Following the very successful previous events for 2023 to 2025 we are delighted to extend an invitation to you to submit an abstract to the Digital Humanities track at the AISoLA 2026 conference ( https://2026-isola.isola-conference.org/isola-tracks/), which is a well-established conference in Computer Science.
Please be advised that you will need to secure your own funding as the GREATLEAP is limited in funding and how it can co-fund.
The guidelines for submission and the LNCS style are here. There is a word version, next to the Latex form.
Please submit the following before June 15th
1) The title and tentative authors, and if you need financial support from GREATLEAP, to tim.riswick@ru.nl
2) An abstract (2 to 15 LNCS pages) submitted through the online system
Registration of a presenter (as academic registrant) should be done before September 1st. We will let all contributors who need funding know before 1 July if we can support your participation.
The event will have refereed optional post-conference proceedings, published as a volume in the prestigious SpringerNature series LNCS (Lecture Notes in Computer Science).
You will be invited to provide a camera-ready papers of ca. 15 pages (LNCS style)
by Jan 15th. It will undergo peer reviewing, with the aim of having the final version by April 1st, ready to go to print.
Note: The registration fee includes a contribution toward the Open Access fee for the LNCS contribution (which is co-sponsored from other sources). No other costs will arise for the OA publication.
We welcome positioning pieces on past and ongoing work, that address as one of their aspects how Computer Science, AI and IT-enabled environments are affecting or may impact the state of the art in the field. Including open challenges and unmet needs.
Feel free to contact us if you wish to discuss your particular papers further.
Work stemming from the Greatleap working groups or even better from STSMs within the Action is explicitly encouraged.
There may be an opportunity to apply for partial support by the COST action via the DCG instrument. (Still true?)
In a separate mail there will be the announcement of the Doctoral Symposium, for postgraduate students to present their work so far and receive feedback from independent senior attendants. Given the interdisciplinary nature of the conference, with significant STEM components, this can be a very useful feedback forum for students who work with elements of data analysis, software, information systems and AI.
We look very much forward to your contribution and meeting you in Rhodes!