Dear all,

With apologies for cross posting, please find below the CFP for the Linked Data 
in Linguistics Workshop taking place at this year’s LREC Conference. This 
year’s workshop (which I am co-organising) is especially interested in cultural 
heritage linked data and use cases including linking collections, the language 
of cataloguing, and multilingualism in collections information, so I hope it 
will be of interest to you!

1st Call for Papers: Linked Data in Linguistics 2026

Paper Submission: 20 February 2026
Submissions can be made via: https://softconf.com/lrec2026/LinkedData/
Workshop: 12 May 2026

The Linked Data in Linguistics (LDL) workshop series has established itself as 
the premier venue for discussing the application of Semantic Web technologies 
to the fields of linguistics, digital lexicography, and digital humanities (DH).

While recent years have witnessed a steady growth in adoption of the technology 
in these areas, its uptake in other relevant domains, most notably in the case 
of natural language processing (NLP), continues to lag behind. This year the 
workshop (collocated with LREC 2026) in addition to embracing the full 
bandwidth of applications of Linguistic Linked Open Data (LLOD) technologies 
and the closely related area of knowledge graphs in linguistics, welcomes 
contributions addressing the application of LLOD technologies to NLP 
applications, as well as those dealing with emerging hot topics regarding 
future bridges between structured (linguistic) knowledge and fields such as 
neural methods and cultural heritage.

Motivation and Topics of Interest

We invite presentations of algorithms, methodologies, experiments, tools, use 
cases, descriptions of ongoing or planned research projects as well as position 
papers that describe the creation, publication or application of linked 
linguistic data collections and their linking with other resources. 
Descriptions of such data, and in particular, its uses in research 
(linguistics, lexicology, digital humanities) and technology (NLP, 
e-lexicography, localization) are also welcome. This year, we are particularly 
interested in submissions related to the use of linguistic linked data for 
cultural heritage applications. The following is a non-exhaustive list of 
relevant topics:


  *   Building, managing and linking language resources:
     *   Lexicons and Lexical Data, including Dictionaries and Lexicographic 
Resources
     *   Annotations and Annotated Corpora
     *   Entity Linking
  *   Technologies, challenges and best practices for language technology and 
language resources on the web:
     *   Interoperability
     *   Sustainability
     *   Infrastructure
     *   FAIRness
  *   Structured data in language technology:
     *   Knowledge Graphs
     *   Machine Learning
     *   Multilingual Technologies
     *   Language Knowledge Injection in LLMs
  *   Show cases, case studies and applications by different communities of 
practice:
     *   Multimodality
     *   Corpus Linguistics
     *   Lexicography
     *   Digital Humanities
  *   Cultural Heritage Applications of Linguistic Linked Data
     *   Linking collections
     *   Language of cataloguing
     *   Multilingualism in collections information
  *   Current directions and critical reflection. Position papers on:
     *   Ethical, legal, technological aspects of structured data in the age of 
LLMs
     *   The role of LLOD in promoting low-resource languages
     *   Extensions of RDF and graph formalisms

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 Linguistic Linked Open Data is reused or created. 
Projects that are still in their early stages and seek advice from the broader 
Linguistic Linked Data community are welcome, especially if they include 
underrepresented fields of study. We particularly welcome work on 
under-resourced and endangered languages, as well as contributions from 
communities and regions that are underrepresented in computational linguistics. 
For more information see https://ldl2026.linguistic-lod.org/.

Submissions can be made via: https://softconf.com/lrec2026/LinkedData/
Papers should be formatted according to the LREC guidelines, please see 
https://lrec2026.info/authors-kit/. Please note that the review process will be 
single-blind.

Important Dates
Paper Submission: 20 February 2026
Notification: 16 March 2026
Camera-ready Copy: 30 March 2026
Workshop: 12 May 2026


All the best,
Erin

Erin Canning, MLIS, MMst
D.Phil. student: University of Oxford, Victoria & Albert Museum
AHRC-funded Collaborative Doctoral Partnership
‘Application of computational approaches in addressing problematic terminology 
within V&A Museum catalogues’
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
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