Call for papers

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Neology and Large Language Models Workshop (NeoLLM2026)

Co-located with LREC 2026, Palma de Mallorca (in-person & online)

May 16, 2026

Paper submission deadline: February 20, 2026

Submission link: https://softconf.com/lrec2026/NeoLLM2026/

Workshop website: https://neollm2026.del.auth.gr/

Main conference website: <https://lrec2026.info/> https://lrec2026.info/

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Motivation and Topics of Interest

Understanding how LLMs capture, propagate, or even invent semantic shifts 
raises fundamental questions for lexicography, language modeling, and semantic 
resources. Addressing these questions requires close collaboration between 
computational linguistics, lexicography, and lexical resource development. Such 
interdisciplinary work can shed light on how large language models both reflect 
and reshape linguistic creativity, an inquiry that lies at the core of the 
proposed workshop.

The goal is to examine methodological, theoretical, and applied questions: How 
can LLMs help identify, track, and categorize new lexical items and senses 
across languages? To what extent do LLMs replicate or amplify human neologisms 
and semantic shifts, and when do they generate artificial or spurious ones? 
What are the implications for lexicographic practice, language documentation, 
NLP applications, and cultural studies of language change?

We invite researchers from computational linguistics, lexicography, digital 
humanities, and language technology to explore the intersection of LLMs and 
neology. We invite submissions on (but not limited to) the following topics:

  *   Linguistic Innovation in the Age of AI

     *   Neology detection and tracking using LLMs

     *   How LLMs absorb, generate, and disseminate new lexical items

     *   Benchmarks for LLM-driven neology detection

     *   Legitimacy and authority in AI-generated neologisms

  *   Language Resources and Inequality

     *   High-resource vs. low-resource languages in neology

     *   Integration of neologisms in dominant languages

     *   LLMs and neology for low-resource languages

  *   Cultural and Sociolinguistic Dimensions

     *   Cultural appropriateness and contextual limitations of AI-driven 
neologisms

     *   Sociolinguistic perspectives on LLMs and neology

     *   LLMs as participants in language innovation

     *   Opportunities for language revitalization and documentation

  *   Future Considerations for Linguistic Research

     *   AI’s role in shaping language futures

     *   Strategies to ensure linguistic equity and diversity

     *   Cross-disciplinary approaches: linguistics, AI, education, and 
sociology

We invite both long (8 pages and 2 pages of references) and short papers (4 
pages and 2 pages of references) representing original research, innovative 
approaches and resource descriptions. Short papers may also represent project 
descriptions. These do not have to be implemented but discuss to what extent 
and for which purposes the project is created. Projects that are still in their 
early stages and seek advice from the broader scientific community are welcome, 
especially if they include underrepresented fields of study. We particularly 
welcome work on under-resourced and endangered languages. Submissions can be 
made via: 
https://neollm2026.del.auth.gr<https://neollm2026.del.auth.gr/>/<https://neollm2026.del.auth.gr/>

Papers should be formatted according to the LREC guidelines, please see 
https://lrec2026.info/authors-kit<https://lrec2026.info/authors-kit/>/<https://lrec2026.info/authors-kit/>.
 Submissions that do not conform to the required styles, including paper size, 
margin width, and font size restrictions, will be rejected without review.

At the time of submission, authors are offered the opportunity to share related 
language resources with the community. All repository entries are linked to the 
LRE Map<https://lremap.elra.info/>, which provides metadata for the resource.


Important Dates

Paper Submission: 20 February 2026

Notification: 15 March 2026

Camera-ready Copy: 30 March 2026

Workshop: 16 May 2026

All deadlines are 11:59 PM UTC-12:00 (“anywhere on earth”).

Workshop organisers

Giedre Valunaite Oleskeviciene (Mykolas Romeris University)

Barbara McGillivray (King’s College London)

Florentina Armaselu (University of Luxembourg)

Voula Giouli (Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

Chaya Liebeskind (Jerusalem College of Technology)




Dr Barbara McGillivray, FHEA | <https://twitter.com/BarbaraMcGilli> 
@BarbaraMcGilli<https://twitter.com/BarbaraMcGilli>

Senior Lecturer in Digital and Cultural Humanities and convenor of the MA 
programme in Digital Humanities

Room 3.28, Department of Digital Humanities, King’s College London, Strand 
Campus, Strand, London, WC2R 2LS

Group lead of the Computational Humanities Research 
Group<https://www.kcl.ac.uk/research/computational-humanities-research-group>
Open 
Research<https://emckclac.sharepoint.com/sites/artshums/SitePages/Open-Research.aspx?Mode=Edit>
 Lead, Faculty of Arts and Humanities

Editor-in-chief of Journal of Open Humanities 
Data<https://openhumanitiesdata.metajnl.com/>




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