Interdisciplinary Workshop on Observations of Misunderstood, Misguided and Malicious Use of Language Models: OMMM 2025

Time and Place

The first Interdisciplinary Workshop on Observations of Misunderstood, Misguided and Malicious Use of Language Models (OMMM 2025) wil be held with the RANLP 2025 conference in Varna, Bulgaria, on 11-13 September 2025.

Call for Papers

We are pleased to invite submissions for the first Interdisciplinary Workshop on Observations of Misunderstood, Misguided and Malicious Use of Language Models (OMMM 2025). The workshop will be held with the RANLP 2025 conference in Varna, Bulgaria, on 11-13 September 2025.

Overview
The use of Large Language Models (LLMs) pervades scientific practices in multiple disciplines beyond the NLP/AI communities. Alongside benefits for productivity and discovery, widespread use often entails misuse due to misalignment of values, lack of knowledge, or, more rarely, malice. LLM misuse has the potential to cause real harm in a variety of settings.

Through this workshop, we aim to gather researchers interested in identifying and mitigating inappropriate and harmful uses of LLMs. These include misunderstood usages (e.g., misrepresentation of LLMs in the scientific literature); misguided usages (e.g., deployment of LLMs without adequate training or privacy safeguards); and malicious usages (e.g., generation of misinformation and plagiarism). Sample topics are listed below, but we welcome submissions on any domain related to the scope of the workshop.

Important Dates
Submission deadline: 6 July 2025, at 23:59 Anywhere on Earth
Notification of acceptance: 31 July 2025
Camera-ready papers due: 20 August 2025
Workshop dates: September 11, 12, or 13, 2025

Submission Guidelines
Submissions will be accepted as short papers (4 pages) and as long papers (8 pages), plus additional pages for references. All submissions undergo a double-blind review, so they should not include any identifying information. Submissions should conform to the RANLP guidelines; for further information and templates, please see the RANLP submission guidelines.

We welcome submissions from diverse disciplines, including NLP and AI, psychology, HCI, and philosophy. We particularly encourage reports on negative results that provide interesting perspectives on relevant topics.

In-person presenters will be prioritised when selecting submissions to be presented at the workshop, but the workshop will take place in a hybrid format. Accepted papers will be included in the workshop proceedings in the ACL Anthology.

Papers should be submitted on the RANLP conference system.

For any questions, please contact the organisers at ommm-workshop@googlegroups.com

Workshop Topic and Content

The use of Large Language Models (LLMs) pervades scientific practices in multiple disciplines beyond the NLP/AI communities. Alongside benefits for productivity and discovery, widespread use often entails misuse due to misalignment of values, lack of knowledge, or, more rarely, malice. LLM misuse has the potential to cause real harm in a variety of settings.

Through this workshop, we aim to gather researchers interested in identifying and mitigating inappropriate and harmful uses of LLMs. We categorise the misuses of LLMs into three domains:

Topics include:

Keynote Speaker

We are excited to have Dr. Stefania Druga as the keynote speaker for the inaugural OMMM workshop. Dr. Druga is a Research Scientist at Google DeepMind, where she designs novel multimodal AI applications. For more information, see her website.

Target Audience

We expect our workshop to appeal to an interdisciplinary group, including:

Organizers

Programme Committee

  1. Alberto Barrón-Cedeño (University of Bologna)
  2. Alina Wróblewska (Polish Academy of Sciences)
  3. Ashley Williams (Manchester Metropolitan University)
  4. Clara Colombatto (University of Waterloo)
  5. Dariusz Kalociński (Polish Academy of Sciences)
  6. Julia Struß (Fachhochschule Potsdam)
  7. Keeley Crocket (Manchester Metropolitan University)
  8. Lev Tankelevitch (Microsoft Research)
  9. Leon Derczynski (NVIDIA)
  10. Lifeng Han (University of Leiden)
  11. Matthew Shardlow (Manchester Metropolitan University)
  12. Moshe Glickman (University College London)
  13. Nael B. Abu-Ghazaleh (University of California, Riverside)
  14. Nanna Inie (IT University of Copenhagen)
  15. Nhung T. H. Nguyen (Johnson & Johnson)
  16. Peter Zukerman (University of Washington)
  17. Piotr Przybyła (Universitat Pompeu Fabra)
  18. Raghavendra Selvan (University of Copenhagen)
  19. Riza Batista-Navarro (University of Manchester)
  20. Samuel Attwood (Manchester Metropolitan University)
  21. Seun Ajao (Manchester Metropolitan University)
  22. Steve Fleming (University College London)
  23. Xia Cui (Manchester Metropolitan University)

Contact

Email us at ommm-workshop@googlegroups.com