[Lingtyp] ComputEL-9: 2nd Call-for-Papers
Antti Arppe
arppe at ualberta.ca
Wed Mar 4 04:49:36 UTC 2026
ComputEL-9: Ninth Workshop on the Use of Computational Methods in the
Study of Endangered Languages
Second CALL FOR PAPERS
Submission deadline: March 20, 2026
Submission link: https://softconf.com/acl2026/ComputEL2026
ComputEL-9 will be co-located with ACL 2026 in San Diego, California. It
will be a one-day workshop, held in Friday July 4, 2026. This time, we
are co-ordinating our activities with Americas-NLP, held on the previous
day.
We encourage submissions that explore the interface and intersection of
computational linguistics, documentary linguistics, and community-based
efforts in language revitalization and reclamation. This includes
submissions that:
(i) demonstrate new methods or technologies for tasks or applications
focused on low-resource settings, and in particular, endangered languages,
(ii) examine the use of specific methods in the analysis of data from
low-resource languages, or demonstrate new methods for analysis of such
data, oriented toward the goals of language reclamation and revitalization,
(iii) propose new models for the collection, management, and
mobilization of language data in community settings, with attention to
e.g. issues of data sovereignty and community protocols,
(iv) explore concrete steps for a more fruitful interaction among
computer scientists, documentary linguists, and language communities.
IMPORTANT DATES
20 March 2026 Deadline for submission of papers or extended abstracts
1 May 2026 Notification of Acceptance
4 July 2026 Workshop
PRESENTATIONS
Presentation of accepted papers will be in both oral session and a
poster session. The decision on whether a presentation for a paper will
be oral and/or poster will be made by the Organizing Committee on the
advice of the Program Committee, taking into account the subject matter
and how the content might be best conveyed. Oral and poster
presentations will not be distinguished in the Proceedings.
SUBMISSIONS
We offer two submissions lengths: short (up to 4 pages) or long (up to 8
pages) paper. The length of submission does not influence the likelihood
of acceptance. Both paper types must include a section on ethical
consideration and a section on limitations; these sections are not
considered part of the page limit.
All submissions must be anonymous and will be peer-reviewed by the
scientific Program Committee. Papers must follow the style and
formatting guidelines provided in by ACL Style Files (download template
files for LaTeX: https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files).
Submissions that exceed the length requirements, or are missing a
limitations section, will be desk rejected.
Papers can be submitted to one of the workshop’s tracks: (a) language
community perspective and (b) academic perspective.
Submissions must be uploaded to SoftConf:
https://softconf.com/acl2026/ComputEL2026 by March 20, 2026 11:59PM
(UTC-12, “anywhere on earth”).
A. Short Papers:
Short paper submissions must describe original and unpublished work.
They are max. 4 pages excluding references. They must include a section
on ethical consideration and limitations; these sections are not
considered part of the page limit. Please note that a short paper is not
a shortened long paper. Instead, short papers should have a small,
focused contribution or describe work in progress (“working paper”).
Short papers might not necessarily be intended for publication. Some
common kinds of short papers are negative results, opinion pieces,
interesting application nuggets, or descriptions of ongoing
collaborative teamwork.
B. Long Paper:
Long papers must describe substantial, original, completed and
unpublished work. Wherever appropriate, concrete evaluation and analysis
should be included. Long papers are max. 8 pages excluding references
and appendices. They must include a section on ethical consideration and
limitations; these sections are not considered part of the page limit.
PROCEEDINGS
The Organizing Committee will select papers that have been accepted for
presentation for online publication via the open-access ACL Anthology.
Not all accepted papers for presentation are guaranteed inclusion in the
Anthology. Final versions of long and short papers that are accepted for
publication will be allotted one additional page (altogether 5 and 9
pages) excluding references. Papers accepted for inclusion in the
Anthology should be revised and improved versions of the work that was
submitted for, and which underwent, review. Any revisions should concern
responses to reviewer comments or the addition of relevant details and
clarifications, but not entirely new, unreviewed content.
FUNDING SUPPORT
Limited funding will be available for some accepted authors. A link to
apply for funding will be sent to submitters after the submission
deadline. Decisions on funding will be sent with notification of
acceptance. Priority will be given to individuals without institutional
support, for instance members of endangered language communities, other
unsponsored or under-sponsored presenters (e.g. student/faculty of
Linguistics Departments), and student presenters.
ADDITIONAL AND CONTACT INFORMATION
Please see the ComputEL-9 website for further information:
https://computel-workshop.org/computel-9/
Organizing Committee Email: computel.workshop at gmail.com
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Antti Arppe - Ph.D (General Linguistics), M.Sc. (Engineering)
Professor of Quantitative Linguistics
Director, Alberta Language Technology Lab (ALTLab)
Project Director, 21st Century Tools for Indigenous Languages (21C)
Department of Linguistics, University of Alberta
Algonquian Studies Association - Secretary-Treasurer
E-mail: arppe at ualberta.ca - antti.arppe at iki.fi
WWW: www.ualberta.ca/~arppe - altlab.ualberta.ca - 21c.tools
Mānahtu ina rēdûti ihza ummânūti ihannaq - dulum ugulak úmun ingul
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