identification of conceptual inconsistencies. We are particularly interested in modern systems that integrate AI, NLP, and LLM technologies, including hybrid human-AI workflows where automated methods are combined with expert curation and validation. Lastly, application domains and use cases are needed to better understand for which concrete research tasks ontologies, knowledge graphs, and LLMs can effectively support researchers, such as literature exploration, hypothesis generation, and synthesis of scientific knowledge.
Assessment. Due to the continuous growth in the volume and diversity of research products, and the global movement around Responsible Research Assessment reforms (e.g., DORA, CoARA), inclusive approaches to research evaluation are more relevant than ever. There is a need for reliable, comprehensive, inclusive and equitable metrics and indicators of the scientific impact and merit of publications, datasets, research institutions, individual researchers, and other relevant entities. In addition, there is a growing need for methods to assess the quality, reliability, and usefulness of the underlying representations and discovery systems themselves, including scientific knowledge graphs, ontologies, and AI-driven discovery tools, in terms of their coverage, accuracy, interpretability, and support for research tasks.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Topics of Interest:
*
Representation
*
Data models for the description of scholarly data and their relationships, including rich semantic representations of hypotheses, methods, claims, and research results.
*
Description and use of provenance information of scientific data.
*
Integration and interoperability models of different data sources, including cross-domain and interdisciplinary knowledge alignment
*
NLP and AI approaches that demonstrate related methods and technologies.
*
Relevant knowledge graphs and ontologies.
*
Hybrid or LLM-based approaches for representation and knowledge graph engineering.
*
Infrastructures and metadata standards aligned with the Barcelona Declaration to ensure open and sustainable research information.
*
Applications of representation approaches in scholarly communication, including semantic publishing and structured scientific communication.
*
Discoverability
*
Methods for extracting metadata, entities and relationships from scientific data.
*
Methods for the (semi-)automatic annotation and enhancement of scientific data.
*
Methods and interfaces for the exploration, retrieval, and visualisation of scholarly data.
*
NLP and AI approaches that demonstrate related methods and technologies.
*
Hybrid human-AI workflows for discovery, including curation, validation, and knowledge refinement.
*
Methods supporting interdisciplinary discovery and cross-domain knowledge exploration.
*
Applications and use cases demonstrating how ontologies, knowledge graphs, and LLMs support research tasks, such as literature exploration, hypothesis generation, and knowledge synthesis.
*
Assessment
*
Novel methods, indicators, and metrics for quality and impact assessment of scientific publications, datasets, software, and other research output.
*
Uses of scientific knowledge graphs and citation networks for the facilitation of research assessment.
*
Studies regarding the characteristics or the evolution of scientific impact or merit.
*
NLP and AI approaches that demonstrate related methods and technologies.
*
Approaches to research assessment aligned with responsible research evaluation initiatives (e.g., DORA, CoAra). .
*
Metrics and frameworks for evaluating the quality, completeness, and reliability of scientific knowledge representations, including knowledge graphs and ontologies.
*
Evaluation of discovery systems and AI-driven tools, including their effectiveness, transparency, interpretability, and support for research tasks.
*
Benchmarking and evaluation methodologies for scholarly data infrastructures and AI-based research support systems (using ontologies, LLMs, KGs).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/***** NEW *****/
Exclusive to ISWC 2026 main tracks’ submissions:
We invite you to submit your paper to Sci-K 2026 if it was rejected from the main tracks (Research, Resource, In-Use), provided that it is in scope of the workshop. Info on the website: https://sci-k.github.io<https://sci-k.github.io/>
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Submission Guidelines:
*
Full research papers (up to 12 pages + unlimited pages of appendices and references)
*
Short research papers (up to 6 pages + unlimited pages of appendices and references)
*
Vision/Position papers (up to 6 pages + unlimited pages of appendices and references)
The workshop calls for full research papers, describing original work on the listed topics, and short papers on early research results, new results on previously published works, demos, and projects. In accordance with Open Science principles, research papers may also be in the form of data or software papers (short or long papers). Data papers present the motivation and methodology for creating data sets of value to the community, e.g., annotated corpora, benchmark collections, and training sets. Software papers present the software's functionality, its value to the community, and its applications. To enable reproducibility and peer-review, authors are requested to share the DOIs of datasets and software products described in the articles.
The workshop also calls for vision/position papers that provide insights into new or emerging areas, innovative or risky approaches, or applications that will require extensions to the state of the art. Vision papers do not necessarily have to present results, but should carefully elaborate on the motivation and ongoing challenges of the described area. We particularly welcome papers that address the technical challenges of implementing the principles of the Barcelona Declaration or contribute to the cause of Responsible Research Assessment.
Sci-K will adopt a single-blind review process, and each paper will be reviewed by at least three Program Committee members.
Submissions must be in PDF format and must adhere to the CEURART single-column template. Submissions that do not follow these guidelines, or do not view or print properly, may be rejected without review.
The proceedings of the workshops will be published on CEUR (indexed in Scopus, DBLP and so on).
Submit your contributions following the link: https://sci-k.github.io/2026/#submission<https://sci-k.github.io/2025/#submission>
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Important Dates:
*
Paper submission: July 24th, 2026 (23:59, AoE timezone)
*
Notification of acceptance: August 21st, 2026
*
Camera-ready due: September 13th, 2026 (tentative)
*
Workshop day: October 25/26, 2026 (TBA)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Organising Committee (alphabetical order):
Allard Oelen, TIB, DE
Anna Jacyszyn, FIZ Karlsruhe, DE
Andrea Mannocci, CNR-ISTI, IT
Francesco Osborne, The Open University, UK
Georg Rehm, DFKI, DE
Angelo Salatino, The Open University, UK
Sonja Schimmler, TU Berlin, Fraunhofer FOKUS, DE
Lise Stork, University of Amsterdam, NL
The groups of Vera Demberg
<https://www.uni-saarland.de/lehrstuhl/demberg.html>and Michael Hahn
<https://lacoco-lab.github.io/>invite applications for two PhD positions
at Saarland University, affiliated with the Konrad Zuse School of
Excellence in Learning and Intelligent Systems (ELIZA).
### Topics
Position in Vera Demberg's group:
- computational models of pragmatics and/or theory of mind, with a focus
on inferring the intent of the conversational partner during interaction
- experimental studies and computational models on how individual
differences in human cognition affect human language processing
Position in Michael Hahn's group:
- abilities & limitations of transformers and other LLM architectures,
- LLM interpretability,
- foundations of LLM reasoning,
- foundations of AI safety.
### Key Information
The PhD positions are part of Saarland University research groups of the
Konrad Zuse School of Excellence in Learning and Intelligent Systems
(ELIZA) and will be located in Saarbrücken. Please see the ELIZA PhD
Program Requirements and Arrangements for ELIZA-funded PhD students:
https://eliza.school/opportunities/eliza-phd-program-fully-funded-positions
The positions are intended to begin at the earliest possible date (start
date is negotiable in both directions, i.e., an earlier start as soon as
August 2026 or a later start are possible).
Application deadline: June 18, 2026
### How to apply
Please find further information and application details here:
Position in Vera Demberg's group:
https://www.uni-saarland.de/fileadmin/upload/verwaltung/stellen/Wissenschaf…
Position in Michael Hahn's group:
https://www.uni-saarland.de/fileadmin/upload/verwaltung/stellen/Wissenschaf…
### About ELIZA and the Research Environment
ELIZA is a graduate school in Artificial Intelligence funded by the
German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD). Research and academic training
within ELIZA focus on four key areas: (1) the foundations of Machine
Learning (ML) — including ML-driven fields such as Computer Vision,
Natural Language Processing (NLP), or Robot Learning —, (2) machine
learning systems, (3) applications in autonomous systems, and (4)
transdisciplinary applications of ML in other scientific domains,
ranging from the life sciences to physics. Saarland University is one of
the leading centers for computational linguistics and computer science
in Europe and offers a dynamic and stimulating research environment. It
is renowned for its interdisciplinary research in language, translation,
computation and cognition. The groups are affiliated with the Department
of Computer Science and with the Department of Language Science and
Technology. The Department of Language Science and Technology comprises
about 100 research staff in ten research groups in the fields of
computational linguistics, psycholinguistics, speech processing, and
corpus linguistics. Both departments are part of the Saarland
Informatics Campus, which brings together 800 researchers and 2,000
students from 81 countries. We collaborate closely with the university's
Department of Computer Science, the Max Planck Institute for
Informatics, the Max Planck Institute for Software Systems, and the
German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence (DFKI). Our
researchers and students come from all over the world, and our primary
working language is English.
If you have further questions, please email Vera Demberg
<demberg(a)lst.uni-saarland.de> or Michael Hahn <mhahn(a)lst.uni-saarland.de>.
--
Michael Hahn
Tenure-Track Professor
Saarland Informatics Campus
Saarland University
Group: https://lacoco-lab.github.io/
Personal: https://www.mhahn.info/
CALL FOR PAPERS
The 30th Annual Conference of the Foundation for Endangered Languages,
FEL XXX (2026)
"Endangered Languages and Innovative Technologies: Documentation,
Processing and Revitalisation"
Organised by the Foundation for Endangered Languages(FEL
<https://ogmios.org>)
and the Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales
(Inalco <https://inalco.fr/en>)
Paris, France, 3-5 November 2026
The conference aims to create a space for dialogue between researchers,
technologists, and, crucially, language communities themselves,
concerning the opportunities and challenges presented by innovative
technologies in efforts to prevent language loss and promote the
maintenance and revitalisation of endangered languages. We strongly
encourage submissions from community members, educators, activists, and
practitioners, as well as presentations of collaborative work between
academic and non-academic partners.
More about the theme: https://www.ogmios.org/conferences/2026/theme.php
Important dates:
# 10July2026:Deadlineforsubmission of abstracts
# 13 July 2026: Registration opens
# 01 August2026:Selectedapplicantsinformed
# 15 September2026:Deadlineforsubmission of extended versions of accepted
abstracts
# 03-05November 2026:Conference dates
# 06 November 2026: Excursion (to be confirmed)
Conference website: https://ogmios.org/conferences/2026
Email: fel2026(a)ogmios.org
--
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steven Krauwer, CLARIN/FEL/ELSNET/TLC, Drift 10, 3512 BS Utrecht, NL
*** First Combo Call for Workshop Papers ***
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/
Workshops at ISSRE provide additional opportunities for collaborating and exchanging
information, for both practitioners from industry and academic researchers. The
workshops aim at discussing recent developments and open challenges in engineering
high-assurance software and systems, and they are open to exchange of ideas at an early
stage before maturation. All accepted workshop papers will be published by IEEE in the
ISSRE 2026 accompanying proceedings volume.
The following workshops are confirmed and will be organized co-located with ISSRE 2026.
3rd International Workshop on Advanced Intelligent Software Quality (AISQ 2026)
https://sites.google.com/view/aisq-2026/home
In the era of Industry 4.0, advanced intelligent software systems, such as cyber-physical
systems (CPS), machine learning-based systems, manufacturing systems, digital twin
systems, quantum software applications, multi-agent systems, real-time systems, and
LLM-based systems, are playing an increasingly important role in both the industrial world
and our daily lives. Failures or requirement violations in these systems may lead to
disruptive consequences or even catastrophic outcomes. Nowadays, extensive research,
spanning both formal methods and engineering practices, has been conducted to improve
the quality of advanced intelligent software from various aspects, such as usability,
correctness, reliability, scalability, and robustness. New research topics and directions,
such as prompt engineering and harness engineering, are constantly emerging. Our AISQ
aims to bridge the gap between the increasing complexity of modern systems and the
scalability of quality assurance approaches and fundamental theories. Specifically, AISQ
seeks to collect promising and high-quality research achievements and provide an
international venue to discuss advanced discoveries and emerging trends related to the
quality of Advanced Intelligent Software in both academia and industry.
3rd International Workshop on Human Factors for Software Dependability (HFSD
2026)
https://hfsdworkshop.github.io/
Software is created by humans and widely used by humans, with the ultimate goal of
benefiting society. HFSD is a specialized workshop that brings together researchers from
multiple disciplines to address the human factors that shape the reliability, safety,
security, and availability of software systems. Topics of interest include, but are not
limited to, human error, human–AI collaborative programming, social factors in security
risks, and human-in-the-loop approaches for trustworthy autonomous systems.
1st International Workshop on Quality Assurance of Conversational Agentic Systems
(QA4AGENTS)
https://qa4agents.github.io/
The QA4Agents workshop focuses on quality assurance techniques, methodologies, and
tools for conversational agentic systems, namely systems capable of interacting with users
and external services through natural language. As these systems become increasingly
autonomous and deeply integrated into complex software ecosystems, ensuring their
reliability, robustness, safety, and correctness represents a critical challenge. The
workshop aims to bring together researchers and practitioners from the fields of software
engineering, software testing, artificial intelligence, and runtime verification to discuss
emerging approaches for the evaluation, testing, monitoring, benchmarking, and
validation of conversational agentic systems.
4th IEEE International Workshop on Reliable and Secure AI for Software Engineering
(ReSAISE 2026)
https://resaise.github.io/2026/
Artificial Intelligence is now deeply embedded in software engineering workflows, from
code generation and program repair to vulnerability detection, test generation,
maintenance, and developer support. Large Language Models and agentic AI systems
make these workflows more powerful, but they also introduce dependability questions
that software engineering research cannot treat as an afterthought. ReSAISE’26 brings
together researchers and practitioners from the AI and Software Engineering communities
to discuss how AI-based solutions for software engineering can be made reliable, secure,
trustworthy, and useful in real development settings. The workshop continues the ReSAISE
focus on reliability and security while reflecting the growing role of LLMs, AI coding
assistants, and multi-agent software engineering systems. We welcome contributions that
study the development, deployment, evaluation, and operation of reliable and secure AI
for software engineering, including methods, empirical studies, tools, benchmarks,
experience reports, and lessons learned from negative or unexpected results.
18th International Workshop on Software Aging and Rejuvenation (WoSAR 2026)
https://www.wosar.net/
WoSAR is the premier international venue for discussing the recent advances and
discoveries in theoretical and practical aspects of software aging and rejuvenation
research. Software aging is the progressive degradation of performance and dependability
in computer programs, especially those executing for a long period of time. This
phenomenon has been extensively studied for more than 20 years, as it affects many
systems, from embedded devices to server software to critical systems. Software
rejuvenation, i.e., proactive restart of application (components/threads/tasks), reboot of
VMs or machines, and failover to a replica are the most prominent approaches to combat
software aging. A variety of rejuvenation techniques, scheduling plans, scope and
granularity, have been proposed for different application types and platforms.
Important Dates (AoE)
• Submission deadline: July 20, 2026 (indicative, refer to the workshops' websites)
• Notification of acceptance: August 10, 2026
• Camera-ready copy submission: August 17, 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
[Reminder]
There is a vacancy for a PhD position at the Department of Information Science and Media Studies, at the University of Bergen, Norway. We are seeking a highly motivated candidate for a 4-year PhD position focused on ethical challenges in NLP, including topics such as bias, fairness, safety, and value alignment.
The position offers flexibility for the candidate to develop and shape their own research questions, while contributing to the broader goal of developing and advancing responsible and ethically grounded NLP systems.
Check the full announcement and application details here: https://www.jobbnorge.no/en/available-jobs/job/298789/phd-position-at-the-d…
Closing date: June 7th, 2026
Kind regards,
Samia
---
Samia Touileb
Associate Professor in Natural Language Processing
Department of Information Science and Media Studies, University of Bergen
MediaFutures: Research Center for Responsible Media Technology & Innovation
Fagspråksenteret: Centre for Norwegian Professional Language
The Computational Linguistics Group at Bielefeld University is seeking
applications for a
** Full-time Research Assistant / Ph.D. Student position **
The position is part of the research project FORESTS which aims to
develop a new interdisciplinary approach to using language models (=LMs)
as tools for comparative linguistic research and linguistic theories as
tools for assessing the systemic robustness of LMs. FORESTS is funded
within the DFG-Priority Program "Robust Assessment & Safe Applicability
of Language Modelling: Foundations for a New Field of Language Science &
Technology (LaSTing)" (SPP 2556). For more details on FORESTS and
LaSTing, see https://clause-bielefeld.github.io/projects/.
The research tasks of this PhD position will involve the development and
grammatical analysis of small, multilingual language models (BabyLMs)
and close collaboration with the second PhD student in FORESTS who will
work in the field of general linguistics
(https://linguistlist.org/issues/37/1971/).
The duration of the position is 3 years. Salary is 100% TVL-E13 scale
(about 4.000,- EUR per month before taxes, depending on relevant work
experience).
Application Deadline: 29-Jun-2026
Application Instructions: please visit the application website and press
the button "Apply now" to get to the application form:
https://jobs.uni-bielefeld.de/job/view/4910/research-position-m-f-d-in-comp…
Please do not apply via e-mail, but use the application form following
the link above.
If you have any questions, please contact: sina.zarriess(a)uni-bielefeld.de
--
Prof. Dr. Sina Zarrieß
Computational Linguistics
https://clause-bielefeld.github.io/
University of Bielefeld
Universitätsstr. 25
33615 Bielefeld, Germany
+49 521 106-2534
Would you like to help us create large language models that can express their confidence in a way people understand?
We are offering an opportunity to pursue a fully funded PhD in computer science, specialising in data science/natural language processing, in the context of an innovative research project aiming to improve the trustworthiness of large language models (LLMs) and enable them to signal their confidence effectively to their users. You will be part of an exciting project spanning natural language processing, machine learning and experimental linguistics. You will develop methods to express uncertainty with large language models in a controllable way and align the level of confidence that is communicated with the user’s perceived confidence.
The project has a dual focus on advancing computational methods in natural language processing and validating them in user studies with human participants. The ideal candidate will have a strong interest in both parts of the project and a solid background in at least one of them.
The project is jointly led by Dr. Christian Hardmeier at ITU and Dr. Jes Frellsen at the Technical University of Denmark in close collaboration with Prof. Hannah Rohde at the University of Edinburgh. An extended research stay in Edinburgh is an essential part of the project.
Apply here: https://candidate.hr-manager.net/ApplicationInit.aspx?cid=119&ProjectId=181…
Deadline: 24 June 2026
Very soon, we'll also advertise a second PhD position in the same project at DTU, which will be more focused on machine learning. The advertisement will follow on this list!
--
Christian Hardmeier
Associate Professor, IT University of Copenhagen
https://christianhardmeier.rax.ch/
ICMI 2026 CALL FOR LATE-BREAKING RESULTS (LBR)
===============================================
5-9 October 2026, Napoli - Italy
https://icmi.acm.org/2026/
===============================================
Dear colleagues,
Please find below the Call for Papers for the Late-Breaking Results (LBR) track of the 28th ACM International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2026).
Based on the success of the Late-Breaking Results (LBR) track, ICMI 2026 will continue soliciting submissions for this special venue. The goal of this venue is to provide a way for researchers to share emerging results at the conference. Accepted submissions will be presented in a poster session at the conference, and the extended abstract will be published in the Adjunct Proceedings (Companion Volume) of the main ICMI Proceedings. Like similar venues at other conferences, the LBR venue is intended to allow sharing of ideas, getting formative feedback on early-stage work, and furthering collaborations among colleagues.
* Online Submission
https://new.precisionconference.com/submissions/icmi26a
* Highlights
- Submission deadline: June 21st, 2026
- Notifications: July 15th, 2026
- Camera-ready deadline: August 2nd, 2026
- Conference Dates: October 6–8, 2026
- Submission format: Anonymized short paper (four-page paper in a double-column format, not including references), following the submission guidelines
- Selection process: Peer-Reviewed
- Presentation format: Participation in the conference poster session
- Proceedings: Included in the Adjunct Proceedings (Companion Volume) and ACM Digital Library
- LBR Co-chairs: Daniel Riccio and Hung-Hsuan Huang
* What are Late-Breaking Results?
Late-Breaking Results (LBR) submissions represent work such as preliminary results, provoking and current topics, novel experiences or interactions that may not have been fully validated yet, cutting-edge or emerging work that is still in exploratory stages, smaller-scale studies, or, in general, work that has not yet reached a level of maturity expected for the full-length main track papers. However, LBR papers are still expected to bring a contribution to the ICMI community, commensurate with the preliminary, short, and quasi-informal nature of this track.
* Why submit to the Late-Breaking Results track at ICMI?
Accepted LBR papers will be presented as posters during the conference. This provides an opportunity for researchers to receive feedback on early-stage work, explore potential collaborations, and otherwise engage in exciting, thought-provoking discussions about their work in an informal setting that is significantly less constrained than a paper presentation. The LBR track also offers those new to the ICMI community a chance to share their preliminary research as they become familiar with this field.
Late-Breaking Results papers appear in the Adjunct Proceedings (Companion Volume) of the ICMI Proceedings. Copyright is retained by the authors, and the material from these papers can be used as the basis for future publications as long as there are significant revisions, as per the ACM and ACM SIGCHI policies. LBR papers will be published as ACM extended abstracts in the Adjunct Proceedings. Under ACM Open, extended abstract article types are not subject to Article Processing Charges (APCs).
* Submission Guidelines
Extended Abstract
An anonymized short paper, four-page paper in a double-column ACM conference format, using LaTeX or Word (excluding references). Papers should follow the same guidelines as papers published in the proceedings of the ACM ICMI conference. The paper should be submitted in PDF format and through the ICMI submission system in the "Late-Breaking Results" track. Due to the tight publication timeline, it is recommended that authors submit a very nearly finalized paper that is as close to camera-ready as possible, as there will be a very short timeframe for preparing the final camera-ready version, and no deadline extensions can be granted.
Anonymization
Authors are instructed not to include author information in their submission. In order to help reviewers judge the situation of the LBR relative to prior work, authors should not remove or anonymize references to their own prior work. Instead, authors should refer to their own prior work in the third person during submission. After acceptance, such references can be changed to first person if desired.
* Review Process
LBRs will be evaluated to the extent that they are presenting work still in progress, rather than complete work, which is under-described in order to fit into the LBR format. The LBR track will undergo an external peer review process. Submissions will be evaluated by a number of factors, including (1) the relevance of the work to ICMI, (2) the quality of the submission, and (3) the degree to which it fits the LBR track, for example, in-progress results. More particularly, the quality of the submission will be evaluated based on the potential contributions of the research to the field of multimodal interfaces and its impact on the field and beyond. Authors should clearly justify how the proposed ideas can bring measurable breakthroughs compared to the state of the art.
* Attendance
Similar rules for registration and attendance will be applied for authors of LBR papers as for regular papers. Further information will be made available later on the conference website.
* Website
For updates, please visit: https://icmi.acm.org/2026/late-breaking-results/
* Contact
For further questions, contact the LBR co-chairs, Daniel Riccio and Hung-Hsuan Huang, at:
icmi2026-latebreaking-chairs(a)acm.org
We would be grateful if you could circulate this call among colleagues and interested researchers.
Best regards,
ICMI 2026 LBR Chairs
Daniel Riccio and Hung-Hsuan Huang
[Apologies for multiple postings]
The ELRA Board is launching, for the first time, an *open call for
expressions of interest* from universities, research teams, research
institutes, and academic consortia active in fields related to LREC and
willing to consider hosting the *International Conference on Language
Resources and Evaluation* (LREC) in either 2028 or 2030.
At this stage, ELRA is not requesting formal hosting proposals.
Candidate teams are invited to submit preliminary expressions of
interest using the dedicated *expression-of-interest form
<https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfi_b5f2OpEeMG8FD7644RRSDu5b-8L-Ie…>*.