CFP: IACAP 2026

Submission deadline: January 31, 2026

Conference date(s):
July 15, 2026 - July 17, 2026

Go to the conference's page

Conference Venue:

Center for Cyber Social Dynamics, University of Kansas
Lawrence, United States

Details

IACAP 2026 Call for Papers

The International Association for Computing and Philosophy (IACAP, https://www.iacap.org ) is pleased to put out this call for abstracts for its next conference in 2026.

  • Conference dates: July 15-17, 2026.

  • Conference location: University of Kansas. Lawrence, KS, USA.

  • Conference host:Center for Cyber-Social Dynamics.

  • Conference Website: https://iacapconf.org 

Important Dates

  • Extended abstracts for individual talks (up to 1000 words) due on: January 31, 2026.

  • Workshop proposals due on: January 31, 2026. 

  • Notification of acceptance: March 31, 2026.

  • Conference registration will open on: April 1, 2026.

Detailed Instructions

  • Title: A short and descriptive title which will be shown in the conference program.

  • Short Abstract: A short abstract of approx. 200 words that will be displayed in the conference program. Do not include a bibliography.

  • Extended Abstract: For an individual talk or workshop proposal (see below for more information on workshops). Maximum 1000 words excluding references. Participants will have the opportunity to publish their accepted/edited abstract/preprint on Zenodo before the program is published (2026 version submission link). Links to the online version will be published in the program.

  • PDF formatted full abstract: If you have a typeset PDF of your extended abstract, you may upload it in addition.

  • Keywords: Please give us 5 or so keywords to assist us in peer review.

  • Track: Please choose the track which most closely aligns with your abstract's topic. This sorting is to help us review the abstracts and to give us a baseline for paper grouping.

  • If possible, please include an ORCID link in your contact data.

  • Profile picture: The online version of the program may feature profile pictures, to help people find you during the conference and ask questions about your contribution. Adding a profile picture is voluntary. 

  • Additional speakers: Please identify any co-authors and indicate who is presenting.

  • Notes: Any additional notes or context you believe will help us review your proposal.

  • Does your abstract need an early review due to visa or planning considerations? Please indicate this in the submission process. The submission page features a Notes section for this. Also, please try to upload these early review abstracts ASAP, if possible by mid December, and please don’t hesitate to write to us if need be.

Tracks

IACAP has a long tradition of promoting philosophical dialogue and interdisciplinary research on all aspects of computing. Its members have contributed to the philosophical and ethical debates about computing, information technologies, and artificial intelligence. The 2026 annual conference will continue this tradition by bringing together researchers from various fields who are interested in the topics covered in our tracks, such as:

  • Computation, Cognitive Science, and Cognition

  • Computational Methods in the Sciences

  • Computer-Mediated Communication

  • Epistemological Issues in Artificial Intelligence and Computing

  • Ethics of Artificial Intelligence, Computation, Information, and Robotics

  • Human-Computational Systems Interaction

  • Information Culture and Society

  • Philosophy and History of Computing

  • Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence

  • Philosophy of Artificial Life and Biologically Inspired Computing

  • Philosophy of Information and Information Technology

  • Robotics and Embodiment

  • SIG: Mind and Machines

  • Societal and Environmental Impact of Computing Technologies and Automated Systems

  • Theoretical Problems in Computer Science

  • Virtual Reality

 

Special Tracks Automation in Science

From software-intensive science (e.g., computational biology, chemistry, etc.) to machine learning techniques in fields like particle physics, computational methods have been playing an increasingly important, and often indispensable, role in the way we conduct scientific inquiry. Increasingly, the role they play can be characterized as automation, since these techniques accomplish tasks previously conducted exclusively by human intervention. This track invites papers that aim to explore the philosophical (i.e., epistemological, ethical, or civilizational) implications of such a development from perspectives such as philosophy of science, philosophy of technology and/or philosophy of computation amongst others.

Epistemology of ML

Contemporary Machine learning (ML) approaches are being increasingly used in both formal and practical inquiry— e.g., science, policy-making, finance, etc.— in novel and important ways. Yet, their epistemic properties, roles, import and status are far from established. We invite papers that explore epistemological issues in machine learning and its applications. 

Pragmatics of LLMs

Recent advances in large language models (LLMs), and the increasing institutional adoption of favoured services, create opportunities for philosophers to develop experience-based frameworks for professional practice and philosophical work. This track invites papers examining how philosophers develop norms and guidance for LLM use in research, professional, and collegial contexts, addressing questions of professional responsibility, pedagogical guidance, and the identification of problematic practices, informed by recent developments in LLM capabilities.

Workshop Proposals

A workshop typically lasts around 90 min. Various formats are possible, from a themed session with various pre-selected papers on a defined topic to book symposia. If you have an idea but are unsure about its fit, please contact us beforehand. For a workshop proposal, please provide (a) a short abstract (approx. 200-300 words) describing the workshop in such a way as to be displayed in the conference program. Please add (b) an extended abstract (approx.) 1000 words that describes and justifies the workshop topic in more detail. We also ask that you upload (c)  a set of short abstracts for each paper in the workshop.

Submit a Proposal

https://pretalx.iacapconf.org/iacap-2026/cfp

Supporting material

Add supporting material (slides, programs, etc.)

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Custom tags

#philosophy of computation, #artificial intelligence, #machine learning, #automation, #technology, #philosophy of computer science