37.548, Confs: 3rd Workshop on Computation and Written Language at LREC 2026 (Spain)

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LINGUIST List: Vol-37-548. Tue Feb 10 2026. ISSN: 1069 - 4875.

Subject: 37.548, Confs: 3rd Workshop on Computation and Written Language at LREC 2026 (Spain)

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================================================================


Date: 07-Feb-2026
From: Kyle Gorman [kgorman at gc.cuny.edu]
Subject: 3rd Workshop on Computation and Written Language at LREC 2026


3rd Workshop on Computation and Written Language at LREC 2026
Short Title: CAWL 2026

Date: 12-May-2026 - 12-May-2026
Location: Palma, Mallorca, Spain
Contact: Kyle Gorman
Contact Email: kgorman at gc.cuny.edu
Meeting URL: https://sigwrit.org/

Linguistic Field(s): Computational Linguistics; Writing Systems

Submission Deadline: 20-Feb-2026

The Third Workshop on Computation and Written Language (CAWL 2026)
will be held in conjunction with LREC 2026 as a half-day workshop on
May 12th in Palma, on the island of Mallorca, Spain. The workshop will
feature an invited talk, a tutorial on working with different writing
systems, and posters and presentations for submitted work. Annual CAWL
workshops are organized under the guidance of the ACL Special Interest
Group on Writing Systems and Written Language (SIGWrit).
Most work in NLP focuses on language in its canonical written form.
This has often led researchers to ignore the differences between
written and spoken language or, worse, to conflate the two.
Furthermore, methods for dealing with written language issues (e.g.,
various kinds of normalization or conversion) or for recognizing text
input (e.g. OCR & handwriting recognition or text entry methods) are
often regarded as precursors to NLP rather than as fundamental parts
of the enterprise, despite the fact that most NLP methods rely
centrally on representations derived from text rather than (spoken)
language. This general lack of consideration of writing has led to
much of the research on such topics to largely appear outside of ACL
venues, in conferences or journals of neighboring fields such as
speech technology (e.g., text normalization) or human-computer
interaction (e.g., text entry).
This workshop will bring together researchers who are interested in
the relationship between written and spoken language, the properties
of written language, the ways in which writing systems encode
language, and applications specifically focused on characteristics of
writing systems. Topics of interest include but are not limited to:
 - Writing systems for less-resourced, Indigenous, and minoritized
languages
 - Multi-writing system models
 - Text entry and tokenization
 - Processing abbreviations and homographs
 - Grapheme-to-phoneme conversion, transliteration, and diacritization
 - Text normalization for speech and for processing “informal'” genres
of text
 - Information-theoretic and machine-learning approaches to
decipherment
 - Optical character (incl. handwriting) recognition and historical
document processing
 - Orthography for unwritten languages
 - Spelling error detection and correction
 - Script normalization and encoding
 - Writing system typology and its relevance to speech and language
processing
 - Properties of written language
 - Applications specifically focused on characteristics of writing
systems



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