Submission of Short Papers or Extended Abstracts
We are happy to welcome
Papers may include short work-in-progress and position papers (2–4 pages) as well as extended abstracts (1–2 pages). All submissions will be considered for both oral presentations and poster sessions. If we have a sufficient number of quality contributions, we could have the opportunity to publish those papers as part of a special issue in a relevant journal.
Submission website: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=ieeesccs2026
Submission deadline: June 20th, 2026
Decision deadline: June 25th, 2026
Workshop date: July 1st, 2026
If there are any further questions, please do not hesitate to reach out to the workshop organizers.
Authors with an accepted short paper or extended abstract contribution have to hold
A short pitch
You can check the ICHMS website for additional information.
The pitch (pptx or pdf)
There will be pitches as part of the workshop (see tentative schedule) where authors will get 4 - 5 minutes to introduce their work.
Presentation slides:
You are expected to provide a title slide for your poster in Microsoft .pptx- or PDF format.
You can add two more slides for your pitch (i.e., a maximum of three slides, with the title slide)
You must provide the organizing team with the slides. We will merge all material into one common presentation, which helps us to minimize the “unnecessary technical breaks”.
The pitch
You are expected to be at the venue of the presentation
You will one by one be asked to enter the stage and give your talk.
You will have a “clicker” to advance the slides.
We will be strict on the time.
Break-Up Group Session - Human-in-the-loop GenAI: Future Trends for Cooperative and Shared Systems
The group session focuses on emerging trends in human-in-the-loop generative AI for cooperative and shared systems, with particular emphasis on how responsibility, control, and decision authority are distributed between humans and AI agents. Discussions address methods for integrating human feedback across different stages of the generative pipeline, including model training, real-time adaptation, and post-hoc validation. Challenges can be examined related to transparency, trust calibration, and cognitive load in shared human–AI workflows, as well as design principles for maintaining meaningful human oversight without undermining system scalability. Further topics include evaluation frameworks for collaborative performance, governance mechanisms for adaptive systems, and implications for deployment in safety-critical and multi-stakeholder environments.
You are welcome to participate in the discussion.
If you have any questions, do not hesitate to contact us.