International Conference  ‘LAnguage TEchnologies for Low-resource Languages’ 
(LaTeLL ’2026)

Fes, Morocco

30 September, 1 and 2 October 2026

www.latell.org/2026/

Fourth Call for Papers


- The conference

Natural Language Processing (NLP) has witnessed remarkable progress in recent 
years, largely driven by the emergence of deep learning architectures and, more 
recently, large language models (LLMs). Nevertheless, these advances have 
disproportionately benefited high-resource languages that possess abundant data 
for model training. By contrast, low-resource languages which account for at 
least 85% of the world’s linguistic diversity and are often spoken by smaller 
or marginalised communities, have not yet reaped the full benefits of 
contemporary NLP technologies.
This imbalance can be attributed to several interrelated factors, including the 
scarcity of high-quality training data, limited computational and financial 
resources, and insufficient community engagement in data collection and model 
development. Developing NLP applications for low-resource languages poses major 
challenges, particularly the need for large, well-annotated datasets, 
standardised tools, and robust linguistic resources.
Although several workshops have previously addressed NLP for low-resource 
languages, LaTeLL represents the first international conference dedicated 
specifically to the automatic processing of such languages. The event aims to 
provide a forum for researchers to present and discuss their latest work in NLP 
in general, and in the development and evaluation of language models for 
low-resource languages in particular.

- Conference topics

We invite submissions on a broad range of themes concerning linguistic and 
computational studies focusing on low-resource languages, including but not 
limited to the following topics:

Language resources for low-resource languages
●       Dataset creation and annotation
●       Evaluation methodologies and benchmarks for low-resource settings
●       Lexical resources, corpora, and linguistic databases
●       Crowdsourcing and community-driven data collection
●       Tools and frameworks for low-resource language processing

Core language technologies for low-resource languages
●       Language modelling and pre-training for low-resource languages
●       Speech recognition, text-to-speech, and spoken language understanding
●       Phonology, morphology, word segmentation, and tokenisation
●       Syntax: tagging, chunking, and parsing
●       Semantics: lexical and sentence-level representation

NLP Applications for low-resource languages
●       Information extraction and named entity recognition
●       Question answering systems
●       Dialogue and interactive systems
●       Summarisation
●       Machine translation
●       Sentiment analysis, stylistic analysis, and argument mining
●       Content moderation
●       Information retrieval and text mining

Multimodality and Grounding for low-resource languages
●       Vision and language for low-resource contexts
●       Speech and text multimodal systems
●       Low-resource sign language processing

Ethics, Equity, and Social Impact for low-resource languages
●       Bias and fairness in low-resource language technologies
●       Sociolinguistic considerations in technology development
●       Cultural appropriateness and sensitivity

Human-Centred Approaches in low-resource languages
●       Usability and accessibility of low-resource language technologies
●       Educational applications and language learning
●       Community needs assessment and technology adoption
●       User experience research in low-resource contexts

Multilinguality and Cross-Lingual Methods for low-resource languages
●       Multilingual language models and their adaptation
●       Code-switching and code-mixing
●       Cross-lingual transfer learning in low-resource languages. 

- Special Theme Track 1 — Building Applications Based on Large Language Models 
for Low-Resource Languages

LaTeLL’2026 will feature a Special Theme Track dedicated to the development of 
applications based on Large Language Models (LLMs) for low-resource languages.
This track aims to explore innovative methodologies, architectures, and tools 
that leverage the power of LLMs to enhance linguistic processing, 
accessibility, and inclusivity for underrepresented languages. Contributions 
are encouraged on topics such as model adaptation and fine-tuning, multilingual 
and cross-lingual transfer, ethical and fairness considerations, and the 
creation of datasets and benchmarks that facilitate the integration of 
LLM-based solutions in low-resource settings.

- Special Theme Track 2 — Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) and Arabic Dialects

This special track addresses the unique challenges and opportunities in 
processing Modern Standard Arabic (MSA) and the rich landscape of Arabic 
dialects. The diglossic nature of Arabic, where the formal MSA coexists with 
numerous, widely used spoken dialects, presents a significant hurdle for NLP. 
While MSA is relatively well-resourced, Arabic dialects are quintessential 
examples of low-resource languages, often lacking standardised orthographies, 
annotated corpora, and dedicated processing tools. This track invites 
submissions on novel research and resources aimed at bridging this gap and 
advancing the state of the art in Arabic language technology. Topics of 
interest include, but are not limited to:

●       Dialect identification and classification
●       Creation of corpora and lexical resources for Arabic dialects
●       Machine translation between MSA and dialects, and across different 
dialects
●       Speech recognition and synthesis for dialectal Arabic
●       Computational modelling of morphology, syntax, and semantics for 
dialects
●       NLP applications (e.g., sentiment analysis, NER) for dialectal 
user-generated content
●       Code-switching between Arabic dialects, MSA, and other languages

- Submissions and Publication

LaTeLL’2026 welcomes high-quality submissions in English, which may take one of 
the following two forms:
●       Regular (long) papers: Up to eight (8) pages in length, presenting 
substantial, original, completed, and unpublished research.
●       Short (poster) papers: Up to four (4) pages in length, suitable for 
concise or focused contributions, ongoing research, negative results, system 
demonstrations, and similar work. Short papers will be presented during a 
dedicated poster session.
The conference will not consider submissions consisting of abstracts only.
All accepted papers (both long and short) will be published as electronic 
proceedings (with ISBN) and made available on the conference website at the 
time of the event. The organisers intend to submit the proceedings for 
inclusion in the ACL Anthology.


To prepare your submission, please make sure to use the LaTeLL’2026 style files 
available here:

LaTeX: 
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1RceWyUqjFLEbv_oNto-x2Quop7qT4-wf/view?usp=sharing
Word:  
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1m6VeC9jtMpe-Ku2QREgrPlE2-NTDvJvZ/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=116404207110716316894&rtpof=true&sd=true
Overleaf: https://www.overleaf.com/read/ttzzfcnjrgvw#e82bef

Papers should be submitted through Softconf/START using the following link:  
https://softconf.com/p/latell2026
Authors of papers receiving exceptionally positive reviews will be invited to 
prepare extended and substantially revised versions for submission to a leading 
journal in the field of Natural Language Processing (NLP).
The conference will also feature a Student Workshop, and awards will be 
presented to the authors of outstanding papers.

Important dates

●       Submissions due: 1 May 2026
●       Reviewing process: 20 May – 20 June 2026
●       Notification of acceptance: 25 June 2026
●       Camera-ready due: 10 July 2026
●       Conference camera-ready proceedings ready 10 July 2026
●       Conference: 30 September, 1 October and 2 October 2026


Keynote speaker

Nizar Habash (New York University Abu Dhabi)


Organisation

Conference Chair 

Ruslan Mitkov (Lancaster University and University of Alicante)


Programme Committee Chairs

Saad Ezzini (King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals)
Salima Lamsiyah (University of Luxembourg)
Tharindu Ranasinghe (Lancaster University)


Organising Committee

Maram Alharbi (Lancaster University)
Salmane Chafik (Mohammed VI Polytechnic University)
Ernesto Estevanell (University of Alicante)
Milica Ikonić Nešić (University of Belgrade)


Further information and contact details

The follow-up calls will provide more details on the conference venue and 
registration. 

The conference website is www.latell.org/2026/ and will be updated on a regular 
basis. For further information, please email [email protected]

Registration will open in April 2026.
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