*** First Call for Papers ***
The 31st 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/
The 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 area is crucial as AI is increasingly integrated into everyday technology.
Understanding and
shaping AI systems for human needs is essential to ensure that AI systems are effective
and
responsible. As these techniques become increasingly powerful, new use cases and
human-AI
interactions can be explored. This conference offers an opportunity to focus the
research
community on important problems at the intersection of AI and HCI and bring together
experts
from various disciplines to discuss and build on these ideas in workshops, breaks, and
networking sessions.
Contributions are welcome from all relevant arenas, including academia, industry,
government,
and non-profit organizations. Diverse insights are critical to the vitality of the IUI
community,
and the conference will accept papers for both long and short oral presentations.
Contributions
to IUI are expected to be supported by rigorous evidence appropriate to the claims (e.g.,
user
study, system evaluation, computational analysis).
Topics
IUI 2026 topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
Human-centered AI methods, approaches, and systems
• Explainable AI methods
• Democratization of AI
• Persuasive technologies in IUI
• Privacy and security of IUI
• Knowledge-based approaches to user interface design and generation
• User modelling for intelligent interfaces
• User-adaptive interaction and personalization
• IUI for crowd computing and human computation
• Human control in daily automations
• Trust and reliance in intelligent systems
Computational innovation
• Interactive machine learning
• Human-in-the loop AI testing and debugging
• Human-centered recommendation and recommender systems
• Generative models
• Human-in-the-loop reinforcement learning
• Intelligent user interfaces for generative AI
Innovative User Interfaces
• Affective interfaces
• Intelligent aesthetic interfaces
• Intelligent collaborative interfaces
• Intelligent AR/VR interfaces
• Intelligent visualization and visual analytics
• Intelligent wearable and mobile interfaces
• Intelligent tangible interfaces
Intelligent Multimodal Systems
• Embodied agents
• Multimodal AI assistants
• Intelligent multimodal interfaces
Intelligent Applications
• Education and learning-related technologies
• Healthcare and wellbeing
• Automotive
• Assistive technologies
• Entertainment
• Workplace happiness
• Social media
• Internet of Things (IoT)
• Smart homes
Large Language Models and Agentic AI
• End-user interaction with LLMs, agents, and multimodal models (e.g., chatbots, image
generation)
• LLMs and agents in the workplace
• Human-agent interaction and multi-agent systems
• Bias in LLMs and agents
• The effects of LLMs and agents use on creative tasks
• Personalized user interaction with LLMs and agents
• Prompt engineering
• User control and steering of LLMs and agents (e.g., RLHF, chaining, instruction
tuning)
Evaluations of Intelligent User Interfaces
• User experiments and studies
• Reproducibility (including benchmarks, datasets, and challenges)
• Meta-analysis
• Mixed-methods evaluations
Papers
We invite original paper submissions that are not under consideration elsewhere.
Accepted
papers will appear in the ACM Digital Library and citation indices. At least one author of
all
accepted papers must register with full registration fee (not student registration fee),
attend in
person, and present their paper during the main conference program. One registration
covers
one paper only.
A selected set of accepted top-quality full papers will be invited to submit their
extended
versions for publication in an ACM Transactions on Interactive Intelligent Systems (TiiS)
special
issue titled “Highlights of IUI 2026” that will appear in 2027.
Reflection of practical and societal impact
We encourage authors to consider practical and societal implications of their work (as
well as
its shortcomings) throughout their projects and to include a reflection on those
implications in
their papers, in particular how the proposed methods and insights could be applied and
deployed in a realistic setting and how they can improve people's lives in the real
world.
We also encourage authors to discuss potential ethical considerations of their work in
terms of
diversity, inclusion, and equality; and other topics under the broad responsible AI topic
and its
societal impact. We recognize that technology is rarely neutral --- simply by making
some
things easier than others, it reshapes society (Winner, 1980; Green, 2020). Further, given
the
incredibly short invention-to-application cycles for AI-related technologies, it is
becoming
increasingly unlikely that “somebody else” will carefully consider how an emerging
intelligent
user interface technology might impact the world before this technology is deployed. Our
purpose is to help authors ensure that the likely societal consequences of their work
are
consistent with their intentions and values. For colleagues who are not yet experienced
with
incorporating societal impacts into their IUI research but who are willing to give it a
try, here
are some ideas to consider.
Anonymization
ACM IUI uses a double-blind review process. All submissions (and supplemental materials)
must be appropriately anonymized according to the following guidelines:
• Authors' names and affiliations are not visible anywhere in the paper.
• Acknowledgements should be anonymized or removed during the review process.
• Self-citations should be included where necessary but must use the third person. For
example, "... as shown in our previous user study [2] ... " is not allowed,
whereas "... as shown
in Smith et al. [2] " is acceptable (because in this case the citation [2] will NOT
be perceived as
self-citation).
Failure to follow these guidelines may result in submissions being desk-rejected without
review.
Accessibility
Authors are asked to make their paper submissions accessible (so that reviewers with
vision
impairments can access them, for example). The authors of accepted papers will be required
to
make their final PDFs accessible. Please use the SIGCHI Guide to an Accessible Submission
for
detailed instructions.
If you are submitting a video as supplemental material, please provide captions, as
described
in Technical Requirements and Guidelines for Videos.
Please refer to the Accessibility page of the conference site for further details and
guidelines.
Usage of Generative AI
All submissions must comply with the ACM policy on the usage of GenAI: the April 2023
ACM
Policy on Authorship and Frequently Asked Questions. Text generated from a large-scale
language model (LLM), such as ChatGPT, must be clearly marked where such tools are used
for
purposes beyond editing the author’s own text. Authors should include a “GenAI Usage
Disclosure” section, right before the references, to provide full disclosure of all use of
GenAI
tools in all stages of the research (including the code and data) and the writing. This
section,
together with the references, will not be counted toward the word limit.
While we do not anticipate using tools on a large scale to detect LLM-generated text, we
will
investigate submissions brought to our attention and desk reject papers where LLM use is
not
clearly marked.
Research Involving Human Participants and Subjects
Any research in submitted manuscripts that involves human subjects must go through the
appropriate ethics review requirements that apply to the authors’ research environment.
As
research environments vary considerably with regard to their requirements, authors are
asked
to submit a short note to reviewers that provides this context. Please also see the 2021
ACM
Publications policy on research involving human participants and subjects before
submitting.
Additional Policies
Authors should also be aware of the SIGCHI Policy for Submission and Review at SIGCHI
Conferences and ACM Publications Policies.
Submission Format, Length, and Platform
We adopt the ACM TAPS Workflow.
Please prepare your submission for review in a single column format, using the latest
templates: Word Submission Template, or the LaTeX template using
\documentclass[manuscript,review,anonymous]{acmart} for the LaTeX template.
Papers are of variable length. Paper length must be proportional to its contribution. We
encourage authors to stay within a 10,000 word limit. Authors of papers exceeding 12,000
words should add a note at the end of their manuscript explaining how the length of the
paper
is commensurate with the contribution of the work.
Submission Platform
All materials must be submitted electronically to the Precision Conference Submission
(PCS)
Portal (
https://new.precisionconference.com/) by the abstract and paper deadlines.
In PCS, first click “Submissions” at the top of the page, from the dropdown menus for
Society,
Conference, and Track, please select “SIGCHI”, “IUI 2026”, and “IUI 2026 Papers”,
respectively,
and then press “Go”.
Note: If the corresponding author (the individual who submits the paper, not necessarily
the
first author) is affiliated with a participating institution that has an open access
agreement with
ACM, the Article Processing Charges (APCs) will be waived for publishing the paper.
Details are
under “Publication and Open Access”.
Supplemental Materials
Submitting supplemental material (e.g., questionnaires, demo videos of applications,
data
sheets) is optional but encouraged.
If supplying a demo video, please follow the SIGCHI Technical Requirements and Guidelines
for
videos.
Publication and Open Access
The official publication date is the date the proceedings are made available in the ACM
Digital
Library. This date may be up to two weeks prior to the first day of the conference. The
official
publication date affects the deadline for any patent filings related to published work.
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.
Important Dates (AoE)
• Abstract: October 3, 2025
• Full Paper: October 10, 2025
• Decision Notification: December 12, 2025
• Camera-ready Submission: January 23, 2026
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