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CfP - Human Work Interaction Design 2026 (HWID 2026)
Harmonisation of human and machine intelligence in the 5th Industrial
Revolution (5IR) Workplace
June 17-18, 2026
University of West London, St. Mary’s Road, London (United Kingdom)
https://wg6.ifip-tc13.org/human-work-interaction-design-2026-hwid-2026
8th Working Conference of the IFIP WG 13.6 Human Work Interaction Design
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Technologies such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), Metaverse, and
Digital Twin (DT) technologies, as they become smarter, present risks of
increased reliance on such technologies in the workplace. Human beings
may discount their thinking capabilities and abdicate their agency,
including those related to creative problem solving, to machine
intelligence. Rather than completely automating tasks and asking the
worker to remain in a supervisory or backup role, augmentation seeks to
enable cooperation between the worker and the machine. If this concept
is well studied to enable efficacy and efficiency at work, efforts must
still be made in HWID research to enable well-being, trust, and ensure
human control and governance of the outcomes within these worker-machine
teams.
The conference calls for inclusive approaches for unpacking Industry
5.0, through the integration of human and social sciences, arts, design,
and humanities insights and expertise in machine applications. This call
seeks contributions that explore the augmentation of human cognition in
line with human values through research of new frameworks, models, and
approaches for Industry 5.0, Fifth Industrial Revolution (5IR) that
focus on a harmonisation of human ability and well-being, while
simultaneously ensuring human beings can make effective use of 5IR
technologies, including machine intelligence in the workplace.
Accordingly, it is essential to revisit and re-conceptualize the notion
of work augmentation in automation-driven contexts by integrating
extremely relevant dimensions such as worker well-being, human autonomy,
and system transparency into its definition.
Industry 5.0 is a concept that builds on the earlier aims of Industry
4.0. Where the Industry 4.0 focus is on productivity and efficiency,
Industry 5.0 aims to place the well-being of the worker at the centre of
the production process and on maintaining sustainability goals.
Harmonisation of human and machine intelligence interaction in the 5IR
would require the ability to measure, analyze, and apply affective data
of the human and workplace environment to design, integrate, and
optimize the employee experience and well-being within the workplace
environment.
This edition of the HWID working conference aims to attract submissions
from professionals in academia, national labs, and industry, as well as
from students. The event will provide a platform to discuss tools,
procedures, and professional competencies essential for harmonizing
human and machine intelligence, central to Industry 5.0.
TOPICS
- Human-centric UI design with 5IR technologies in the workplace
- Human-AI interaction and collaboration
- Sociotechnical Theory and Methods for 5IR
- Collaborative systems design for Industry 5.0
- Human Digital Twins in the future of work
- Behavioral analytics and data modeling
- Safety and well-being of workers in the workplace (e.g., trust and
training)
- Ethics, policy, and law in 5IR
- Case studies and implications of 5IR technologies (e.g., discretionary
effort, job satisfaction)
- Education and coaching to afford harmonisation of human and 5IR
technologies in the workplace
- Human and social sciences, creative arts, and design
IMPORTANT DATES
Submission deadline: February 8
Notification to authors: March 6
Camera ready: March 27
Conference: June 17-18, 2026
SUBMISSIONS
We invite authors to submit full papers (max 8 pages, including
references) formatted according to the LNCS template available on the
Springer website:
https://www.springer.com/gp/computer-science/lncs/conference-proceedings-gu…
The link to the submission system:
https://meteor.springer.com/HWID2026
Each paper will be reviewed by three reviewers. The collection of all
accepted papers will be distributed to the participants as digital
proceedings before the conference. During the review process, the
reviewers will be asked to evaluate whether an extended version of the
paper is suitable for an IFIP Springer book (IFIP Advances in
Information and Communication Technology) that will be edited after the
conference.
ORGANIZERS
General Chairs:
- Jose Abdelnour-Nocera (University of West London, UK)
- Judith Molka-Danielsen (Molde University College, Norway)
Program Chairs:
- Barbara Rita Barricelli (University of Brescia, Italy)
- Elodie Bouzekri (Université de Brest, France)
- Parisa Sadaati (University of West London, UK)
Local Organizing Chair:
- Ali Gheitasy (University of West London, UK)