The Information Disorder Workshop

Collocated with LREC 2026 in Palma de Mallorca, Spain
https://information-disorder-workshop.github.io/ 

* February 24: Paper submission
* March 17: Notification of acceptance
* March 30: Camera-ready submission
* May 12, 2026: InDor at LREC!

Online disinformation is a pressing challenge for our societies. Its role in 
influencing elections (Allcott & Gentzkow, 2017) and behaviours (van der Linden 
et al., 2020) has gathered the attention of different societal actors aimed at 
mitigating its negative impact.
The Natural Language Processing (NLP) community is contributing to fighting 
this phenomenon with a growing number of datasets (Hussain et al., 2025) and 
technologies (VeraAI, AskVera, Bellingcat) (Lupi et al., 2023; Wuhrl et al., 
2023) for the automatic recognition of fake news. However, this field of 
research suffers from a lack of a common theoretical framework, which causes a 
fragmentation of approaches. The increasing attention of the NLP community to 
human-label variation (Plank, 2022) raises additional challenges regarding the 
cross-cultural and pragmatic implications that determine the spreading of 
disinformation (Dabbous et al., 2022).
The goal of the Information Disorder (InDor) workshop is to promote an 
interdisciplinary and intersectorial discussion towards the development of NLP 
research on disinformation.
Information Disorder is a recent framework introduced by Wardle and Derakhshan 
(2017) to organize theories, definitions, and approaches for the study of 
disinformation.
The framework is characterized by two main pillars: 1) acknowledging the need 
to categorize fake news under a finer-grained taxonomy of disorders 
(mis-information, dis-information, and mal-information); 2) exploring the role 
of the contextual factors that determine the spreading of fake news.

InDor aims to
Define a common theoretical ground for the research on disinformation in NLP 
and beyond
Discuss the cultural factors determining subjectivity to disinformation
Promote interdisciplinarity in the development of datasets and models
Discuss the impact of real-world applications to contrast disinformation

The InDor workshop (half-day duration) will be co-located with the fifteenth 
biennial Language Resources and Evaluation Conference (LREC) held at the Palau 
de Congressos de Palma in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, on 11-16 May 2026.

Submissions

When submitting a paper from the START page, authors will be asked to provide 
essential information about resources (in a broad sense, i.e. also 
technologies, standards, evaluation kits, etc.) that have been used for the 
work described in the paper or are a new result of your research. Moreover, 
ELRA encourages all LREC authors to share the described LRs (data, tools, 
services, etc.) to enable their reuse and replicability of experiments 
(including evaluation ones).  In addition, authors will be required to adhere 
to ethical research policies on AI and may include an ethics statement in their 
papers.

The papers should be submitted as a PDF document, conforming to the formatting 
guidelines provided in the call for papers of the LREC conference. Templates 
are provided here https://lrec2026.info/authors-kit/  

We accept three types of submissions:
Regular research papers;
Non-archival submissions: like research papers, but will not be included in the 
proceedings;
(Non-archival) research communications: 1-page abstracts summarising relevant 
research published elsewhere.

InDor will also accept submissions that have been rejected from ACL rolling 
review, provided they are accompanied by their reviews, and they fit the topic 
of the workshop.

Research papers (archival or non-archival) may consist of up to 8 pages of 
content. Research communications may consist of up to 1 page of content. Please 
make the submission here: https://softconf.com/lrec2026/InDor26/ 

Topics

We invite original research papers specifically on the following topics, with a 
particular focus on resources, taxonomies, and benchmarks for the evaluation of 
NLP systems on Information Disorder:
new interdisciplinary theoretical proposals and foundational aspects
surveys on Information Disorder
multiculturality and multilinguality in datasets and technologies
interdisciplinary computational methods and frameworks 
community- and user-centred approaches
real-world applications to contrast false information
experimental applications and projects for social good
evaluation of Information Disorder-focused systems
generative approaches to contrast false information
participatory approaches
positions on Information Disorder

Submissions are open to all and are to be submitted anonymously (and must 
conform to the instructions for double-blind review). All papers will be 
refereed through a double-blind peer review process by at least three 
reviewers, with final acceptance decisions made by the workshop organisers. 
Scientific papers will be evaluated based on relevance, significance of 
contribution, impact, technical quality, scholarship, and quality of 
presentation. 

Attendance

At least one author of each accepted paper is required to participate in the 
conference and present the work, in-person or online.

Workshop organisers: 

Simona Frenda, Heriot-Watt University
Marco Antonio Stranisci, University of Turin
Shaina Ashraf, Phillips University of Marburg
Ada Ren, Macquarie University
Ioannis Konstas, Heriot-Watt University
Usman Naseem, Macquarie University

Contact us at [email protected] if you have any questions.
Website: https://information-disorder-workshop.github.io/
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