LaTeCH-CLfL 2025: 9th Joint SIGHUM Workshop on Computational Linguistics for Cultural Heritage, Social Sciences, Humanities and Literature
The 9th Joint SIGHUM Workshop on Computational Linguistics for Cultural Heritage, Social Sciences, Humanities and Literature (LaTeCH-CLfL 2025) will be held on May 3rd or 4th, 2025 in Albuquerque, NM, USA. The workshop is calling for papers on original, unpublished work in the topic areas of the workshop. The deadline for paper submission is January 30, 2025.
LaTeCH-CLfL 2025
is the ninth in a series of meetings for NLP researchers who work with data from the broadly understood arts, humanities and social sciences. The workshop will be held on May 3rd or 4th, 2025 in Albuquerque, NM, USA, in conjunction with NAACL 2025. The workshop will continue a long tradition of annual meetings, including the ten LaTeCH workshops (2007-2016) and the first four CLfL workshops (2017-2024). The five Workshops on Computational Linguistics for Literature (CLfL) took place in 2012-2016, and the first eight joint LaTeCH-CLfL workshops were held in 2017-2024.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following:
- adaptation of NLP tools to Cultural Heritage, Social Sciences, Humanities and literature
- automatic error detection and cleaning of textual data
- complex annotation schemas, tools and interfaces
- creation (fully- or semi-automatic) of semantic resources
- creation and modeling of discourse and narrative
- emotion analysis for the humanities and for literature
- generation of literary narrative, dialogue or poetry
- identification and analysis of literary genres
- interpretability of large models output for DH-related tasks (explainable AI)
- linking and retrieving information from different sources, media, and domains
- low-resource and historical language processing
- modeling dialogue literary style for generation
- modeling of information and knowledge in the Humanities, Social Sciences, and Cultural Heritage
- profiling and authorship attribution
- search for scientific and/or scholarly literature
- work with linguistic variation and non-standard or historical use of language
All submissions are to follow the ACL paper styles (for TeX / Overleaf and MS Word) available at https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files.
Papers should be submitted electronically, only in PDF, via the LaTeCH-CLfL 2025 submission website on the SoftConf pages (we will publish the link as soon as we have it).
Tags: LaTeCH-CLfL 2025, NLP, Cultural Heritage, Social Sciences, Humanities, Literature, Workshop, NAACL 2025, Albuquerque, New Mexico, May 3rd or 4th, 2025