Resources for subjectivity, sentiment, emotion and social media analysis
Opinion retrieval, extraction, categorization, aggregation and summarization
Humor, Irony and Sarcasm detection
Mis- and disinformation analysis and the role of affective attributes
Aspect and topic-based sentiment and emotion analysis
Analysis of stable traits of social media users, incl. personality analysis and profiling
Transfer learning for domain, language and genre portability of sentiment analysis
Modelling commonsense knowledge for subjectivity, sentiment or emotion analysis
Improvement of NLP tasks using subjectivity and/or sentiment analysis
Intrinsic and extrinsic evaluation of subjectivity and/or sentiment analysis
Application of theories from related fields to subjectivity and sentiment analysis
Multimodal emotion detection and classification
Social Groups analysis and their interactions in Social Media
Generation, detection, and evaluation of subjectivity, sentiment, and emotion in NLP tasks with LLMs
Risks, challenges, and ethical implications of affective uses of LLMs
The role of emotions in argument mining
Applications of sentiment and emotion mining
Public sentiments and communication patterns of public health emergencies.
The analysis of pretrained small and large language models.
Finally, this year we also propose a special track on multilinguality and socio-cultural adaptation to lesser-resourced languages/communities.
In general, we particularly invite contributions from young researchers, work on low-resource languages, multilingual methods, and interdisciplinary work.
Important datesDecember 17, 2025: Direct submission deadline
January 2, 2026: ARR submission deadline
January 23, 2026: Notification of acceptance
February 3, 2026: Camera Ready Papers due
March 24–29, 2026: EACL with WASSA workshop on one of the days.
We do not offer a shared task this year.
PapersAt WASSA 2026, we will accept three types of submissions:
For the regular research track we accept long & short papers.
Additionally, we accept double submissions and double commitment of ARR reviews in parallel to WASSA and another venue. Please note that you must immediately withdraw your paper from WASSA if you decide to publish it elsewhere. Check with the other venue if they also allow double submissions.
Long papers may consist of up to eight (8) pages of content, with any number of additional pages of references. A- subset of these papers will be presented orally.
Short papers may consist of up to four (4) pages of content, with any number of additional pages of references. Most of these papers will be presented as posters.
Also this year there is an industry track, for which we accept demo papers. Demo papers describe system demonstrations, ranging from early prototypes to mature production-ready systems. Commercial sales and marketing activities are not appropriate for this track. Demo papers may consist of up to six (6) pages of content, these will be presented as a poster and should include a live demonstration.
Submission procedure and templatesSubmissions without reviews can be done directly through our Open Review side (https://openreview.net/group?id=eacl.org/EACL/2026/Workshop/WASSA).
Authors who received reviews already through the ACL Rolling Review process are invited to commit their reviewed paper to WASSA. To do so, please go to our ARR Website and click on “ACL 2026 Workshop WASSA Commitment Submission”. You will then need to add the title, the URL to the ARR submission with reviews + metareview, and other information.
Both long and short papers must be anonymised for double-blind reviewing, must follow the ACL Author Guidelines, and must use the ACL templates (https://github.com/acl-org/acl-style-files). The submitting author must have an OpenReview profile
Optional Supplementary Materials: Appendices, Software and DataARR encourages the submission of these supplementary materials to improve the reproducibility of results, and to enable authors to provide additional information that does not fit in the paper. Supplementary materials may include appendices, software or data. For example, pre processing decisions, model parameters, feature templates, lengthy proofs or derivations, pseudocode, sample system inputs/outputs, and other details that are necessary for the exact replication of the work described in the paper can be put into appendices. However, if the pseudo-code or derivations or model specifications are an important part of the contribution, or if they are important for the reviewers to assess the technical correctness of the work, they should be a part of the main paper, and not appear in appendices. Reviewers are not required to consider material in appendices. Appendices should come after the references in the submitted pdf, but do not count towards the page limit. Software should be submitted as a single .tgz or .zip archive, and data as a separate single .tgz or .zip archive. Supplementary materials must be fully anonymized to preserve the two-way anonymized reviewing policy and must not exceed 100MB.
Organizers
Jeremy Barnes, University of the Basque Country
Valentin Barriere, University of Chile
Orphée De Clercq, Ghent University
Roman Klinger, University of Bamberg
Célia Nouri, Inria and Sciences Po
Debora Nozza, Bocconi University
Pranaydeep Singh, Ghent University
Contact
Email: wassaw...@gmail.com
Website: https://workshop-wassa.github.io/