Convergence 2026
17 - 19 June 2026
Guildford, UK
Building on the success of the first Convergence conference in 2023, which explored the responsible and intelligent integration of human and machine capabilities in translation and interpreting, the Centre for Translation Studies is proud to announce Convergence 2026: Human-AI Integration for Multilingual and Accessible Communication. The second edition of the Convergence conference will create an opportunity to bring together innovative research on the evolving landscape of AI in the context of multilingual and accessible communication, reflecting on the complexity and effects of using AI-driven technologies in these fields. The conference will foster a multidisciplinary dialogue that will generate new theoretical perspectives and practical research, focusing on themes such as the ethical aspects of AI in translation and interpreting, AI-enabled digital accessibility and societal inclusion, and the impact of Generative AI on language mediation. We will also examine the evolving role of language professionals, the power of Large Language Models (LLMs) in supporting multilingual communication, and the crucial need for responsible use of language AI in the public sector. The conference will publish full papers in open access proceedings with assigned ISBN and DOI.
The conference will be preceded by a Summer school on Artificial Intelligence for Accessible Communication between 15th and 17th June 2026. More details about the Summer school will be added soon.
Important dates
- 9th Feb 2026: Registration of intention to submit a paper (optional)
- 16th Feb 2026: Submissions of full papers
- 30th March 2026: Notification of acceptance
- 22nd May 2026: Camera ready papers for the draft proceedings
- 15th - 17th June 2026: Summer school on Artificial Intelligence for Accessible Communication
- 17th - 19th June 2026: The Convergence conference
- 1st Sept 2026: Camera ready papers for final proceedings
Submissions and publications
Convergence 2026 invites the following types of submissions on one of the conference themes:
- Full papers – describing original completed research. Allowed paper length: maximum 8 pages + unlimited number of pages for references and appendices
- Short papers – describing work in progress. Allowed paper length: maximum 4 pages + unlimited number of pages for references and appendices
The conference aims to be a platform for in-depth discussion of prevalent themes while also offering contributors the opportunity for swift publication of their work. The event will provide the wide community of Translation and Interpreting Studies and the disciplines it intersects with, a space for networking, collective brainstorming and looking into the future of communication, all sustained by a robust set of papers published in the conference proceedings.
Both full and short papers can be associated with rigorous empirical work or conceptual approaches to the themes of the conference. PhD students are also invited to submit papers regardless of the stage of their PhD journey. If accepted, their papers may be selected to any of the sessions of the conference, including a dynamic poster session, in which students may receive feedback and consider new developments for their work.
The papers should be formatted using a style similar to the two column ACL style (available at https://acl-org.github.io/ACLPUB/formatting.html). The next call for papers will provide links to the styles customised for the Convergence 2026 conference.
The submission will be electronic, using the Softconf START conference management system.
Each submission will be reviewed by three members of the Programme Committee. The conference will not consider and evaluate abstracts only.
The final versions of the accepted papers will be published in e-proceedings with assigned ISBN and DOI. Authors may add one additional page to their final submission to incorporate the feedback from reviewers.
A draft version of the proceedings will be published before the conference. After the conference, the authors will be given the opportunity to make minor changes to their papers in order to incorporate feedback received at the conference. The final version of the proceedings will be published in September 2026.
Venue
The conference will take place in Guildford at University of Surrey.
Conference organisers
Conference chair: Prof Sabine Braun
Programme chairs: Prof Constantin Orasan and Dr Diana Singureanu
Proceedings chairs: Dr Felix do Carmo and Prof Constantin Orasan
Summer school chairs: Dr Elena Davitti and Prof Sabine Braun
Sponsorship chairs: Sara Palmer and Aimee Savage
Local organisers: Aimee Savage and Dr Yuan Zou