Dear Colleagues,
We invite submissions for the Normative Reasoning for Agentic AI (NORA) special 
track at the 39th International FLAIRS Conference, to be held 17-20 May 2026 in 
Marco Island, Florida.
The goal of the NORA special track is to advance research on how norms can 
shape, guide, and explain agentic behavior in AI systems. It aims to bring 
together scholars exploring formal models of norms and deontic reasoning with 
those developing applied approaches to norm-aware, agent-based, collaborative, 
and responsible AI. By fostering dialogue between logic-based, data-driven, and 
human-centered perspectives, the track seeks to bridge theoretical foundations 
and practical implementations of normative reasoning across diverse domains 
such as multi-agent systems, reinforcement learning, robotics, security, law, 
and AI ethics.
The track welcomes both established scholars and early-career researchers from 
diverse AI domains who wish to explore how normative approaches can enrich and 
support contemporary AI research. Topics of interest include (but are not 
limited to):

  *   Formal and computational models of normative reasoning
  *   Norm-aware and norm-adaptive agents (including agents for coordination, 
negotiation, and institution design)
  *   Normative alignment and behavioral conformity in agentic and adaptive AI 
systems
  *   Normative reasoning in multi-agent interaction, collaboration, and 
collective decision-making
  *   Dialogue and interaction protocols for proposing, contesting, and 
revising norms
  *   Learning, planning, and control under normative constraints 
(reinforcement learning, safe exploration, and compliance by design)
  *   Automated normative reasoning for verification, monitoring, and 
compliance checking
  *   Normative reasoning in robotics, embodied and hybrid agents, and 
practical decision making
  *   Causal reasoning and norms (responsibility, accountability, blame/credit 
assignment, and trust)
  *   Normative explainability and interpretability (e.g., argumentation- or 
deontic-based explanations)
  *   Translation of natural-language norms into formal or executable 
specifications
  *   Applications of normative reasoning in law, security, machine ethics, and 
AI governance

For full details on the track and how to submit see the track website: 
https://sites.google.com/view/flairs-nora/

Important Dates

  *   Abstract submission deadline: January 19, 2026 (Abstract is required to 
submit full paper.)
  *   Paper submission deadline: January 26, 2026
  *   Paper acceptance notifications: March 9, 2026
  *   Camera ready version due: April 6, 2026


Types of submissions
The track is accepting three types of paper submissions:

  *   Full papers (up to 6 pages excluding references)
  *   Short papers (up to 4 pages  excluding references)
  *   Posters (up to 2 pages excluding references)

Proceedings
The proceedings of FLAIRS-39 will be published by Florida Online Journals 
(https://journals.flvc.org/) which is indexed in DBLP and Scopus.

Paper submission
Papers must use the 
<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1MZDlUkHPxAUVe4nenFm0_FoOtJPLNqsh/view> 
FLAIRS-39 
template<https://drive.google.com/file/d/1MZDlUkHPxAUVe4nenFm0_FoOtJPLNqsh/view>
 and must be submitted as a PDF.

We look forward to your contributions!

The NORA Track Chairs

Réka Markovich, University of Luxembourg, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Leon van der Torre, University of Luxembourg, [email protected]

Davide Liga, University of Luxembourg, [email protected]

Luca Pasetto, University of Luxembourg, [email protected]

Liuwen Yu, Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology, [email protected]
_______________________________________________
Corpora mailing list -- [email protected]
https://list.elra.info/mailman3/postorius/lists/corpora.list.elra.info/
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

Reply via email to