Dear all,
We are organising the 5th Cardiff NLP Summer Workshop, which will take place on 22–23 June 2026 in the Abacws Building in Cardiff (Wales, UK).
The workshop is especially aimed for PhD students and early-career researchers (and anyone interested in NLP). Registration is free for all participants. Please fill in the expression of interest form<https://forms.gle/ypUBEpVhfoUhSgY16> by 11 April if you are interested in joining the workshop.
Workshop activities include:
* Invited speakers from academia and industry.
* Tutorials.
* Poster session and networking.
* Panel discussion.
Important dates:
* Application period: 28 January – 11 April 2026.
* Notification of acceptance: Late April 2026.
* Workshop: 22–23 June 2026, Cardiff.
For more details, please visit the workshop website: https://www.cardiffnlpworkshop.org/.
Best regards,
The Cardiff NLP Organising Team.
Dear Colleagues,
I am writing to ask whether you would be willing to distribute the following workshop announcement via your mailing list. Thank you.
Kind regards,
Maja (Stegenwallner-Schuetz)
-------
4TH WORKSHOP ON EYE MOVEMENTS AND THE ASSESSMENT OF READING COMPREHENSION
Dates: June 18-20, 2026
Location: University of Koblenz, Germany
Webpage: https://uni-ko.de/UTq3s
## Workshop theme:
Effective and widely available reading assessments are fundamental for educational and clinical settings, as they are instrumental for early diagnosis of reading difficulties, enabling timely and targeted intervention. In this workshop, we explore how eye-tracking combined with machine learning technologies can enhance reading assessments. Our goal is to bring together researchers from various relevant fields, including educational science, cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics, eye-tracking-based reading research, and machine learning. The workshop will provide a platform for exchanging ideas for the next generation of reading assessments aided by eye-tracking and machine learning technologies, as well as inspiring cross-disciplinary research collaborations.
We invite submissions on any topic related to the workshop's theme, including:
* Methods and practices of reading assessment in education (including large scale assessments) * Reading instruction and development * Reading impairments and learning difficulties * Machine reading comprehension * AI, NLP and ML modeling of human reading * Predictive modelling of language proficiency and reading processes underlying comprehension * HCI, human factors, and interactive tutoring systems * Eye tracking technologies * Cognitive models of eye movements in reading * Psycholinguistic analyses of reading * Text readability and simplification
Since the workshop aims to bring together researchers from different communities and addresses a nascent research area, we also welcome contributions that involve eye movements in reading (or alternative methodologies such as self-paced reading and mouse tracking) without directly addressing the assessment of reading comprehension. Likewise, we invite contributions on reading assessments that do not involve eye-tracking.
## Important dates:
* Abstract submission deadline: April 1, 2026 * Acceptance notifications: April 10, 2026 * Application deadline for travel stipends: April 23, 2026 * Registration period ends: May 15, 2026 * Workshop dates: June 18-20, 2026
## Workshop format:
The first two days will feature a structured program, including talks, poster sessions, and group discussions. On the third day, the focus shifts to a more relaxed format, providing participants with the opportunity to network and plan joint activities in an informal setting while enjoying a hike or a boat tour on the rivers.
## Invited speakers (confirmed):
Ido Roll
Faculty of Education in Science and Technology & Faculty of Data and Decision Sciences
Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Israel
Sascha Schroeder
Institute of Psychology
University of Goettingen, Germany
## Submissions:
- We invite submissions of short abstracts of up to 350 words.
- To submit your abstract, please fill in the abstract submission form
at https://forms.gle/Nh7bREP59eyeYQGEA
- Submissions will be reviewed by the workshop organizers primarily with
an eye to relevance.
- We expect to accept 25–35 submissions.
## Venue:
The workshop will be held at the family owned Diehls Hotel which was established in 1919 and is beautifully located directly on the banks of the Rhine River. We booked two interconnected conference rooms Ehrenbreitenstein I and II which can accommodate up to 90 participants. Refreshments throughout the workshop will be provided by the hotel.
A contingent of hotel rooms has been reserved for workshop participants. The hotel also features a highly recommended restaurant, where we will enjoy our social dinner on Thursday evening.
In addition to the conference facilities, attendees will appreciate the hotel’s charming riverside setting. It is in close proximity to historic sites of the city.
The city of Koblenz is well connected to the city of Frankfurt via train. The venue is then accessible from Koblenz main station (Koblenz Hbf) by bus (16-25 Min depending on the bus route) or from the old city by taking a scenic ride across the Rhine river in the famous Koblenz Cable Car.
Contact information for booking and venue description with photos: https://diehls-hotel.de/en/rooms-suites/
## Funding
The workshop is funded by the MultiplEYE COST Action and the University of Koblenz. The workshop will provide financial support to cover travel expenses for a limited number of participants. Authors will be invited to apply for travel funding upon abstract acceptance. Funding may be partial, and priority will be given to junior researchers.
## Workshop organizers
Maja Stegenwallner-Schuetz
Dept. of Special Education
University of Koblenz, Germany
stegenwa(a)uni-koblenz.de
Lena Jaeger
Dept. of Computational Linguistics
University of Zurich, Switzerland
jaeger(a)cl.uzh.ch
Yevgeni Berzak
Faculty of Data and Decision Sciences
Technion, Israel
berzak(a)technion.ac.il
Titus von der Malsburg
Inst. of Linguistics
University of Stuttgart, Germany
titus.von-der-malsburg(a)ling.uni-stuttgart.de
--
JProf. Dr. Maja Stegenwallner-Schütz
Juniorprofessorin/Assistant professor
Förderpädagogik/Sprache unter besonderer Berücksichtigung inklusiver Bildungsprozesse/
Special Education/Language Development in Inclusive Learning Settings
Universität Koblenz
University of Koblenz
Institut für Förderpädagogik/Department of Special Education
Postfach 20 16 02 | D-56016 Koblenz (Postanschrift)
Universitätsstraße 1 | D-56070 Koblenz (Besucheranschrift)
Tel.: +49 261 287 1916
E-Mail: stegenwa(a)uni-koblenz.de
Website: https://www.uni-koblenz.de/de/bildungswissenschaften/institut-fuer-foerderp…
Datenschutz: https://www.uni-koblenz.de/de/datenschutz
The 2st Workshop on DHOW: Diffusion of Harmful Content on Online Web
Workshop
The workshop will be conducted in a *hybrid* format to ensure maximum
participation, accommodating attendees both *online* and in person.
Submission deadline: *July 11 2025 AOE*
*Workshop site*: https://dhow-workshop.github.io/2025/
*Co-located with ACMMM 2025*
https://acmmm2025.org/ <https://lrec-coling-2024.org/>
Dublin, Ireland, 27-31 October 2024
*Important Dates*
Submission deadline: extended to *July 11, 2025*
Notification of acceptance: August 01, 2025
Camera-ready papers due: August 11, 2025
Workshop date: October 27/28, 2025
*Workshop Description*
With the advancement of digital technologies and gadgets, online content
is easily accessible. At the same time, harmful content also gets
spread. There are different harmful content available on different
platforms in multiple languages. The topic of harmful content is broad
and covers multiple research directions. But from the user’s aspect,
they are affected by them all. Often, it is studied individually, like
misinformation and hate speech. Research has been done on one platform,
monolingual, on a particular issue. It leads to harmful content
spreaders switching platforms and languages to reach the user base.
Harmful is not limited to social media but also news media. Spreader
shares harmful content in posts, news articles, comments, and
hyperlinks. So, there is a need to study the harmful content by
combining cross-platform, language, multimodal data and topics.
We will bring the research on harmful content under one umbrella so that
research on different topics (hate speech, misinformation,
disinformation, self-harm, offensive content, etc.) can bring some novel
methods and recommendations for users, leveraging text analysis with
image, audio, and video recognition to detect harmful content in diverse
formats. The workshop will cover the ongoing issue of war or elections
in 2025.
We believe this workshop will provide a unique opportunity for
researchers and practitioners to exchange ideas, share latest
developments, and collaborate on addressing the challenges associated
with harmful contents spread across the Web. We expect that the workshop
will generate insights and discussions that will help advance the field
of societal artificial intelligence (AI) for the development of safer
internet. In addition to attracting high quality research contributions
to the workshop, one of the aims of the workshop is to mobilise the
researchers working on the related areas to form a community.
*Submissions Topics*
•Studying different types of harmful content
•Computational fact-checking & Misinformation Detection
•Role of Generative AI in Mitigating Harmful Content
•Harassment, Bullying, and Hate Speech Detection
•Explainable AI for Harmful Content Analysis
•Multimodal and Multilingual Harmful Content Detection such as fake
news, spam, and troll detection.
•Deepfake and Synthetic Media
•Ethical & Societal Implications of AI in Content Moderation
•Both Qualitative and Quantitative study on harmful content
•Psychological effects of harmful content like mental health
•Approaches for data collection or data annotation using multimodal
large models on harmful content
•User study on the effects of harmful content on human beings
*Submissions*
- Submission Instructions: https://dhow-workshop.github.io/2025/#call
<https://dhow-workshop.github.io/2025/#call>
- Submission Link:
https://openreview.net/group?id=acmmm.org/ACMMM/2025/Workshop/DHOW
<https://openreview.net/group?id=acmmm.org/ACMMM/2025/Workshop/DHOW>
***Workshop organizers*
•Thomas Mandl (University of Hildesheim, Germany)
•Haiming Liu (University of Southampton, United Kingdom)
•Gautam Kishore Shahi(University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany)
•Amit Kumar Jaiswal (University of Surrey, United Kingdom )
•Durgesh Nandini (University of Bayreuth, Germany)
DHOW 2025
Second Call for Papers
The 21st Workshop on Innovative Use of NLP for Building Educational Applications (BEA 2026)
San Diego, California, United States and online
Thursday, July 2 and Friday, July 3, 2026
(co-located with ACL 2026)
https://sig-edu.org/bea/current
Submission: https://softconf.com/acl2026/bea2026/
Submission Deadline: Monday, March 23, 2026, 11:59pm UTC-12
WORKSHOP DESCRIPTION
The BEA Workshop is a leading venue for NLP innovation in the context of educational applications. It is one of the largest one-day workshops in the ACL community with over 100 registered attendees in the past several years. The growing interest in educational applications and a diverse community of researchers involved resulted in the creation of the Special Interest Group in Educational Applications<https://sig-edu.org/members> (SIGEDU) in 2017, which currently has over 400 members.
The 21st BEA will be a 2-day workshop, with one in-person workshop day and one virtual workshop day. The workshop will feature oral presentation sessions and large poster sessions to facilitate the presentation of a wide array of original research. Moreover, there will be a panel discussion on “Transitioning from Academia to the EdTech Industry<https://sig-edu.org/news/bea21-call-for-panelists/>”, a half-day tutorial on Theory of Mind and its Applications in Educational Contexts, and two shared tasks on Vocabulary Difficulty Prediction for English Learners<https://www.britishcouncil.org/data-science-and-insights/bea2026st> and on Rubric-based Short Answer Scoring for German<https://edutec.science/bea-2026-shared-task/> comprising an oral overview presentation by the shared task organizers and several poster presentations by the shared task participants.
The workshop will accept submissions of both full papers and short papers, eligible for either oral or poster presentation. We solicit papers that incorporate NLP methods, including, but not limited to:
* use of generative AI in education and its impact;
* automated scoring of open-ended textual and spoken responses;
* automated scoring/evaluation for written student responses (across multiple genres);
* game-based instruction and assessment;
* educational data mining;
* intelligent tutoring;
* collaborative learning environments;
* peer review;
* grammatical error detection and correction;
* learner cognition;
* spoken dialog;
* multimodal applications;
* annotation standards and schemas;
* tools and applications for classroom teachers, learners and/or test developers; and
* use of corpora in educational tools.
PANEL
We invite applications and nominations for panelists to participate in a panel discussion on “Transitioning from Academia to the EdTech Industry.” Please see the call for panelists here: https://sig-edu.org/news/bea21-call-for-panelists/.
SHARED TASKS
Vocabulary Difficulty Prediction for English Learners
Organizers: Mariano Felice (British Council) and Lucy Skidmore (British Council).
Description: This shared task aims to advance research into vocabulary difficulty prediction for learners of English with diverse L1 backgrounds, an essential step towards custom content creation, computer-adaptive testing and personalised learning. In a context where traditional item calibration methods have become a bottleneck for the implementation of digital learning and assessment systems, we believe predictive NLP models can provide a more scalable, cost-effective solution. The goal of this shared task is to build regression models to predict the difficulty of English words given a learner’s L1. We believe this new shared task provides a novel approach to vocabulary modelling, offering a multidimensional perspective that has not been explored in previous work. To this aim, we will use the British Council’s Knowledge-based Vocabulary Lists (KVL), a multilingual dataset with psychometrically calibrated difficulty scores. We believe this unique dataset is not only an invaluable contribution to the NLP community but also a powerful resource that will enable in-depth investigations into how linguistic features, L1 background and contextual cues influence vocabulary difficulty.
For more information on how to participate and latest updates, please refer to the shared task website: https://www.britishcouncil.org/data-science-and-insights/bea2026st
Rubric-based Short Answer Scoring for German
Organizers: Sebastian Gombert (DIPF), Zhifan Sun (DIPF), Fabian Zehner (DIPF), Jannik Lossjew (IPN), Tobias Wyrwich (IPN), Berrit Katharina Czinczel (IPN), David Bednorz (IPN), Sascha Bernholt (IPN), Knut Neumann (IPN), Ute Harms (IPN), Aiso Heinze (IPN), and Hendrik Drachsler (DIPF)
Description: Short answer scoring is a well-established task in educational natural language processing. In this shared task, we introduce and focus on rubric-based short-answer scoring, a task formulation in which models are provided with a question, a student answer, and a textual scoring rubric that specifies criteria for each possible score level. Successfully solving this task requires models to interpret the semantics of scoring rubrics and apply their criteria to previously unseen answers, closely mirroring how human raters assign scores in educational assessment. Although rubrics have been used as auxiliary information in prior work on free-text scoring and LLM-based approaches, there has been little focused investigation of rubric-based short-answer scoring as a task in its own right. This setting poses distinct challenges, including ambiguous or underspecified rubric criteria and a wide range of valid student responses. With this shared task, we aim to stimulate systematic research on rubric-based scoring, assess how well current NLP methods can reason over rubrics, and identify promising modeling strategies. Additionally, by providing a German-language dataset, the shared task contributes a new non-English benchmark to the field.
For more information on how to participate and latest updates, please refer to the shared task website: https://edutec.science/bea-2026-shared-task/
TUTORIAL
Theory of Mind and Application in Educational Context
Organizers: Effat Farhana (Auburn University), Maha Zainab (Auburn University), Qiaosi Wang (Carnegie Mellon University), Niloofar Mireshghallah (Carnegie Mellon University), Ramira van der Meulen (Leiden University), Max van Duijn (Leiden University).
Description: This tutorial examines the integration of Theory of Mind (ToM) into AI-driven online tutoring systems, focusing on how advanced technologies, such as Large Language Models (LLMs), can model learners’ cognitive and emotional states to provide adaptive, personalized feedback. Participants will learn foundational principles of ToM from cognitive science and psychology and how these concepts can be operationalized in AI systems. We will discuss mutual ToM, where both AI tutors and learners maintain models of each other’s mental states, and address challenges such as detecting learner misconceptions, modeling meta-cognition, and maintaining privacy in data-driven tutoring. The tutorial also presents hands-on demonstrations of Machine ToM applied to programming education using datasets such as CS1QA and CodeQA, which contain Java and Python samples. By combining conceptual foundations, research insights, and practical exercises, this tutorial provides a comprehensive overview of designing human-centered, ethically aware, and cognitively informed AI tutoring systems.
IMPORTANT DATES
All deadlines are 11.59 pm UTC-12 (anywhere on earth).
* Submission deadline: Monday, March 23, 2026
* Notification of acceptance: Tuesday, April 28, 2026
* Camera-ready papers due: Tuesday, May 12, 2026
* Workshop: Thursday, July 2, and Friday, July 3, 2026
SUBMISSION INFORMATION
We will be using the ACL Submission Guidelines for the BEA Workshop this year. Authors are invited to submit a long paper of up to eight (8) pages of content, plus unlimited references; final versions of long papers will be given one additional page of content (up to 9 pages) so that reviewers’ comments can be taken into account. We also invite short papers of up to four (4) pages of content, plus unlimited references. Upon acceptance, short papers will be given five (5) content pages in the proceedings. Authors are encouraged to use this additional page to address reviewers’ comments in their final versions. We generally follow ACL submission guidelines and will require that all submitted papers should include a dedicated "Limitations" section, which does not count toward the page limit.
Papers which describe systems are also invited to give a demo of their system. If you would like to present a demo in addition to presenting the paper, please make sure to select either “long paper + demo” or “short paper + demo” under “Submission Category” in the START submission page.
Previously published papers cannot be accepted. The submissions will be reviewed by the program committee. As reviewing will be blind, please ensure that papers are anonymous. Self-references that reveal the author’s identity, e.g., “We previously showed (Smith, 1991) …”, should be avoided. Instead, use citations such as “Smith previously showed (Smith, 1991) …”.
We have also included conflict of interest in the submission form. You should mark all potential reviewers who have been authors on the paper, are from the same research group or institution, or who have seen versions of this paper or discussed it with you.
Link for submissions: https://softconf.com/acl2026/bea2026/
DOUBLE SUBMISSION POLICY
We will follow the official ACL double-submission policy. Specifically, papers being submitted both to BEA and another conference or workshop must:
* Note on the title page the other conference or workshop to which they are being submitted.
* State on the title page that if the authors choose to present their paper at BEA (assuming it was accepted), then the paper will be withdrawn from other conferences and workshops.
ORGANIZING COMMITTEE
* Ekaterina Kochmar, MBZUAI
* Andrea Horbach, Hildesheim University
* Ronja Laarmann-Quante, Ruhr University Bochum
* Marie Bexte, FernUniversität in Hagen
* Anaïs Tack, KU Leuven, imec
* Victoria Yaneva, National Board of Medical Examiners
* Bashar Alhafni, MBZUAI
* Zheng Yuan, University of Sheffield
* Jill Burstein, Duolingo
* Stefano Bannò, Cambridge University
Workshop contact email address: bea.nlp.workshop(a)gmail.com<mailto:bea.nlp.workshop@gmail.com>
PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Tazin Afrin; David Alfter; Bashar Alhafni; Maaz Amjad; Nischal Ashok Kumar; Stefano Bannò; Michael Gringo Angelo Bayona; Lee Becker; Beata Beigman Klebanov; Luca Benedetto; Bhavya Bhavya; Serge Bibauw; Ted Briscoe; Dominique Brunato; Jie Cao; Dan Carpenter; Jeevan Chapagain; Guanliang Chen; Mei-Hua Chen; Christopher Davis; Orphee De Clercq; Kordula De Kuthy; Jasper Degraeuwe; Dushyanta Dhyani; Yuning Ding; Rahul Divekar; Kosuke Doi; Mohsen Dorodchi; Yo Ehara; Hamza El Alaoui; Sarra El Ayari; Andrew Emerson; Yao-Chung Fan; Mariano Felice; Nigel Fernandez; Michael Flor; Thomas François; Thomas Gaillat; Ananya Ganesh; Ritik Garg; Sebastian Gombert; Samuel González López; Cyril Goutte; Abigail Gurin Schleifer; Na-Rae Han; Ching Nam Hang; Jiangang Hao; Aki Härmä; Hasnain Heickal; Chieh-Yang Huang; Chung-Chi Huang; Radu Tudor Ionescu; Elsayed Issa; N J Karthika; Anisia Katinskaia; Elma Kerz; Fazel Keshtkar; Grandee Lee; Ji-Ung Lee; Arun Balajiee Lekshmi Narayanan; Jiazheng Li; Anastassia Loukina; Wanjing Anya Ma; Jakub Macina; Lieve Macken; Nitin Madnani; Arianna Masciolini; Detmar Meurers; Michael Mohler; Phoebe Mulcaire; Ricardo Muñoz Sánchez; Sungjin Nam; Diane Napolitano; Huy Nguyen; S Jaya Nirmala; Sergiu Nisioi; Michael Noah-Manuel; Adam Nohejl; Amin Omidvar; Daniel Oyeniran; Robert Östling; Ulrike Pado; Yannick Parmentier; Ted Pedersen; Mengyang Qiu; Martí Quixal; Chatrine Qwaider; Arjun Ramesh Rao; Vivi Peggie Rantung; Manikandan Ravikiran; Hanumant Redkar; Robert Reynolds; Saed Rezayi; Frankie Robertson; Aiala Rosá; Andreas Säuberli; Nicy Scaria; Ronald Seoh; Pritam Sil; Astha Singh; Lucy Skidmore; Maja Stahl; Katherine Stasaski; Helmer Strik; Hakyung Sung; Sowmya Vajjala; Elena Volodina; Nikhil Wani; Alistair Willis; Fabian Zehner.
If you would like to join our PC, please fill in the form: https://forms.gle/gtKo6Bx6EFmwWf9w5
Final call for papers: 2nd Workshop on Computational Humor (CHum 2026)
======================================================================
The 2nd Workshop on Computational Humor (CHum 2026) will take place
virtually on July 3 or 4, 2026 as part of the 64th Annual Meeting of the
the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL 2026).
Scope and topics
----------------
CHum 2026 aims to foster further work on modeling the processes of humor
with current methods in computational linguistics and natural language
processing, against the theoretical backdrop of humor research and with
reference to relevant corpora of textual, visual, and multimodal
materials. A principal goal of the workshop is to unite researchers who
can together probe the limits of various meaning representations --
symbolic, neural, and hybrid -- for humor processing.
We welcome contributions on any topic relevant to the computational
processing of humor, including but not limited to the following:
* LLMs, knowledge representation
* Resources and evaluation
* Human-computer interaction
* Computer-mediated communication
* Assisted content creation
* Machine and computer-assisted translation
* Digital humanities applications
* Formal modeling of humor
* Proof-of-concept humor detection and classification
Particularly encouraged are submissions describing inter- or
multi-disciplinary work, whether completed or in progress, and position
papers that critically discuss the past, present, and future of
computational humor systems.
Submission instructions
-----------------------
Long and short papers should be formatted according to the same
guidelines for the main ACL 2026 conference papers
<https://2026.aclweb.org/calls/main_conference_papers/> and submitted
through START: <https://softconf.com/acl2026/chum2026/>
Important dates
---------------
All deadlines are at 23:59 UTC-12:00 ("anywhere on Earth").
* Initial submission: March 12, 2026 (extended from March 5, 2026)
* Notification of acceptance: April 28, 2026
* Camera-ready submission: May 12, 2026
* Workshop: July 3 or 4, 2026
Organizers
----------
* Christian F. Hempelmann, East Texas A&M University
* Julia Rayz, Purdue University
* Ori Amir, Fulbright University Vietnam
* Tristan Miller, University of Manitoba
* Tiansi Dong, University of Cambridge
Further information
-------------------
* Website: <https://chumweb.org/>
* E-mail: chum(a)groups.io
--
Dr. Tristan Miller, Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science, University of Manitoba
https://clam.cs.umanitoba.ca/ | Tel. +1 204 474 6792
HUMIC – Humans and Machines in Conversation: Linguistic, Social and Relational Perspectives on Conversational AI
https://www.ias.surrey.ac.uk/event/humic-humans-and-machines-in-conversatio…
University of Surrey | In-person Workshop
16th June 2026
As generative AI and large language models reshape how we interact with chatbots, voice assistants and conversational agents, HUMIC focuses on the linguistic, social and relational dimensions of these technologies—areas often overlooked in technical development. HUMIC<https://www.ias.surrey.ac.uk/event/humic-humans-and-machines-in-conversatio…>, led by Dr. Doris Dippold and supported by the Surrey Institute for Advanced Studies, the BAAL Special Interest Group ‘Humans, Machines, Languages’ and the Surrey Institute for People-Centred AI, aims to foster interdisciplinary dialogue and connect academic insights with industry practice. Such insights are vital for developing conversational technologies that are context-aware, socially responsive, and cater for their users’ rapport needs.
We invite contributions that explore the complex interplay between humans and machines with reference to these factors. We welcome submissions from researchers working across the disciplines, for example but not limited to linguistics, psychology, sociology, natural language processing, UX research, and conversation design. Submissions may focus on any domain. We particularly welcome submissions from industry, focusing for example on common challenges and practices in designing conversational systems with linguistic, social and relational perspectives in focus.
During the workshop, participants will be invited to participate in a collaborative session. The session will encourage the generation of new research ideas and explore how research can respond to industry challenges. Selected works resulting from this workshop will be considered for a potential special issue.
Keynote Speakers:
* Maaike Groonewege (ConvoCat, Netherlands)<https://www.linkedin.com/in/maaikegroenewege/?originalSubdomain=nl> – Linguist and Conversation Designer
* Bettina Migge (University College Dublin, Ireland)<https://people.ucd.ie/bettinamigge> – Language and AI Technology
* Christian Hildebrand (University of St Gallen, Switzerland)<https://www.ibt.unisg.ch/team/christian-hildebrand/> – AI and Language in Consumer Behaviour
We invite 300-word proposal on topics related to the workshop. Themes of interest include, but are not limited to:
* Linguistic and pragmatic dimensions of human-machine dialogue
* Social and relational dynamics in conversational AI, including rapport-building, empathy and trust
* Designing inclusive and accessible conversational systems that account for the needs of diverse users (linguistic, cultural, neurodiverse)
* Linguistic choices and their role in shaping user expectations, satisfaction, engagement and decision-making
* Evaluation methods and metrics for linguistic, social and relational outcomes in human–machine interaction (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed-methods)
* Model training and fine-tuning strategies for enhancing linguistic, social and relational outcomes in human–machine interaction.
* Interdisciplinary and academic-industry collaboration in the development of linguistically, socially and relationally aware conversational technologies
Accepted submissions will be assigned to oral or poster presentation formats according to the mode of presentation best suited to their content.
Submission Details:
* Abstract length: 300 words (excluding title, authors and references)
* Deadline: 16th March 2026
* Notification of acceptance: 27th April 2025
* Submission: HUMIC – Humans and Machines in Conversation<https://forms.office.com/e/gyLXEs9QFi>
ORGANISERS
Dr Doris Dippold<https://www.surrey.ac.uk/people/doris-dippold>, Literature and Languages, University of Surrey
Dr Fabio Fasoli<https://www.surrey.ac.uk/people/fabio-fasoli>, School of Psyschology, University of Surrey
Dr Di Fu<https://www.surrey.ac.uk/people/di-fu>, School of Psychology, University of Surrey
Dr Richard Green<https://www.surrey.ac.uk/people/richard-green>, School of Health Sciences, University of Surrey
Assistant Professor Amal Haddad<https://www.ugr.es/personal/amal-haddad-haddad>, University of Granada
Prof Constantin Orasan<https://www.surrey.ac.uk/people/constantin-orasan>, Literature and Languages, University of Surrey
Dr Valentina Pitardi<https://www.surrey.ac.uk/people/valentina-pitardi>, Strategy, Marketing and International Business, University of Surrey
---
Prof Constantin Orăsan
Professor of Language and Translation Technologies
Centre for Translation Studies<https://www.surrey.ac.uk/centre-translation-studies>
Personal page: https://www.surrey.ac.uk/people/constantin-orasan
Office: 06LC03, Phone: +44 (0) 1483 68 4115
Library and Learning Centre, University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey, GU2 7XH, UK
Apologies for cross-posting.
----------------------------------------
The International Conference on Spoken Language Translation
ACL – 23rd IWSLT 2026 – First Call for Participation
July 3-4, 2026 - San Diego, CA, USA
http://iwslt.org
The International Conference on Spoken Language Translation (IWSLT) is the
premier annual conference for all aspects of Spoken Language Translation.
Every year, the conference organises and sponsors open evaluation campaigns
around key challenges in simultaneous and consecutive translation, under
real-time/low-latency or offline conditions and under low-resource or
multilingual constraints. System descriptions and results from
participants’ systems and scientific papers related to key algorithmic
advances and best practices are presented.
IWSLT is the venue of the SIGSLTs, the Special Interest Group on Spoken
Language Translation of ACL, ISCA and ELRA. With a track record of 22
years, IWSLT benchmarks and proceedings serve as reference for all
researchers and practitioners working on speech translation and related
fields.
The 23rd edition of IWSLT will be run as an ELRA/ACL event and co-located
with ACL 202 <https://2026.aclweb.org/>6 on July 3-4, 2026. It will be run
as a hybrid event.
Important Dates
January 1, 2026: Release of shared task training and dev data
March 15, 2026: Scientific paper submission deadline
Apr 1-15, 2026: Evaluation period
April 24, 2026: System description paper submission deadline
May 15, 2026: Notification of acceptance
June 1, 2026: Camera-ready deadline (all papers)
July 3-4, 2026: IWSLT conference
Evaluation
The IWSLT 2026 features shared tasks <https://iwslt.org/2026/#shared-tasks>
that address the following focus areas:
-
Speech to Text Translation track: Offline, Low-resource
-
Customized Speech Translation track: Compression, Subtitling,
Simultaneous
-
Speech Generation track: Indic S2S, African S2S, Cross-lingual Voice
Cloning
-
Instruction Following track
-
Speech Translation Metrics track
Training and development data for each shared task will be prepared and
released by the respective organisers (for further information on this
initiative, please refer to the website). Participants will receive
instructions about how to submit their runs. In addition, participants have
the opportunity to present their work through a system paper that will be
published in the ACL Proceedings.
Conference
IWSLT also invites submissions of scientific papers to be published in the
ACL Proceedings and presented either in oral or poster format. The
conference selects high-quality, original contributions on theoretical and
practical issues of spoken language translation research, technologies and
applications. Submissions will be accepted directly through the IWSLT
submission site (to be announced at the conference website
<https://iwslt.org/2026/>). We will also accept commitments of submissions
with reviews from the ACL Rolling Review.
Additionally, to foster cross-pollination of ideas, the conference also
invites the presentation of papers on speech translation recently published
elsewhere. Please note that this is for non-archival presentation of papers
relevant to speech translation already published in other venues (e.g., ACL
2026 Findings papers, speech, NLP or MT conferences). Submissions for this
category will be accepted through a dedicated form (to be announced at
the conference
website <https://iwslt.org/2026/>). Papers will be checked for relevance to
IWSLT and assigned either oral or poster presentation slots if selected.
Contact
Please send an email to iwslt-evaluation-campaign(a)googlegroups.com if you
have any questions related to the shared tasks.
Thanks,
Marcello, Alex, Antonios, Luisa, Matteo, Jan, Sebastian, Marco Elizabeth,
Atul
(IWSLT organisers)
Call for Papers: ArgMining 2026 – Workshop on Argument Mining
The Workshop on Argument Mining (ArgMining) provides a regular forum for presenting and discussing cutting-edge research in argument mining (a.k.a. argumentation mining) for academic and industry researchers. Continuing a series of twelve successful previous workshops, the 2026 edition welcomes submissions of long papers, short papers, extended abstracts, and PhD proposals.
Workshop Theme
The 2026 edition of ArgMining places a special focus on understanding and evaluating arguments in both human and machine reasoning. With this theme, we broaden the workshop’s scope to include reasoning—a long-standing area of AI research that has recently gained renewed interest within the ACL community, driven by the latest generation of large language models (LLMs).
Reasoning is tightly connected to argumentation, as it represents, analyzes, and evaluates the process of reaching conclusions based on available information. Viewing argumentation as a paradigm for capturing reasoning enables the evaluation of machines (particularly LLMs) based on their ability to address argument mining tasks.
Topics of Interest
Topics include, but are not limited to:
* Automatic extraction of textual patterns describing argument components in human and machine argumentation
* Cross-lingual, cross-cultural, and multi-perspective argument mining and reasoning
* Argument mining and generation from multimodal and/or multilingual data
* Explainability in argument mining through reasoning
* Modeling, assessing, and critically reflecting on the argumentation capabilities of LLMs
* Novel benchmarks in argument mining addressing recent developments in LLM reasoning
* Guidelines for assessing and documenting reasoning processes reflected in benchmarks
* Annotation guidelines, linguistic analysis, and argumentation corpora
* Real-world applications (e.g., social sciences, education, law, scientific writing; misinformation detection)
* Integration of commonsense and domain knowledge into argumentation models
* Combining information retrieval with argument mining (e.g., argumentative search engines)
* Ethical aspects and societal impact of argument mining and LLM reasoning
Submissions from all application areas are welcome.
Submission Types
The workshop accepts the following submission types:
* Long Papers (archival)
* Short Papers (archival)
* Extended Abstracts (non-archival)
* PhD Proposals (non-archival)
Accepted contributions will be presented as oral or poster presentations.
Archival Submissions
* Long papers:
* Substantial, original, completed, and unpublished work
* Up to 8 pages (excluding references)
* Unlimited references
* Up to 2 appendix pages
* 1 additional page in the final version for reviewer comments
* Short papers:
* Original, unpublished work with a focused contribution
* Not shortened versions of long papers
* Up to 4 pages (excluding references)
* Unlimited references
* Up to 1 appendix page
* 1 additional page in the final version for reviewer comments
Non-Archival Submissions
* Extended abstracts:
* Up to 2 pages including references
* 1 additional appendix page for tables/figures
* Selection based on workshop fit and the special theme
* Priority given to abstracts with doctoral students as first authors unable to present at *CL conferences due to visa restrictions
* PhD proposals:
* Up to 4 pages
* Description of PhD project, research challenges, contributions, and future directions
* Presented in a dedicated poster session for feedback and discussion
Multiple Submissions Policy
ArgMining 2026 will not consider papers simultaneously under review elsewhere. Submissions overlapping significantly (>25%) with active ARR submissions will not be accepted. ARR-reviewed papers are allowed if reviews and meta-reviews are available by the ARR commitment deadline.
Submission Format
* Two-column ACL 2026 format
* LaTeX or Microsoft Word templates
* PDF submissions only
* Submissions via OpenReview
Important Dates
* Direct paper submission deadline (archival): March 5, 2026
* ARR commitment deadline (archival): March 24, 2026
* Direct paper submission deadline (non-archival): April 7, 2026
* Notification of acceptance: April 28, 2026
* Camera-ready deadline: May 12, 2026
* Workshop dates: July 2–3, 2026
Review Policy
Long and short papers will follow ACL double-blind review policies. Submissions must be anonymized, including self-references and links. Papers violating anonymity requirements will be rejected without review. Demo descriptions are exempt from anonymization.
Best Paper Award
ArgMining 2026 will present a Best Paper Award to recognize significant contributions to argument mining research. All accepted papers are eligible.
Contact and Information
Website: https://argminingorg.github.io/2026/
Email: argmining.org [at] gmail.com
Workshop Organizers
Mohamed Elaraby (University of Pittsburgh)
Annette Hautli-Janisz (University of Passau)
John Lawrence (University of Dundee)
Elena Musi (University of Liverpool)
Julia Romberg (GESIS Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences)
Federico Ruggeri (University of Bologna)
SECOND CfP: The 33rd International Conference on Head-Driven Phrase
Structure Grammar (Norway)
Short Title: HPSG 2026
Date: 03-Aug-2026 - 04-Aug-2026
Location: Western Norway University of Applied Sciences (Bergen, Norway)
Contact: Petter Haugereid, Berthold Crysmann & Antonio Machicao y Priemer
Email: hpsg2026(a)easychair.org
Conference Website: https://petterha.github.io/hpsg2026/
Conference fee: 68€ (faculty) / 43€ (student)
Linguistic Field(s): General Linguistics; Linguistic Theories;
Computational Linguistics; Syntax; Morphology; Semantics; Cognitive
Science;
Meeting Description:
The 33rd International Conference on Head-Driven Phrase Structure
Grammar will be held on August 03-04 August 2026 at the Western Norway
University of Applied Sciences (Bergen, Norway).
The HPSG 2026 conference will be a two-day main conference (03-04
August). It will be co-located with the DELPH-IN meeting held over the
preceding week (27-31 July).
Anonymous abstracts are invited that address linguistic, foundational,
or computational issues relating to or in the spirit of the framework of
Head-Driven Phrase Structure Grammar. Submissions should be 4 pages
long, + 1 page for data, figures & references. They should be submitted
in PDF format. The submissions should not include the authors’ names,
and authors are asked to avoid self-references. Presentations are
in-person by default, although exceptions can be negotiated.
All abstracts should be submitted by 10 April 2026, via Easychair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=hpsg2026
Deadline for abstracts: 10 April 2026
Reviews due: 10 May 2026
Notification of acceptance: 15 May 2026
Conference: 03-04 August 2026
Keynote speakers:
* Dag Trygve Truslew Haug (Universitetet i Oslo, Norway)
* Nurit Melnik (Open University, Israel)
Conference proceedings submission: 15 October 2026
All abstracts will be reviewed anonymously by at least two reviewers.
Each accepted abstract will be given 30 minutes for presentation.
Additionally, 10 minutes will be reserved for discussion.
A call for contributions to the proceedings will be issued after the
conference. The proceedings will undergo a separate (final) round of
reviews (accept/reject), to enable indexing of the proceedings. The
proceedings of previous conferences are available at:
https://proceedings.hpsg.xyz/
Programme Committee:
- Anne Abeillé (LLF, Université de Paris)
- Gabrielle Aguila-Multner (Universität Zürich)
- Emily M. Bender (University of Washington)
- Gabriela Bîlbîie (University of Bucharest)
- Felix Bildhauer (Institut für Deutsche Sprache Mannheim)
- Olivier Bonami (Universite Paris Diderot)
- Francis Bond (Palacký University)
- Rui Chaves (University at Buffalo, SUNY)
- Berthold Crysmann (CNRS - LLF, Université de Paris)
- Petter Haugereid (Western Norway University of Applied Sciences)
- Fabiola Henri (University at Buffalo)
- Anke Holler (University of Göttingen)
- Jong-Bok Kim (Kyung Hee University)
- Jean-Pierre Koenig (University at Buffalo, The State University of New
York)
- Andy Lücking (Goethe University Frankfurt)
- Antonio Machicao y Priemer (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
- Jakob Maché (Universidade de Lisboa)
- Nurit Melnik (The Open University of Israel)
- Luis Morgado Da Costa (Palacký University Olomouc)
- Stefan Müller (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
- Tsuneko Nakazawa (The University of Tokyo)
- Joanna Nykiel (UC Davis)
- David Oshima (Nagoya University)
- Gerald Penn (University of Toronto)
- Frank Richter (Goethe Universität Frankfurt)
- Manfred Sailer (Goethe Universität Frankfurt)
- Frank Van Eynde (Katholieke Universiteit Leuven)
- Giuseppe Varaschin (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)
- Elodie Winckel (Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg)
- Shûichi Yatabe (The University of Tokyo)
- Eun-Jung Yoo (Seoul National University)
- Olga Zamaraeva (Universidade da Coruña)
--
Dr. Antonio Machicao y Priemer
Department of German Studies and Linguistics - Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Homepage: https://hu.berlin/aMyP
Project: Building register into the architecture of language – an HPSG account (CRC 1412, Project A04)
Series: Textbooks in Language Science (https://langsci-press.org/catalog/series/tbls)
2nd CALL FOR ABSTRACTS
[only three weeks left to submit]
*** 2026 NARNiHS Research Incubator
*** North American Research Network in Historical Sociolinguistics
*** 8th edition
*** 07-09 May 2026 -- entirely online!
==> Abstract Submission Deadline
==> 23 March 2026, 11:59 PM (U.S. Eastern Time)
The 2026 NARNiHS Research Incubator is an entirely online event (**with free registration**). This event offers an opportunity for scholars in historical sociolinguistics from all over the world to participate in discussions of cutting-edge research without the limitations imposed by international travel. We encourage our fellow historical sociolinguists and scholars from related fields in our global scholarly community to join us online for our Research Incubator this spring.
Abstract submission deadline: 23 March 2026, 11:59 PM (U.S. Eastern Time)
Abstract submission online: https://easyabs.linguistlist.org/submit/2026_Incubator/
The North American Research Network in Historical Sociolinguistics (NARNiHS) is accepting abstracts for its 2026 NARNiHS Research Incubator. The 8th edition of this inclusive NARNiHS event seeks to provide a collaborative environment where presenters bring work that is in-progress, exploratory, proof-of-concept, prototyping. The Incubator's audience actively participates in workshopping these new ideas, brainstorming along with the presenters to forge scholarly paths and develop research solutions. We see the NARNiHS Research Incubator as a place for testing and pushing boundaries; developing new theories, methods, models, and tools in historical sociolinguistics; seeking feedback from peers; and engaging in productive assessment of fledgling ideas and nascent projects.
NARNiHS welcomes papers in all areas of historical sociolinguistics, which is understood as the application/development of sociolinguistic theories, methods, and models for the study of historical language variation and change over time, or more broadly, the study of the interaction of language and society in historical periods and from historical perspectives. Thus, a wide range of linguistic areas, subdisciplines, and methodologies easily find their place within the field, and we encourage submission of abstracts that reflect this broad scope.
Successful abstracts for this research incubator environment will demonstrate thorough grounding in historical sociolinguistics, scientific rigor in the formulation of research questions, and promise for rich discussion of ideas. Abstracts should be explicit about which theoretical frameworks, methodological protocols, and analytical strategies are being applied or critiqued. Data sources and examples should be sufficiently (if briefly) presented, so as to allow reviewers a full understanding of the scope and claims of the research. Please note that the connection of your research to the field of historical sociolinguistics should be explicitly outlined in your abstract. Abstracts should not exceed one page (not including examples and references, see below). Failure to adhere to these criteria will likely result in rejection.
We are soliciting abstracts for 25-minute presentations. Presenters will have the entire 25 minutes for their presentations, with discussion happening in the "incubation session" at the end of each panel. Presentations will be grouped into thematic panels of three presentations, each panel followed by an hour-long discussion with the audience led by specialists, creating a brainstorming/workshopping environment that encourages maximum exchange of ideas. Discussion will encompass specific feedback on the individual papers as well as consideration of overarching questions of theory, methods, and models emerging from the papers. To facilitate such discussion, authors will be required to submit a draft of their presentation materials for distribution to the panel discussants and to the other presenters a few days prior to the start of the conference.
Abstracts will be accepted until Monday, 23 March 2026 -- late abstracts will not be considered.
*** Abstract Content Requirements:
1) Abstracts should be explicit about which theoretical frameworks, methodological protocols, and analytical strategies are being applied or critiqued.
2) Data sources and examples should be sufficiently (if briefly) presented, so as to allow reviewers a full understanding of the scope and claims of the research.
3) The connection of your research to the field of historical sociolinguistics should be explicitly outlined.
*** Abstract Format Guidelines:
1) Abstracts must be submitted in PDF format.
2) Abstracts must fit on one standard 8.5×11 inch or A4 page, with margins no smaller than 1 inch / 2.5 cm and a font style and size no smaller than Times New Roman 12-point. All additional content (visualizations, trees, tables, figures, captions, examples, and references) must fit on a single (1) additional page. No exceptions to these requirements are allowed; abstracts exceeding these limits will be rejected without review.
3) Anonymize your abstract. We realize that sometimes complete anonymity is not attainable, but there is a difference between the nature of the research creating an inability to anonymize and careless non-anonymizing (in citations, references, file names, etc.). Be sure to anonymize your PDF file (you may do so in Adobe Acrobat Reader by clicking on "File", then "Properties", removing your name if it appears in the "Author" line of the "Description" tab, and re-saving the file before submission). Do not use your name when saving your PDF (e.g. Smith_Abstract.pdf); file names will not be automatically anonymized by the EasyAbs system. Rather, use non-identifying information in your file name (e.g. HistSoc4Lyfe.pdf). Your name should only appear in the online form accompanying your abstract submission. Papers that are not sufficiently anonymized wherever possible will be rejected without review.
*** General Conference Requirements:
1) Abstracts must be submitted electronically, using the following link: https://easyabs.linguistlist.org/submit/2026_Incubator/
2) Papers must be delivered as projected in the abstract or represent bona fide developments of the same research.
3) Authors are expected to virtually attend the conference and present their own papers.
4) Presentations will be delivered via Zoom. Technical details and instructions regarding the platform will be sent to authors in due time.
Please contact us at NARNiHistSoc(a)gmail.com with any questions.