[agents] Call for Papers: Digital Humanism – Interdisciplinary Science and Research Conference

Hackl, Andrea andrea.hackl at tuwien.ac.at
Thu Jun 12 04:55:30 EDT 2025


Call for Papers


          Digital Humanism – Interdisciplinary Science and Research Conference
          November 20–21, 2025
          MuseumsQuartier - Architekturzentrum Wien, Vienna

          https://dighum.org/dighum-res/
          (Preliminary Information on Registration now Online)

          Submission deadline: July 15, 2025
          Notification: September 15, 2025
          Final Versions Due: September 30, 2025

          Invited Speakers:
          + Gry Hasselbalch, DataEthics.eu
          + Julian Nida-Rümelin, LMU München
          + Hannes Werthner, TU Wien



Aims and Scope

Technology and digitization profoundly shape the world we live in, and the stakes are high. This call invites papers that explore the complex interplay of technology and humankind, understanding the fundamental changes, examining the new opportunities enabled by technological advances as well as the tremendous risks inherent to digitization, and envisaging the prospects for a better life in the digitized era. Issues addressed by the conference program will revolve around digitalization and its entanglement with contemporary social, political, economic, and cultural developments – from algorithmic governance and regulation through the role of AI in popular culture to the ever-increasing permeation of our lives with digital devices.

The recent rise of AI has triggered a heightened awareness of the far-reaching impact of digitization on our lives, which ranges from numerous beneficial uses to worrisome concerns for open democratic societies and the lives of their citizens. Technological change is expanding the boundaries of what is possible. 
There are strong reasons to be concerned about the enormous concentration of power, resources, and prioritization of future AI R&D directions in the hands of very few players.

We define Digital Humanism as an approach that describes, analyzes, and, most importantly, influences the complex interplay of technology and humankind, for a better society and life, fully respecting universal human rights.

Addressing these challenges requires interdisciplinary collaboration between a whole range of domains from computer science to humanities. We invite contributions that explore all scientific aspects at the complex interplay of humans and machines in the digitized age. Different research methodologies and approaches are welcome.


Topics

The following topics based on the Vienna Manifesto on Digital Humanism
(https://caiml.org/dighum/dighum-manifesto/#vienna-manifesto-on-digital-humanism)
offer an illustrative, though certainly not exhaustive list of possible fields to be addressed:

          + The role of tech monopolies, market competitiveness and anti-trust
          + Internet governance and digital sovereignty
          + Automated and human decision making
          + Participatory approaches and collective decision-making,
          computational
          social choice
          + New systems design
          + Cross-disciplinary approaches to technological questions, especially
          collaborations between computer science / informatics and social
          sciences
          and the humanities
          + New educational curricula, combining knowledge from the humanities,
          the
          social sciences, and engineering studies
          + Researchers and practitioners and their shared responsibility for
          the
          impact of information technologies
          + Human-centered AI, human-AI interaction, and human-AI teaming
          + Ethical models/frameworks around AI and data, handling of bias
          + Environmental costs and climate impacts of digitization/AI

All contributions welcome that address these topics – from computer science, AI research, social sciences, law as well as the humanities.


Submission Guidelines

DIGHUM-RES welcomes submissions of long papers (15 pages) or short papers (6 
pages) of all types, including:

          Empirical, conceptual, or theoretical
          Technical or system descriptions
          Position papers

The indicated number of pages includes title page, figures, tables, references 
and appendix.

All submissions will be peer-reviewed (double-blind) and accepted papers will 
appear in the conference proceedings published in the Springer’s Lecture Notes 
in Computer Science (LNCS) series. At least one author of each accepted paper 
is expected to register for the conference and present the work in person.

Evaluation criteria include scientific rigor, impact, and accessibility for an 
interdisciplinary audience.

Submissions must be written in English, present original research, and be 
formatted according to Springer’s guidelines and technical instructions 
available at: 
https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-guidelines.

Paper submission is enabled via the DIGHUM-RES easy-chair site: 
https://easychair.org/conferences?conf=dighumres25.

DIGHUM-RES will not accept any paper which, at the time of submission, is under 
review or has already been published or accepted for publication in a journal 
or another conference. These restrictions do not apply to previous workshops 
with a limited audience and without archival proceedings. Papers that include 
text generated from large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT are prohibited 
unless the produced text is presented as a part of the paper’s experimental 
analysis. Note that this policy does not prohibit authors from using LLMs for 
editing or polishing author-written text.


Conference Program Chairs

          Ludger Hagedorn (Institute for Humans Sciences, Vienna)
          Ute Schmid (University of Bamberg)
          Susan J. Winter (University of Maryland)
          Stefan Woltran (Vienna University of Technology)


Contact

Please contact dighumres25 at easychair.org with any queries.




More information about the agents mailing list