Artificial Intelligence and Digital Humanities: practices, challenges and future directions

The Information Science and Digital Humanities division at the Research Center on Scientific and Technical Information at Algiers, is delighted to announce the organization of the International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Digital Humanities: practices, challenges and future directions. This is an interdisciplinary event that aims at bringing together researchers, scholars and practitioners from all related disciplines to share investigations and experiences in the transformative intersection of AI and DH.

Conference objectives

The rise of AI is revolutionizing research, analysis, preservation, and mediation practices in the humanities and social sciences. At the same time, digital humanities offer fertile ground for experimenting with new tools, methods, and critical perspectives on linguistic, historical, cultural, and heritage data.

However, in the Algerian context, as in many Arab, African and Mediterranean countries, local knowledge, heritage corpora, national languages, and forms of thought stemming from the social sciences and humanities remain underrepresented in the major international dynamics of the digital humanities and AI. This first edition of the conference, to be held in Algiers in October 2026, aims to raise awareness and give visibility to the research, practices, and issues specific to these regions. It offers a space for interdisciplinary dialogue between researchers, engineers, heritage professionals, artists, librarians, linguists, and computer scientists to explore together the critical, epistemological, and creative

potential of AI applied to the humanities, with a particular focus on countries and communities that are underrepresented in these fields.

Topics

We welcome original research papers, case studies and sharing experiences within the non-exhaustive list of topics below:

Applications and Practices



AI-driven text analysis and Natural Language Processing in humanities research



Digital preservation and restoration of cultural heritage using AI



AI applications in archaeology, history, and archival studies



AI in social memory and trauma studies



AI in creative and cultural practices: literature, art, music, and performance



Bias, representation and stereotyping in AI-generated cultural content



AI in critical/computational cultural studies



Digital storytelling, immersive and interactive experiences (VR/AR, gamification)



AI-enhanced pedagogy and digital learning in the humanities



AI for audience engagement, participatory humanities and public cultural practices

Data and Methods



Multilingualism and low-resource languages in digital humanities (corpora, resources and tools)



Data creation, curation, annotation and sharing for humanities and heritage



Multimodal cultural datasets (text, image, sound, video) and their challenges



Computational methods for historical and diachronic analysis



Knowledge graphs, ontologies, data modeling and semantic technologies



Collaborative platforms and infrastructures for interdisciplinary research



Interdisciplinary collaboration: models, challenges and best practices



Evaluation frameworks and benchmarks for humanities AI applications

Ethics, Policy, and Perspectives



Ethical challenges and responsible AI in the humanities



Legal frameworks, intellectual property, and data governance in cultural contexts



Policy, governance, and risk mitigation in AI adoption



Environmental sustainability of AI infrastructure in humanities research



Decolonial AI, local knowledge systems, and inclusive digitization



Global South perspectives on AI and digital humanities

Honorary Chair: Prof. Zoheir Mokhtari, Director of CERIST

Chair: Dr. Hassina Aliane, Director of Research, CERIST

Participation opportunities

Paper/poster: submission guidelines TBA

Special session: NLP and impact of LLMs for regional low-resourced languages: information TBA.

Demos: demonstration of tools

Panels:

Panel 1: Ethics, Responsible AI and legal frameworks in Digital humanities.

Panel 2: Open access, open data and Digital Humanities.

Panel 3: South-south cooperation in AI and Digital Humanities.

Publication and diffusion

All contributions will be peer-reviewed:

– Articles submitted to the main conference and the special session must be written in English. The conference proceedings will be submitted to IEEE.