LaTeR Lab · Language Technology Research Lab
Scuola Superiore per Mediatori Linguistici di Pisa
1st Annual Symposium · Call for Papers

Language,
the Self,
& AI.

Resilience and Responsibility in the Age of the Algorithm

12 – 14 May 2027 SSML Pisa, Italy
Language · English Mode · Face-to-Face Interdisciplinary
01

About the Symposium

Language, creativity, human agency and ethics in the age of AI.

In few realms of human activity has the impact of artificial intelligence been felt as immediately and visibly as in language. For many people, AI and language technology are now synonymous — from neural machine translation systems like DeepL to large language model interfaces such as ChatGPT and Claude, technologies that achieved some of the fastest adoption rates in the history of communication media.

Yet beneath the surface of this remarkable efficiency lies a set of urgent and unresolved questions. The capacity of AI systems to generate fluent multilingual output at scale has made them central actors in contemporary information ecosystems — shaping which voices are amplified, which varieties of language are standardised, and which forms of knowledge are rendered invisible. Issues of bias, linguistic inequality, and epistemic asymmetry are not incidental features of these tools; they are structurally embedded in how they are designed and deployed.

Language is inseparable from how human beings frame experience, construct identity, and interact with the world. A technology that so faithfully mimics communication — the very basis of human identity and connection — demands rigorous, multidisciplinary scrutiny.

If language is, as Heidegger put it, the “house of being,” then those who work with it bear a clear ethical responsibility in the age of AI.

That responsibility is to resist purely utilitarian considerations and to preserve the capacity of language to reveal, nuance, and sustain human understanding. AI systems, by design, tend toward standardisation, optimisation, and probabilistic reproduction — risking the flattening of ambiguity, the erosion of minority expressions, and the privileging of dominant linguistic patterns. The task is not to reject technology outright, but to prevent the “house” from being converted into a purely functional structure: to ensure that language remains a space where meaning can emerge, rather than merely be processed.

Language, the Self, and AI is the inaugural symposium of LaTeR Lab, a new research centre at the Scuola Superiore per Mediatori Linguistici di Pisa (SSML Pisa) dedicated to the intersection of language, technology, and professional practice. It is conceived as a genuinely interdisciplinary event — as relevant to translators and interpreters as to computer scientists, and as relevant to ethicists and policy-makers as to linguists and educators.

02

Conference Themes

Four thematic tracks. Interdisciplinary contributions that cut across themes are especially encouraged.

Track 01

Human–AI Interaction & Professional Practice

Post-editing, interactive MT, AI-assisted interpreting; legal, medical, technical and literary domains; quality, accreditation, and the economics of AI-disrupted language professions.

Track 02

AI, Disinformation & Epistemic Integrity

AI-generated text and disinformation architectures; deepfakes and synthetic voice; algorithmic amplification; multilingual fact-checking; the geopolitics of language targeting.

Track 03

Language, Society & Public Discourse

Authorship and creative expression; identity, alienation, and algorithmic representation; journalism and institutional discourse; oral cultures and low-resource languages.

Track 04

Pedagogy, Training & Disciplinary Futures

AI literacy in translator and interpreter training; curriculum design for AI-integrated programmes; assessment and academic integrity; what remains distinctively human.

03

Keynotes & Registration

Keynote Speakers
  • Dr Claudio FantinuoliTBC
    University of Mainz, Germersheim
  • Dr Bart Defrancq
    University of Ghent
Registration Fees
Full-time Professionals € 120
Early-Bird Registration € 100
Full-time Studentswith proof of enrolment € 60
Conference Dinneroptional · evening of 13 May € 45

Registration includes conference materials, coffee breaks, and two lunches across the two conference days.

04

How to Submit

Submission Guidelines
  • Abstract: 250–350 words (excl. references)
  • Bio: up to 150 words
  • Languages: English or Italian; conference language English
  • Track: indicate the thematic track addressed
  • Submit to: directorofstudies@mediazionelinguistica.it by 15 November 2026
Presentation Formats
  • Research papers — 20 min + 10 min discussion
  • Practice-based presentations & case studies — 20 min + 10 min
  • Panel discussions — 90 min, groups of 3–4 speakers
05

Important Dates

15 Nov 2026
Abstract Submission Deadline
5 Dec 2026
Acceptance Notifications
15 Mar 2027
Registration Deadline
12–14 May 2027
Conference Dates

Publication

Selected papers will be invited for a peer-reviewed edited volume, organised thematically. Details will be shared with the authors of accepted abstracts.

Scientific Committee

Chair

Dr Christopher Fotheringham

Members

Dr Dirk Brand · Dr Silviu Rogobete · Dr Kim Wallmach · Dr Claudio Fantinuoli · Mr Cristiano Ripoli

Submit your abstract

Join the inaugural conversation on language, the self, and artificial intelligence.

Send your abstract