OzCHI 2026 (Australian Computer Human Interaction Conference) is a ICORE B / QUALIS B1 conference held in Adelaide, Australia on 2026-11-21. The paper submission deadline is 2026-06-12 (extended). Acceptance notifications are sent on 2026-07-31.
About OzCHI
OzCHI is Australasia's leading forum for the latest in HCI research and practice. OzCHI attracts a broad international community of researchers, industry practitioners, academics and students. Participants typically come from more than 25 countries and from a range of backgrounds, including interface designers, user experience experts, information architects, software engineers, human factors specialists, information systems analysts and social scientists. We welcome international submissions and participation. We encourage submissions and participation from industry.
This year's conference theme: On the Edge
OzCHI this year embraces the theme “On the Edge”, inviting us to examine human–computer interaction at the precipice of new frontiers—where capability sits at the tipping point of future human-computer interaction. It also calls attention to interaction at its limits: the edge of human experience, the design of systems for extreme use cases, and the boundaries of inclusion—questioning where we sit and who is left out. Ultimately, the theme is framed as operating on the edge of certainty, binaries, and future possibilities toward what comes next for people, systems, and environments.
Long Papers and Late Breaking Work
OzCHI 2026, to be held at Adelaide University, Australia, invites original contributions on all topics related to human-computer interaction (HCI), interaction design, and interactive technologies. We welcome submissions from design, engineering, social science, creative industries and other related disciplines. In this Call For Papers we invite Long Papers as well as Late-Breaking Work submissions. The paper contributions should address current practices, discuss theoretical approaches, or present novel research through relevant case studies, design processes, and community and industry examples. Submissions to both categories will be double anonymous, peer-reviewed, and published in the conference proceedings.
OzCHI this year embraces the theme “On the Edge”, inviting us to examine human–computer interaction at the precipice of new frontiers—where capability sits at the tipping point of future human-computer interaction. It also calls attention to interaction at its limits: the edge of human experience, the design of systems for extreme use cases, and the boundaries of inclusion—questioning where we sit and who is left out. Ultimately, the theme is framed as operating on the edge of certainty, binaries, and future possibilities toward what comes next for people, systems, and environments.
At least one author must register with OzCHI and present the paper in person. Remote and pre-recorded presentations will not be offered as part of OzCHI 2026.
Long Papers
Long Papers should present original research and mature work in HCI and interaction design. These papers may describe investigations of user needs or contexts of use, lab-based evaluations or field deployments of prototypes, or other design-led or empirical investigations examining the relationship between people and technology.
Authors are encouraged to submit a paper of length proportional to its contribution. The average length of OzCHI Long Papers is approximately 7,000–8,000 words, excluding references, figure/table captions, and appendices. Submissions of 12,000 words or more will be considered excessively long and could be desk rejected. Accepted Long Papers will be presented in person at the conference and included in the ACM Digital Library's conference proceedings.
Late-Breaking Work
Late-Breaking Work (LBW) submissions present emerging ideas that would benefit from discussion with members of the HCI community. These submissions may include initial findings from new research, experiences of reflective practitioners, and first drafts of novel concepts and approaches.
Contributions should be up to 5,000 words, excluding references, figure/table captions, and appendices.
Accepted LBW will be presented as a poster during the conference and included in the conference proceedings at the ACM Digital Library.
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