---------------------------------
CfP - Human Work Interaction Design 2026 (HWID 2026)
Harmonisation of human and machine intelligence in the 5th Industrial
Revolution (5IR) Workplace
June 17-18, 2026
University of West London, St. Mary’s Road, London (United Kingdom)
https:/wg6.ifip-tc13.org/human-work-interaction-design-2026-hwid-2026
8th Working Conference of the IFIP WG 13.6 Human Work Interaction Design
---------------------------------
Technologies in work settings are increasingly underpinned by Artificial
Intelligence (AI). This means that applications and platforms such as
those in the Metaverse, Digital Twin (DT) systems, and Industry 4.0 and
5.0 are becoming increasingly autonomous and intelligent. While these
developments promise efficiency and innovation, they also present risks
of over-reliance on technology and a potential abdication of human
agency in the workplace. Such reliance may lead workers to underestimate
their own cognitive and creative capabilities and to privilege machine
intelligence over human skills. Rather than automating tasks and
relegating workers to supervisory or backup roles, augmentation seeks to
enable meaningful cooperation between humans and machines. Although this
concept has been well studied in terms of efficacy and efficiency,
further efforts in Human Work Interaction Design (HWID) research are
required to support well-being, trust, and transparency; to ensure human
autonomy and governance within human–machine teams; and to respect human
values.
Industry 5.0 builds on the technological foundations of Industry 4.0 by
shifting the focus from productivity and efficiency toward human
well-being and sustainability. In this context, the harmonisation of
human and machine intelligence requires the ability to measure, analyse,
and apply affective and contextual data about workers and workplace
environments in order to design, integrate, and optimise work
experiences. This conference, therefore, calls for inclusive and
interdisciplinary approaches to unpacking Industry 5.0 and
re-conceptualising work augmentation in AI-driven environments. We
particularly encourage the integration of perspectives from the social
sciences, arts, design, and humanities into the design and governance of
intelligent work systems.
This call seeks contributions that explore the augmentation of human
cognition in line with human values through research of new frameworks,
models, approaches, and case studies for Industry 5.0. The Fifth
Industrial Revolution (5IR) focuses on harmonising human ability and
well-being, while simultaneously ensuring human beings can make
effective use of 5IR technologies in the workplace.
This edition of the HWID working conference aims to attract submissions
from professionals in academia, national labs, and industry, as well as
from students. The event will provide a platform to discuss tools,
procedures, and professional competencies essential for harmonizing
human and machine intelligence, central to Industry 5.0.
KEYNOTE SPEAKER
HWID2026 is a two-day working conference that focuses on discussion and
exchange of ideas. During this edition, HWID2026 is pleased to welcome
Professor Karen Cham, Director of the Behavioural Research Analytics in
Neurotechnological Systems (BRAINS) Lab at Kingston University, expert
in Augmented Intelligence, Digital Transformation & Design, as a keynote
speaker.
TOPICS
- Human-centred UI design with and of 5IR technologies in the workplace
- Human-AI interaction and collaboration
- Sociotechnical Theory and Methods for 5IR
- Collaborative systems design for Industry 5.0
- Human Digital Twins in the future of work
- Behavioral analytics and data modelling
- Safety and well-being of workers in the workplace (e.g., trust and
training)
- Ethics, policy, and law in 5IR
- Case studies and implications of 5IR technologies (e.g., discretionary
effort, job satisfaction)
- Education and coaching to afford harmonisation of human and 5IR
technologies in the workplace
- Human and social sciences, creative arts, and design
- Digital readiness for Industry 5.0 technologies in workplaces.
- Design for occupational well-being in the 5IR
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission deadline: February 8, 2026
Notification to authors: March 6, 2026
Camera ready: March 27, 2026
Conference: June 17-18, 2026
SUBMISSIONS
We invite authors to submit full papers (minimum 6 pages, maximum 12
pages, excluding references) formatted according to the LNCS template
available on the Springer website:
https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu…
The link to the submission system: https://meteor.springer.com/HWID2026
Each paper will be reviewed by three reviewers (single-blind). The
collection of all accepted papers will be distributed to participants as
digital proceedings prior to the conference. During the review process,
reviewers will be asked to evaluate whether an extended version of the
paper is suitable for an IFIP Springer book (IFIP Advances in
Information and Communication Technology), which will be edited after
the conference.
ORGANIZERS
General Chairs:
- Jose Abdelnour-Nocera (University of West London, UK)
- Judith Molka-Danielsen (Molde University College, Norway)
Program Chairs:
- Barbara Rita Barricelli (University of Brescia, Italy)
- Elodie Bouzekri (Université de Brest, France)
Paper Chairs:
- Ali Gheitasy (University of West London, UK)
- Parisa Sadaati (University of West London, UK)
*** First 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: August12 29, 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
*** Call for Participation ***
The Annual ACM Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces (IUI 2026)
March 23-26, 2026, 5* Coral Beach Hotel & Resort, Paphos, Cyprus
https://iui.hosting.acm.org/2026/
(*** Early Registration Deadline: February 13, 2026 ***)
The 2026 ACM Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces (ACM IUI) is the annual premier
venue, where researchers and practitioners meet and discuss state-of-the-art advances
at the intersection of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Human-Computer Interaction (HCI).
Ideal IUI submissions should address practical HCI challenges using machine intelligence
and discuss both computational and human-centric aspects of such methodologies,
techniques and systems.
This year we had a record number of submissions, so we have a record number of
accepted papers (114), a record number of posters and demos (53) and we hope for a
record number of participants.
Furthermore, we have 8 workshops and 5 tutorials.
Finally, the technical program will feature two keynotes, by Antonio Kruger on the role of
HCI in trusted A.I. and Pattie Maes on designing A.I. interaction for human flourishing.
The detailed program of IUI 2026 can be found on the conference website:
https://iui.acm.org/2026/program/ .
The early registration deadline is on February 13th and the registration page is:
https://iui.acm.org/2026/registration/
We are looking forward to meeting everybody in Paphos.
Organisation
General Chairs
• Tsvi Kuflik, The University of Haifa, Israel
• Styliani Kleanthous, Open University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Local Organising Chair
• George A. Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Program Chairs
• Li Chen, Hong Kong Baptist University, China
• Giulio Jacucci, University of Helsinki, Finland
• Alison Renner, Dataminr, USA
*** Apologies for cross-posting ***
------------------------------------------------------
CALL FOR PAPERS: Responsible AI in Healthcare Collection
Discover Artificial Intelligence
------------------------------------------------------
We are delighted to invite submissions to a new topical collection on **"Responsible AI in Healthcare: Bridging Technical Innovation and Multi-Stakeholder Needs"** in Discover Artificial Intelligence.
As AI becomes increasingly embedded in clinical decisions, patient care pathways, and health outcomes, the need for systems that are not only technically robust but also trustworthy, equitable, and aligned with diverse stakeholder needs becomes critical. This collection emphasizes **operationalizing responsible AI** across the healthcare ecosystem—going beyond explainability to address governance, ethics, workflow integration, fairness, bias mitigation, privacy, accountability, and inclusive design.
== Important Dates ==
* Submission Deadline: October 5, 2026
== Submission Guidelines ==
* Article Types: Research, Review, Brief Report, Case Study, Methodology, Perspective, and others
* Format: Follow Discover Artificial Intelligence submission guidelines
* Submission Portal: https://www.springer.com/journal/44163/submission-guidelines
* Note: In the submission system, select this collection from the drop-down menu on the 'Details' tab
== Collection Focus ==
We particularly welcome research demonstrating how AI systems can be **designed, validated, and implemented collaboratively** with clinicians, patients, researchers, administrators, and policymakers to ensure inclusive, equitable, trustworthy, and effective outcomes in real-world healthcare settings.
We invite contributions that combine technical rigor with practical impact, spanning machine learning, multimodal health data, wearable and sensor-based systems, human-computer interaction, and ethical design in domains such as digital health, neurorehabilitation, clinical decision support, and telehealth.
== Topics of Interest ==
Building on emerging trends and challenges in responsible healthcare AI, we welcome submissions that address, but are not limited to:
1. **Human-Centered AI and Participatory Design**
- Co-design methodologies in healthcare AI
- Stakeholder engagement strategies
- Multi-stakeholder collaboration frameworks
2. **Fairness and Bias Mitigation**
- Algorithmic fairness in clinical contexts
- Equitable AI deployment
- Bias detection and mitigation strategies
3. **Clinical Integration and Validation**
- Workflow integration of AI tools
- Clinical validation methodologies
- Evaluation frameworks for healthcare AI
4. **Governance and Implementation**
- Regulatory and ethical frameworks
- Responsible data governance
- Privacy preservation and informed consent
- Implementation case studies
5. **Domain-Specific Applications**
- AI-driven neurorehabilitation tools
- Wearable systems and adaptive interfaces
- Clinical decision support systems
- Telehealth and remote care AI
6. **AI Communication and Interaction**
- Natural language processing for health communication
- Conversational AI for ethical decision support
- Explainable AI in clinical contexts
7. **Data and Modeling**
- Multimodal data fusion
- Personalized healthcare using AI
- Digital biomarkers and predictive modeling
== About the Journal ==
Discover Artificial Intelligence is a transdisciplinary open access journal publishing research on all aspects of AI theory, methodology, and applications (SJR 2024: 0.876, Q1). The journal offers a median time to first decision of 23 days.
**Open Access Funding:** Many institutions have existing agreements with Springer Nature. Check your institution's funding eligibility at: https://www.springernature.com/gp/open-science/funding/articles#c14214262
== Guest Editors ==
* Giuseppe Prencipe, Associate Professor, University of Pisa, Italy
* Silvia Filogna, Researcher, IRCCS Fondazione Stella Maris, Italy
* Tommaso Turchi, Assistant Professor, University of Pisa, Italy
This collection provides a platform for interdisciplinary contributions spanning computer science, biomedical engineering, clinical research, ethics, and policy, supporting **SDG 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure**.
**Full collection details:** https://link.springer.com/collections/ccieiafgad
For questions or more information, please contact Tommaso Turchi at tommaso.turchi(a)unipi.it
We look forward to your contributions!
#ResponsibleAI #HealthcareAI #HumanCenteredAI #ExplainableAI #AlgorithmicFairness #ClinicalAI
ICMI 2026 CALL FOR PAPERS
============================================
5-9 October 2026, Napoli - Italy
https://icmi.acm.org/2026/
============================================
The 28th International Conference on Multimodal Interaction (ICMI 2026) will be held in Napoli, Italy. ICMI is the premier international forum for advancing research at the intersection of multimodal artificial intelligence (AI) and social interaction to create technically innovative, effective, and human-centered multimodal interactive systems. A unique aspect of ICMI is its multidisciplinary nature, bringing together research in AI, multimodal data processing, human-machine, and human-human interaction to bridge behavioral understanding with technology, with an eye towards impactful applications that benefit people and society.
Novelty will be evaluated along two dimensions: scientific novelty and technical novelty. Accepted papers at ICMI 2026 must demonstrate novelty in at least one of these two dimensions.
The theme of this year's conference is "Context and Cultural Awareness for Multimodal Interaction", to explore how context and cultural factors influence multimodal interaction systems, including their design, implementation, and evaluation. We welcome papers that address the integration of contextual understanding, such as environmental, social, and emotional factors, into multimodal interaction systems. We also encourage contributions that explore cultural considerations in the development and deployment of interactive technologies.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
* Affective computing and interaction
* User-adaptive systems
* Cognitive modelling and multimodal interaction
* Context-aware modelling
* Cross-cultural design and evaluation
* Gesture, touch, and haptics
* Healthcare, assistive technologies
* Human communication dynamics
* Human-robot/agent multimodal interaction
* Human-centred AI and ethics
* Interaction with a smart environment
* Machine learning for multimodal interaction
* Mobile and wearable multimodal systems
* Multimodal behaviour generation
* Multimodal datasets and validation
* Multimodal dialogue modeling
* Multimodal fusion and representation
* Multimodal interactive applications
* Novel multimodal datasets
* Spoken/visual behaviours in social interaction
* System components and multimodal platforms
* Virtual/augmented reality and multimodal interaction
Commitment to ethical conduct is mandatory, and submissions must adhere to ethical standards, in particular when human-derived data are employed. Authors are encouraged to consult the ACM Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct (https://ethics.acm.org/).
*** Important Dates
Abstract deadline April 13, 2026
Paper Submission April 20, 2026
Rebuttal Period June 1, 2026
Paper notification July 6, 2026
Camera-ready paper July 23, 2026
Presenting at the main conference October 6-8, 2026
*** ACM Publication Policies
ACM's New Open Access Publishing Model. Starting January 1, 2026, ACM will fully transition to Open Access. All ACM publications, including those from ACM-sponsored conferences, will be 100% Open Access. Authors will have two primary options for publishing Open Access articles with ACM: the ACM Open institutional model or by paying Article Processing Charges (APCs). With over 1,800 institutions already part of ACM Open, the majority of ACM-sponsored conference papers will not require APCs from authors or conferences (currently, around 70-75%).
Authors from institutions not participating in ACM Open will need to pay an APC to publish their papers, unless they qualify for a financial or discretionary waiver. To find out whether an APC applies to your article, please consult the list of participating institutions in ACM Open and review the APC Waivers and Discounts Policy. Keep in mind that waivers are rare and are granted based on specific criteria set by ACM.
Understanding that this change could present financial challenges, ACM has approved a temporary subsidy for 2026 to ease the transition and allow more time for institutions to join ACM Open. The subsidy will offer:
* $250 APC for ACM/SIG members
* $350 for non-members
This represents a 65% discount, funded directly by ACM. Authors are encouraged to help advocate for their institutions to join ACM Open during this transition period. This temporary subsidized pricing will apply to all conferences scheduled for 2026, including ICMI.
*** Last Combo Call for Workshop Papers ***
The 25th International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent
Systems (AAMAS 2026)
May 25-29, 2026, 5* Coral Beach Hotel & Resort, Paphos, Cyprus
https://cyprusconferences.org/aamas2026/
AAMAS 2026 received 1455 full paper submissions for the Main Track, after an initial
submission of 1800 abstracts. This is by far the highest number of submissions (around
50% more than the previous highest number) in the 25 years of AAMAS.
The conference will feature the following workshops with open calls for
submission. Please visit the workshops' websites and/or contact their organisers for
more details and important dates.
2nd Workshop on AI for Critical Infrastructure and Government (AI4CNI-26)
https://sites.google.com/view/ai4cni-26/
Critical National Infrastructure (CNI) forms the backbone of modern society, yet its
increasing complexity requires increasingly autonomous operation and makes it
vulnerable to cascading failures and cyber-physical threats. The AI4CNI workshop
explores the transformative potential of artificial intelligence and multi-agent systems to
enhance the efficiency, resilience, and defense of vital services like energy, transportation,
communication networks and healthcare.
18th International Workshop on Adaptive and Learning Agents (ALA)
https://alaworkshop2026.github.io/
Adaptive and Learning Agents (ALA) brings together researchers working on learning,
adaptation, and autonomous behaviour in single- and multi-agent systems. The workshop
welcomes contributions from across computer science (including reinforcement learning,
agent architectures, evolutionary computation, planning, and game theory) as as well as
from related fields such as cognitive science, biology, economics, and the social sciences.
Autonomous Robots and Multirobot Systems (ARMS)
https://arms2026.di.unimi.it/
Robots are agents, too. Indeed, agents researchers often use robotics problems as
motivating examples. Both practical and analytical techniques developed by agents
researchers influence, and are influenced by, research in autonomous robots and multi-
robot systems. Despite the overlap between the agents and robotics research areas,
researchers from these communities only have a few opportunities to meet and interact.
The Robotics Area of Interest in the main AAMAS conference (formerly, the “Robotics
Track”) is one such opportunity. The goal of this workshop is to build on this opportunity,
offering an informal and dedicated forum where agents and robotics researchers can
interact, discuss promising research directions and open problems, and foster further
collaborations. Contributions are sought in all areas of robotics, in particular as related to
autonomous agents research. Theoretical papers are welcome, as long as they clearly
specify the connection to challenges in robotics. Empirical studies should ideally present
experiments with real robots, though physical simulation studies are also acceptable.
Papers that focus on mechanical aspects and low-level control should make an effort to
relate this work to the agents community.
7th International Workshop on Agents for Societal Impact (ASI)
https://panosd.eu/asi2026/
This workshop focuses on the design, analysis, and deployment of intelligent agents that
contribute positively to society. As AI agents become increasingly autonomous and
embedded in real-world systems, it is critical to ensure that their behavior aligns with
human values and societal goals, rather than optimizing narrowly defined technical
objectives. The workshop provides a forum to discuss how agent-based technologies can
be responsibly applied to real-world societal systems, including (but not limited to):
healthcare, education, climate, sustainability, conservation, public infrastructure, labor
markets, governance and policy design, etc. The goal is to identify new MAS problems in
societies, develop novel MAS solutions to resolve social challenges, and learn from the
real-world deployment of MAS.
14th International Workshop on Agents in Traffic and Transportation (ATT 2026)
https://sites.google.com/unimib.it/att2026/
The ATT 2026 workshop focuses on AI-driven modeling, simulation, control, and
management of large-scale traffic and transportation systems. It addresses the challenges
of distributed, autonomous, and data-rich mobility systems operating under uncertainty
and societal constraints. The workshop invites contributions on multi-agent systems,
machine learning, optimization, control, and data-centric AI approaches. Topics include
autonomous and connected vehicles, intelligent traffic control, digital twins, shared
mobility, and multi-modal transportation. Both theoretical advances and real-world
applications enabling safe, robust, and scalable intelligent transportation are welcomed.
Citizen-Centric Multi Agent Systems 2026 (C-MAS 2026)
https://sites.google.com/view/cmas2026
Join us for the C-MAS 2026 workshop, where we explore citizen-centric AI and multiagent
systems. In today’s world, large-scale AI systems hold the potential to tackle critical
societal challenges, from decarbonising our energy system to facilitating on-demand
mobility and improving disaster response. However, we often overlook the active role of
citizen end users, treating them merely as data providers and service consumers. Our
workshop aims to shift this perspective and explore innovative approaches that treat
citizen end users as primary agents with diverse needs and preferences. By doing so, we
can develop more trustworthy, fair, and widely accepted sociotechnical solutions to
pressing societal challenges.
11th Workshop on Collaboration of Humans, Agents, Robots, Machines and Sensors
(CHARMS 2026)
https://charms2026.github.io/
Cyber physical systems (CPS) are becoming more involved in the lives of humans. All
indications point to a future where many varieties of CPS and humans co-exist and, at a
minimum, must interact consistently through life’s tasks. This workshop will explore ideas
of the future to understand, discern and develop the relationship between humans and
CPS and the practical nature of software agents to facilitate the integration.
Causal Learning and Reasoning in Agents and Multi-Agent Systems (CLaRAMAS)
https://claramas-workshop.github.io/claramas2026/
CLaRAMAS aims to foster cross-disciplinary exchange and synergistic collaboration
between two complementary communities: the AAMAS community and the Causal
Learning and Reasoning (CLR) community. The overarching goal is to bridge these domains
by exploring the following open questions: How CLR techniques can enhance agent-based
decision-making? How agent-oriented perspectives can leverage the operational
deployment of CLR in real-world applications?
Coordination, Organizations, Institutions, Norms and Ethics for Governance of Multi-
Agent Systems (COINE)
https://coin-workshop.github.io/coine-2026-paphos/
This workshop is an evolution of the COIN (Coordination, Organizations, Institutions and
Norms in Agent Systems) workshop series that ran at various conferences including
AAMAS (18 times), IJCAI (twice), AAAI in 2008 and ECAI in 2006 and 2016, and produced
17 volumes of post-proceedings in Springer’s Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence. The
18th volume of COINE post-proceedings is in progress. In 2020, ethics was added to the
name and acronym (now COINE), and also the notion of governance of MAS was added to
the full workshop title as this is the common objective uniting the various threads of
research (coordination, organizations, etc.) undertaken. The workshop in the new format
has been held six times (2020–2025).
14th International Workshop on Engineering Multi-Agent Systems (EMAS 2026)
https://w3id.org/emas/2026/
EMAS 2026 builds on the long-standing tradition of the Workshop on Engineering Multi-
Agent Systems, advancing the design, implementation, and deployment of autonomous
agents and Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) through research on theories, architectures,
languages, platforms, and methodologies. To engage with emerging augmented language
models and agentic systems and build on decades of established MAS engineering
approaches, this 14th edition focuses on Hybrid Agent Architectures and Multi-Agent
Systems. We invite contributions covering the diversity of approaches to engineering
agents and MAS: submissions may focus on established or emerging approaches, as well
as hybrid approaches that integrate the two, exploring, among others, questions such as
how elements from different agent architectures can be combined to create more capable
agents, and how MAS can be designed to ensure interoperability, coordination, and
governance among heterogeneous agents.
8th International Workshop on EXplainable, Trustworthy, & Responsible AI &
Multi‑Agent Systems (EXTRAAMAS 2026)
https://extraamas.ehealth.hevs.ch/index.html
The International Workshop on EXplainable, Trustworthy, and Responsible AI and Multi-
Agent Systems (EXTRAAMAS) runs since 2019, and is a well-established workshop and
forum. It aims to discuss and disseminate research on explainable artificial intelligence,
with a particular focus on intra/inter-agent(ic) explainability and cross-disciplinary
perspectives. In its 8th edition, EXTRAAMAS 2026 identifies four particular focus topics
with the ultimate goal of strengthening cutting-edge foundational and applied research.
The 8th Games, Agents, and Incentives Workshop (GAIW-26)
https://gtep-workshops.github.io/gaiw2026/
Games, Agents and Incentives is a confederated workshop which focuses on agents and
incentives in AI. In particular, it promotes approaches that deal with game theory
(cooperative and non-cooperative), social choice, and agent-mediated e-commerce
aspects of AI systems. The confederated workshop merges multiple workshops that have
been associated with AAMAS in the past, which considered different aspects of the general
interplay between AI and economics including CoopMAS, AMEC, and EXPLORE.
27th International Workshop on Multi-Agent-Based Simulation (MABS 2026)
https://mabsworkshop.github.io/
MABS focuses on the confluence of social sciences and multi-agent systems, with a strong
application/empirical vein, and it emphasizes, (i) exploratory agent-based simulation as a
principled way of undertaking scientific research in the social sciences and (ii) using social
theories as an inspiration for new frameworks and developments in multi-agent systems.
MABS 2026 continues its tradition of fostering cross-fertilisation and innovation in MAS
engineering and complex social and sociotechnical systems modeling. The workshop
encourages submissions in areas such as simulation methodology and tools, simulation
of social and intelligent behaviour, diverse applications, and simulation analytics.
International Workshop on Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems for Space
Applications (MASSpace)
https://mas-space.github.io/aamas2026ws/
This workshop aims at disseminating and sharing recent advances in the use of agent-
based and multi-agent-based models and techniques in the Space domain. Indeed, the
use of agent-based and multi-agent systems (MAS) in aerospace and space is gaining
traction, as they offer a promising approach for modeling and solving distributed,
complex and dynamic problems. Sample applications notably include multiple spacecraft
operations and maintenance, onboard-ground coordination, mission simulation, multi-
mission operation, autonomous navigation, and collective robotics.
NEurosymbolic eXplainable trUstworthy Systems (NEXUS)
https://nexus.telecom-paris.fr/
The opacity of current deep learning models is a major barrier to adoption where
accountability is essential. NEXUS focuses on neurosymbolic reasoning as a foundational
approach to building theory, applications, and tools for well-calibrated and trustworthy
autonomy. This paradigm moves beyond a narrow focus on formal logic, concerning itself
with the integration of deep and reinforcement learning algorithms with a broad spectrum
of structured knowledge.
Workshop on Optimization and Learning in Multi-Agent Systems (OptLearnMAS)
https://optlearnmas.github.io
The goal of the workshop is to provide researchers with a venue to discuss models or
techniques for tackling a variety of multi-agent optimization problems. We seek
contributions in the general area of multi-agent optimization, including distributed
optimization, coalition formation, optimization under uncertainty, winner determination
algorithms in auctions and procurements, and algorithms to compute Nash and other
equilibria in games. Of particular emphasis are contributions at the intersection of
optimization and learning. This workshop invites works from different strands of the
multi-agent systems community that pertain to the design of algorithms, models, and
techniques to deal with multi-agent optimization and learning problems or problems that
can be effectively solved by adopting a multi-agent framework.
Rebellion and Disobedience in Artificial Intelligence (RaD-AI)
https://sites.google.com/view/rad-ai/home
Should intelligent autonomous agents always obey human commands or instructions? In
some contexts, they should not. Most existing research on collaborative robots and agents
assumes that a “good” agent complies with the instructions it is given and works in a
predictable manner under the consent of the human operator(s) it serves (e.g., it should
never deceive its operator). Our RaD-AI workshop challenges this assumption; we will
reconsider the desired abilities and responsibilities of collaborative agents. For example,
these include exhibiting behavior that attempts appropriate and harm-preventing non-
compliance (e.g., safety constraints in autonomous vehicles or training LLMs to avoid
potentially harmful or norm-violating output), among others. Our agenda will include
accepted submissions that describe novel (and/or survey existing) contributions, or
propose new directions, related to RaD-AI in the context of intelligent social agents,
human-agent interaction, and their societal effects, along with invited talks and other
events. We warmly welcome participation from AAMAS-26 conference attendees!
Strategic Engineering Workshop (SE)
https://sites.google.com/view/se-aamas2026
Real-world interactions are messy; Game Theory is rigorous. Historically, connecting the
two required expensive manual modeling. “Strategic Engineering” seeks to automate this
pipeline. We ask: How can LLMs serve as architects, translating everyday scenarios into the
formal structures that Game Theory (GT) and Multi-Agent Systems (MAS) require? If we can
automate the creation of the “world model”, we can unlock the full power of classical GT/
MAS reasoning for any situation. We invite submissions that fuse the generative capabilities
of LLMs with the reasoning power of GT/MAS, creating a new class of agents capable of
navigating complex, strategic environments.
Organizing Committee
AAMAS 2026 General Chairs
• Viviana Mascardi, University of Genova, Italy
• John Thangarajah, RMIT University, Australia
AAMAS 2026 Program Chairs
• Chris Amato, Northeastern University, United States of America
• Louise Dennis, University of Manchester, United Kingdom
AAMAS 2026 Local Chairs
• George A. Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus, Cyprus (Chair)
• Panayiotis Kolios, University of Cyprus, Cyprus (Vice Chair)
*** Last Mile for Abstract Submission ***
*** 2026 IEEE Frontiers in Education Conference ***
October 11-14, 2026, Coral Beach Hotel & Resort, Paphos, Cyprus
https://fie-conference.org/2026
*** 2026 Conference Theme: Engineering and Computing Education in the Large Language Model Era ***
*** Abstract Submission Deadline: February 2, 2026 (extended!) ***
The Frontiers in Education (FIE) Conference is a premier international forum bringing
together a global community to share ideas, challenge assumptions, and shape the future
of teaching and learning. Since 1971, FIE has been co-sponsored by the IEEE Education
Society, IEEE Computer Society, and ASEE ERM Division, and is recognized for its rigorous
peer-review process, diverse program, and impact on the field.
The Call for Abstracts for FIE 2026 invites researchers, educators, and practitioners to
contribute innovative work in engineering and computing education.
The 2026 conference theme is Engineering and Computing Education in the Large
Language Model Era, reflecting FIE’s role in advancing timely, transformative
conversations.
Submissions are welcomed as Extended Structured Abstracts for Full and Work-in-
Progress (WIP) Papers, and as Proposals for Alternative Sessions, including
Workshops, Special Sessions, Panels, and Student Panels.
Accepted papers in these tracks that are presented in person at the conference will appear
in the Conference Proceedings and be published on IEEE Xplore.
The complete list of topics is also available on the conference web site:
https://fie-conference.org/authors/topics-of-interest .
IMPORTANT DATES (AoE)
• Full & WIP Paper Abstract Submission Deadline: February 2, 2026 (extended)
• Full & WIP Paper Abstract Acceptance Notification: February 13, 2026
• Alternative Session Proposal Deadline: February 23, 2026
• Alternative Session Proposal Acceptance Notification: March 13, 2026
• Full & WIP Preliminary Paper Submission Deadline: March 23, 2026
• Alternative Session Paper Submission Deadline: May 4, 2026
• Notification of Full & WIP Paper Revision Requirements and
Acceptance Notification: May 8, 2026
• Alternative Session Paper Acceptance Notification: May 22, 2026
• Revised Full & WIP Paper Submission Deadline: June 15, 2026
• Alternative Session Revised Paper Submission Deadline: June 29, 2026
• Final Acceptance Notification for all Paper and Session Types: July 10, 2026
• Final Camera-Ready Paper Submission for all Paper and Session
Types & Copyright Deadline: July 20, 2026
Call for Late-Breaking Results
EICS 2026 – The 18th ACM SIGCHI Symposium on Engineering Interactive
Computing Systems
June 30 – July 3, 2026
Patras, Greece
https://eics.acm.org/2026/
Submission deadline (Late-Breaking Results): March 12, 2026
Notification to authors: April 15, 2026
Camera-ready deadline: April 30, 2026
About Late-Breaking Results
Late-Breaking Results (LBR) describe preliminary results of ongoing
research or incremental work that present new ideas, concepts, systems,
or approaches focusing on methods, techniques, and tools for designing
and developing interactive systems.
LBR submissions are intended to elicit useful feedback on early-stage or
incremental work that can benefit from discussion with colleagues in the
EICS community. We particularly welcome papers suitable for
demonstration at the conference. Supplementary videos showing the system
in action are strongly encouraged.
Accepted LBR papers will be published in the conference’s companion
proceedings and made available in the ACM Digital Library.
Topics of Interest
Submissions should advance the state of the art in the engineering of
interactive systems. Topics include, but are not limited to:
- Modeling, specification, and analysis of interactive systems
- Requirements engineering for interactive systems
- Software architectures and formal methods for interactive systems
- Methods, processes, principles, tools, and frameworks for developing
interactive systems (design, prototyping, implementation, evaluation,
verification, validation, and testing)
- Domain-specific languages, notations, and APIs for interactive systems
- Integration of engineering concerns into the design process
- Engineering data-driven and smart interactive systems (adaptive,
context-aware, AI-based, multimodal, etc.)
- Engineering for accessibility at scale and integration with software
development pipelines
- Engineering serious games and cognitive stimulation tools (embodied
agents, humanoid robots)
- Interactive systems using emerging technologies (e.g., touch and
multitouch, voice, gestures, EEG, AR/MR/VR/XR, large language models,
chatbots, humanoid robots)
- Interactive systems for diverse audiences (children, elderly, people
with disabilities)
- Interactive systems for various domains (health, entertainment,
safety-critical systems, emergency management, etc.)
- Engineering hardware/software integration (cyber-physical systems,
tangible, haptic, wearable, robotic systems)
- Engineering for specific properties (usability, user experience,
safety, security, dependability)
- Building human-centred AI systems (explainable AI, intelligible
design, human-in-the-loop, adaptive and context-aware interactive
agents)
Format and Submission Guidelines
LBR papers will be published as 6-page double-column papers generated by
ACM TAPS.
For review, authors must submit using the single-column review template.
The single-column review submission should be approximately 8–12 pages,
up to 5,000 words, excluding references.
Authors must not use the old double-column format at the review stage.
Submissions must be made via:
https://new.precisionconference.com
Citation Guidelines
Authors are kindly requested to ensure references report the correct
publication format to facilitate citation indexing, particularly for
conferences publishing in journal proceedings such as PACM. Please avoid
informal conference-style citations when a PACM reference is available.
Anonymization Policy
The review process is double-anonymous. Authors must remove author and
institutional identities from the title, headers, and document metadata,
and leave the acknowledgments section blank.
Citations to prior work, including the authors’ own, should remain but
must be written in the third person (e.g., “As described by [10]…”).
Further suppression of identifying information in the paper body is left
to the authors’ discretion.
Authors are reminded that preprints or public dissemination during the
review period may compromise anonymity and potentially introduce
unconscious bias.
Contact
For questions regarding Late-Breaking Results submissions, please
contact the LBR chairs at:
lbr2026(a)eics.acm.org
EICS 2026 Late-Breaking Results Chairs
*** Call for Participation ***
The 33rd IEEE International Conference on Software Analysis, Evolution
and Reengineering (SANER 2026)
17-20 March, 2026, 5* St. Raphael Resort and Marina, Limassol, Cyprus
https://conf.researchr.org/home/saner-2026
*** Early Registration Deadline: 13th February, 2026 (extended) ***
The IEEE International Conference on Software Analysis, Evolution and Reengineering
(SANER) is the premier event on the theory and practice of recovering information from
existing software and systems. The event explores innovative methods to extract the
many kinds of information that can be recovered from software, software engineering
documents, and systems artifacts, and examines innovative ways of using this
information in system renewal and program understanding.
INVITED SPEAKERS
Nicole Novielli and Alexander Serebrenik are the keynote speakers of SANER 2026.
More details: https://conf.researchr.org/info/saner-2026/keynotes
REGISTRATION
Registration is open. Please visit:
https://conf.researchr.org/attending/saner-2026/registration+
*** Early registration till 13th February, 2026 (extended) ***
If you have not yet registered, there is still time to register at the reduced rate.
Special rates for IEEE members and for students.
The conference organisation is able to provide visa support letters to attendees that
require visa.
VENUE
SANER 2026 is taking place in Limassol, Cyprus. St. Raphael Resort is located on one of
the most renowned beaches in Limassol, only a short coastal drive from the lively centre
of town, approximately 10 minutes away.
PROGRAM OVERVIEW
SANER 2026 workshops take place on 17th March and the main conference between
18th and 20th of March.
SANER 2026 features many tracks with talks in different areas of Software Analysis,
Evolution and Reengineering.
• Research Track (47 papers)
• Industrial Track (19 papers)
• Early Research Achievement Track (15 papers)
• Short Papers and Posters Track (19 papers)
• Reproducibility Studies and Negative Results Track (4 papers)
• Tool Demo Track (13 papers)
• Journal First Papers (18 papers)
• Registered Report Track (5 papers)
• Workshops (7 workshops)
• Tutorials (1 tutorial)
WORKSHOPS
- SQA4AI – Software Quality Assurance for Artificial Intelligence Workshop
https://sqa4ai-ws.github.io/
- Greenvolve – The Green Software Evolution Workshop
https://greenvolve.github.io/
- Fairness 2026 – 2nd International Workshop on Fairness in Software Systems
https://fairnessworkshop.github.io/
- F-TRANSFER – Facilitating Continuous Education and Training Through AI in SE
https://www.cs.ubbcluj.ro/~avescan/f-transfer-2026/
- IWBOSE 2026 – Ninth International Workshop on Blockchain Oriented Software Engineering
https://www.agile-group.org/iwbose2026/
- VST 2026 – 9th Workshop on Validation, Analysis and Evolution of Software Tests
https://vstworkshop.github.io/vst2026/
- MSR4P&S 2026 – 4th International Workshop on Mining Software Repositories
Applications for Privacy and Security
https://msr4ps.github.io/
ORGANISING COMMITTEE
General Chair
• Georgia Kapitsaki, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Local Organizing Chair
• George Angelos Papadopoulos, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Program Chairs
• Eunjong Choi, Kyoto Institute of Technology, Japan
• Matthias Galster, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Industrial Chairs
• Anne Etien, University of Lille, France
• Tushar Sharma, Dalhousie University, Canada
ERA Chairs
• Mairieli Wessel, Radboud University, Netherlands
• Christoph Treude, Singapore Management University, Singapore
Short Papers and Posters Chairs
• Eleni Constantinou, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
• Sandro Schulze, Anhalt University of Applied Sciences, Germany
RENE Chairs
• Apostolos Ampatzoglou, University of Macedonia, Greece
• Sebastian Proksch, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
Workshop/Tutorial Chairs
• Marcelo De Almeida Maia, Federal University of Uberlandia, Brazil
• Juri Di Rocco, University of L'Aquila, Italy
Journal-First Chairs
• Luigi Lavazza, Università degli Studi dell'Insubria, Italy
• Yuxia Zhang, Beijing Institute of Technology, China
Registered Report Chairs
• Sherlock A. Licorish, University of Otago, New Zealand
• Sebastiano Panichella, Zurich University of Applied Science, Switzerland
Tool Demo Chairs
• Maliheh Izadi, Delft University of Technology, Netherlands
• Roberto Verdecchia, University of Florence, Italy
Diversity, Inclusion, and Newcomers Chairs
• Catia Trubiani, Gran Sasso Science Institute, Italy
• Aldeida Aleti, Monash University, Australia
Proceedings Chair
• Raula Gaikovina Kula, Osaka University, Japan
Most Influential Paper Award Chairs
• Alexander Chatzigeorgiou, University of Macedonia, Greece
• Michele Lanza, Software Institute - USI, Lugano, Switzerland
Sustainability Chair
• Maria Papoutsoglou, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Financial Chair
• Constantinos Pattichis, University of Cyprus, Cyprus
Publicity and Social Media Chair
• Erina Makihara, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
*Call for Papers*
2nd workshop on Innovative Interfaces in Digital Healthcare (INI-DH 2026)
https://sites.google.com/unisa.it/ini-dh
in conjunction with AVI 2026 (https://www.unive.it/web/en/15667/home)
18th International Conference on Advanced Visual Interfaces
San Servolo (Venice), Italy
8th-12th June 2026
*Important dates*
Submission deadline: March 27, 2026
Notification: April 10, 2026
Camera-ready deadline: April 21, 2026
Registration deadline: early registration AVI 2026
*Topics*
In an era defined by digital transformation, the intersection of technology
and healthcare is reshaping the landscape of medical practice and patient
experience. This workshop aims to bring together innovators, healthcare
professionals, designers and researchers to explore the multiple
applications of visual interfaces in digital healthcare.
The workshop aims to explore the multiple applications of visual interfaces
in digital healthcare by considering several topics including, but not
limited to:
- Adaptive and Context-Aware Interfaces for Digital Healthcare
- Affective Visual Interfaces
- Computer Vision
- Conversational Healthcare Interfaces
- Full-body Interaction
- Human-Robot Interaction for Patient Empowerment
- Human-Centered AI for Healthcare
- Image Analysis
- Information Visualization
- Intelligent Interfaces and Creative AI for Patient Empowerment
- Interfaces for Social Interaction and Cooperation in the Healthcare
Domain
- Interfaces and Interactions for Inclusion, Accessibility and Aging
- User eXperience Design in IoT Environments for Healthcare
- Usability and Accessibility
- Virtual and Augmented Reality for Training Healthcare Professionals
*Participation and Submission*
We invite the submission of papers in accordance with the CEUR Article
Template.
All papers must be original and not simultaneously submitted to another
journal, conference, or workshop. The following paper categories are
welcome:
- Full Papers: minimum of 10 standard pages, plus an appropriate number of
references
- Short Papers: between 5 and 9 standard pages
Following acceptance, it is mandatory for at least one author of each
accepted paper to attend the workshop.
*Organizers*
Paola Barra, *University of Naples Parthenope, Italy*
Andrea Antonio Cantone, *University of Salerno, Italy*
Teresa Onorati, *Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain*