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Registration

Registration and Conference fee

Registration for SEASON 2026 Conference is now open.

Register now!

Conference Fee Structure:

Student Full Social

Early Bird

€100 €200 €50
Regular  €150 €250 €50

The registration fee includes:

  • Two conference days
  • One workshop day
  • Conference Dinner
  • Refreshments during the conference coffee breaks

Programme

Conference Programme

Explore the online Conference Programme on EasyChair here: SEASON 2026 Conference Programme

 
Day 1 Tuesday, 15 September
08:45–09:15
Coffee & registration
09:15–09:30

Introduction

09:15

Welcome and Opening

Rosie Graham (Conference Chair)
Dirk Lewandowski and Sebastian Schultheiß (Local Co-Chairs)

09:30–10:30

Keynote: Impact of Search Engines on Society: Lessons from Antitrust Cases

Thomas Höppner

10:30–11:00
Coffee break
11:00–12:30

Parallel Sessions

Political Bias & Elections
11:00

Elections in the Age of Algorithms: Evidence of Political Bias in Search Engines and Large Language Models

Íris Damião

11:30

Using generative AI instead of search engines? Comparison and implications in the context of five state elections in Germany

Patrick Parschan, Michael V. Reiss, Mario Haim, Kateryna Kasianenko, Ashwin Nagappa, Daniel Angus and Axel Bruns

12:00

Restricted (Over)view: Audit of Google’s and Bing’s AI summaries in the context of Swiss popular votes

Corinna Hertweck, Giovanni Astante, Aleksandra Urman, Oliver Marsh, Angela Müller and Aniko Hannak

Everyday Practice & Communities
11:00

Emerging frictions: visual generative AI and the prompting practices of trans and nonbinary people

Ben Hogan

11:15

Multilingual across multiple platforms: researching the role of language in the everyday

Cecilia Andersson

11:30

Chatbot creep: Generative AI in the everyday information practices of young adults

Klara Chlupata

11:45

Hello Donauwörth, I’m looking for…: Searching for Administrative Services on Municipal Websites vs. Google

Helena Häußler

12:00

Search Engines, AI Assistants, and Everyday Practices in Sports: Behavioral Shifts, Emotional Responses, and Privacy Cynicism among Chilean Football Fans

Pablo Farías

12:30–13:30
Lunch
13:30–15:00

Parallel Sessions

Literacy & Education
13:30

Information Literacy in Conversational Search: Developing a Categorization Scheme for Measuring Information-Literate Behavior in Human-AI Interaction

Joachim Griesbaum, Nicola Hoppe, Beatrix Kreß, Karen Malin Krüger, Bettina Lindner-Bornemann, Anna Mierzecka, Stephan Schlickau and Karsten Senkbeil

14:00

Developing Critical Literacy for Entrepreneurial Practice in Digital Environment

Thao Laavunen

14:30

Navigating the Impact of Generative AI on Information Seeking and Learning in Schools: Insights from Swedish Teachers and Librarians

Olof Sundin and Anna-Lena Godhe

14:45

Information Retrieval Literacy in the Age of Generative AI: Bias, Query Formulation, and Prompt Engineering

Shari Thurow

AI Overviews & Trust
13:30

On the Quality and Impact of Google’s AI Overviews

Dirk Lewandowski

14:00

Citation Design in AI Overviews: Effects on User Reliance and Source Engagement

Kshitijaa Jaglan, Elsa Lichtenegger, Aleksandra Urman and Aniko Hannak

14:30

The Option to Search without AI: How Placing Chatbots in SERP Shapes Search Behavior and Activates Information Avoidance

Alamir Novin

15:00–15:30
Coffee break
15:30–17:00

Sessions

Health & High-Stakes Information
15:30

Think-Alouds and Results Assessment: A Study of Health Information Seeking Among People Who Use(d) Drugs

Jessalyn Vallade and Meghan Dowell

16:00

Visibility by design: Reliability of top domains in search engines for health-related queries

Natalie Tutzer

16:30

Generative AI search engines: cognitive authorities on climate change?

Luanne Sinnamon and Alice Li

Panel Session
15:30

The Infrastructural and Software Challenges of Independent Search Engine Research

Sebastian Sünkler, Phil Höfer, Philipp Schaer, Aleksandra Urman and Dirk Lewandowski

17:00–18:00

Poster Session & Refreshments

Librarians as Catalysts for Search Literacy Education in Academic Libraries in Developing Countries

Ihuoma Sandra Babatope

Searching for Pluralism: Bringing Search Engine Research into conversation with Media Pluralism Monitoring.

Lucas Braun

Using Think-Alouds for Search Term Collection for Search Engine Studies

Meghan Dowell and Jessalyn Vallade

Revealing the Hidden Success Factors of Scientific Papers: The Case of Table and Figure References.

Fabian Haak and Philipp Schaer

Presenting the SUMA-Kit toolkit

Phil Höfer

Searching for the Unspeakable? Preliminary Insights from Sexual Health-Related Search Results Across Search Engines in Germany and the United States

Aylin Imeri and Sebastian Sünkler

Promoting information literacy, democratic participation, and digital sovereignty: Library workshops for informed, empowered citizens

Katharina Leyrer

Information Access under Epistemic Uncertainty: Learning from Journalism

Alisa Rieger, Nicolas Mattis and Johanne R. Trippas

Quantifying the interdisciplinary research field of search engine studies

Veronika Samostrol, Anastasia Murashova and Leonardo Dolgun

Enhancing Dataset Discovery in Open Government Data Portals: AI-Generated Metadata for Improved Information Access

Tobias Siebenlist and Jennifer Gnyp

Sounding the Horn: Designing Auditory Misinformation Warnings to Foster Critical Engagement with Podcasts

Konstantin-Asen Yordanov, Alisa Rieger and Ujwal Gadiraju

19:00–22:00
Conference Dinner
Day 2 Wednesday, 16 September
09:00–10:00

Keynote: From Regulation to Research: Navigating the Digital Services Act’s Article 40 in Search Studies

Katrin Weller

10:00–10:30
Coffee break
10:30–12:30

Parallel Sessions

AI Answers, Podcasts & Behaviour
10:30

Visual Cues and Trust in AI-Generated Search Results: An Eye-Tracking Study on Google AI Overviews

Lisa Eleonora Haase, Marius Brüning Genannt Wolter, Benno Michaelsen, Fabian Schott and Dirk Lewandowski

10:45

Comparing Chat and Search for Engaging with News Topics

Alisa Rieger, Vitalii Hirak, Stefan Dietze and Ran Yu

11:00

How Users Prompt Generative Search Engines for News and Political Information: An Empirical Taxonomy

Dorian Tsolak

11:15

Beyond Ranking Bias: Synchronous and Sequential Modes of SERP-based Relevance Assessment

Jacqueline Sachse

11:30

Are we being framed? Using integrative framing analysis to audit generative search engine results

Rasmus Helles

Methods & Infrastructure
10:30

Hacking the "wicked problems" of search: A hackathon as a collaborative approach towards capturing query variability

Kateryna Kasianenko, Ashwin Nagappa, Oleg Zendel, Sally Storey, Axel Bruns, Daniel Angus, Kath Albury, Mark Sanderson, Abdul Karim Obeid, Amanda Lawrence, Anand Badola, Chenglong Ma, Ekaterina Tokareva, Fan Yang, Fletcher Scott, Futoon M. Abu Shaqra, India Read, Joanne Kuai, Kun Ran, Khanh Luong, Kieran Hegarty, Madhurima Khirbat, Nuha Abu Onq, Rayane El Masri, Sadia Sharmin, Sara Allawati, Shuoqi Sun, Udiana Dewi, Utami Diah Kusumawati, Xinye Wanyan, Yanheng Fang, Awais Hameed Khan, Bogdan Mamaev, Kacper Sokol, Kyle Herbertson, Johanne Trippas, Damiano Spina and Danula Hettiachchi

11:00

Method Impossible? A Reflection On Frangibility Of Methodologies And Infrastructures For Search Engine Research

Ashwin Nagappa, Abdul Karim Obeid, Sebastian Sünkler, Kateryna Kasianenko and Daniel Angus

11:30

The Infrastructures of Visual Memory

Robert Musil

11:45

Under a new archival umbrella – the investment on a national search engine and its implications for the societal role of archives

Ann-Sofie Klareld

12:30–13:30
Lunch
13:30–15:30

Parallel Sessions

SEO, GEO & Visibility
13:30

Modeling the Impact of Search Engine Marketing on User Knowledge Gain

Sebastian Schultheiß

14:00

Semantic Multi-Cluster Coverage and LLM Citation Frequency: A Controlled Generative Engine Optimization Experiment

Hadeer Elmalah

14:30

Will AI Overviews Reshape Media SEO Strategies? A Longitudinal Analysis of Query Segments and Search Traffic Changes

Tereza Schambergerová

Critical & Theoretical Perspectives
13:30

Emancipatory IR: Towards Critical Theories and Practices

Bhaskar Mitra

14:00

Chatbot rodeo: a comparative interface of GPT responses exploring context windows and Rogerian psychoanalysis

Renée Ridgway

14:30

Responsible Consumption as an Information and Communication Problem for Search Engines

Frans van der Sluis

15:00

Search Engines and Generative AI in the Cultural Imaginary

Katherine Parsons

15:30–16:15

Wrap-Up & Community Meeting

15:30

Presentations Wrap-Up

Rosie Graham, Dirk Lewandowski and Sebastian Schultheiß

15:45

SEASON Community Meeting

Rosie Graham, Dirk Lewandowski and Sebastian Schultheiß

15:45–16:45

Film Screening

15:45

Short Film Selection: Algo-Rhythm and Others

Presented by Rosie Graham · featuring short films by artist and filmmaker Manu Luksch

Day 3 Thursday, 17 September - Workshops
09:30–12:45

Morning Workshops

Track A: Workshop
09:30

Investigating Search: A Hands-on Workshop with the Investigating Search Toolkit

Rosie Graham

Track B: Workshop
09:30

How Search Engines Speak – a Foucauldian Framework for SERPs as Epistemological Actants

Katarzyna Kozlowska

12:45–13:45
Lunch
13:45–17:00

Afternoon Workshops

Track A: Workshop
13:45

Conducting Search Data Related Studies with the Result Assessment Tool (RAT)

Sebastian Sünkler, Oliver Koop, Sebastian Schultheiß, Björn Quast, Tuhina Kumar and Dirk Lewandowski

Track B: Workshop
13:45

Dawn of the Synthetic Fog: Addressing Youth Epistemic Agency in the Age of Generative Search

Ujwal Gadiraju

15:15

Introducing Open and Reproducible Web Search for the Social Sciences

Muhammad Taimoor Khan, Alisa Rieger, Johannes Kiesel, Dimitar Dimitrov and Stefan Dietze

Program subject to change. For the most up-to-date programme, please check the listing on EasyChair.

Overview

Conference Overview

Search Engines and Society Annual Conference (SEASON 2026) brings together researchers, practitioners, and policymakers to discuss the societal impact of search technologies. The conference offers keynotes, panels, workshops, and networking opportunities.

Location

HAW Hamburg – Finkenau Campus
Finkenau 35, 22081 Hamburg, Germany

Date

15 – 17 September 2026

Registration

Registration for SEASON 2026 Conference is now open.

Register now!

Programme

t.b.d.

Keynote Speakers

Prof. Dr. Thomas Höppner

Geradin Partners

“Impact of Search Engines on Society: Lessons from Antitrust Cases”

Prof. Dr. Katrin Weller

GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences & Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf

“From Regulation to Research: Navigating the Digital Services Act’s Article 40 in Search Studies”

Programme Committee

Programme Committee

We look forward to welcoming you to Hamburg in September. If you have any queries or questions, please contact:

  • Programme chair: Rosie Graham
  • Local chairs: Dirk Lewandowski and Sebastian Schultheiß
  • Local organising team: Oliver Koop and Tuhina Kumar
  • Programme Committee:
    • Cecilia Andersson, Lund University, Sweden
    • Axel Bruns, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
    • Andrew Cox, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom
    • Elizabeth Van Couvering, Karlstad University, Sweden
    • Meghan Dowell, University of Kentucky, United States
    • Stefan Dreisiebner, Carinthia University of Applied Sciences, Austria
    • Jessica Enevold Duncan, Lund University, Sweden
    • Björn Ekström, University of Borås, Sweden
    • David Elsweiler, University of Regensburg, Germany
    • Mikael Eriksson, University of Borås, Sweden
    • Maria Gäde, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany
    • Jennifer Gnyp, Hochschule Rhein-Waal, Germany
    • Tim Gollub, Bauhaus-Universität Weimar, Germany
    • Roșie Graham, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom
    • Joachim Griesbaum, University of Hildesheim, Germany
    • Fabian Haak, TH Köln, Germany
    • Jutta Haider, University of Borås, Sweden
    • Anikó Hannák, University of Zurich, Switzerland
    • Judith Hartstein, German Centre for Higher Education Research and Science Studies (DZHW), Germany
    • Fred Henderson, Ecosia, Germany
    • Phil Höfer, SUMA-EV, Germany
    • Helena Häußler, HAW Hamburg, Germany
    • Ann-Sofie Klareld, Lund University, Sweden
    • Oliver Koop, HAW Hamburg, Germany
    • Katarzyna Kozlowska, University of Warsaw, Poland
    • Karine Lespinasse, University of Paris 8, France
    • Dirk Lewandowski, HAW Hamburg, Germany
    • Katharina Leyrer, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg, Germany
    • Elsa Maria Lichtenegger, University of Zurich, Switzerland
    • David Gunnarsson Lorentzen, University of Borås, Sweden
    • Mykola Makhortykh, University of Bern, Switzerland
    • Thomas Mandl, University of Hildesheim, Germany
    • Bhaskar Mitra, Independent Researcher, United States of America
    • Robert Musil, Università della Svizzera italiana, Switzerland
    • Alamir Novin, University of South Carolina, United States of America
    • Alexander Nussbaumer, Graz University of Technology, Austria
    • Julius Odede, University of Wolverhampton, United Kingdom
    • Amanda Persson, Lund University, Sweden
    • Vivien Petras, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany
    • Christine Plote, Open Search Foundation, Germany
    • Nikolaus Poechhacker, University of Graz, Austria
    • Alisa Rieger, GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences, Germany
    • Renée Ridgway, Aarhus University, Denmark
    • Malte Rödl, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Sweden
    • Jacqueline Sachse, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany
    • Philipp Schaer, TH Köln, Germany
    • Sebastian Schultheiß, HAW Hamburg, Germany
    • Tobias Siebenlist, Rhine-Waal University of Applied Sciences, Germany
    • Luanne Sinnamon, University of British Columbia, Canada
    • Frans van der Sluis, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
    • Ayah Soufan, University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
    • Jan Størup, Aarhus University, Denmark
    • Olof Sundin, Lund University, Sweden
    • Sebastian Sünkler, HAW Hamburg, Germany
    • Agnes Tibbelin, University of Borås, Sweden
    • Shari Thurow, Information Architecture Gateway, United States of America
    • Natalie Tutzer, PH Freiburg, Germany
    • Kelsey Urgo, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, United States of America
    • Aleksandra Urman, University of Zurich, Switzerland

Sponsoring

Sponsoring Packages

Service Bronze Silver Gold

Price (plus VAT)

€500 €1,000 €2,000
Conference booth max. 2 m² max. 4 m² max. 6 m²
Conference tickets 1 person 2 persons 4 persons
Logo/Link/Description on website and program booklet max. 500 characters max. 1,000 characters max. 2,000 characters
Mentioned at conference opening yes yes
Logo on conference bag and poster yes
Promotional material in conference bag Flyer Flyer + 1 goodie Booklet + 2 goodies

Contact: Oliver Koop, oliver.koop@haw-hamburg.de

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Call for Contribution [CLOSED]

Call for Contributions

Annual Conference of the Search Engines and Society Network (SEASON 2026)

On behalf of the Search Engines and Society Network (SEASON), we invite you to contribute to the 2026 edition of the Search Engines and Society Annual Conference (SEASON 2026) to be held at HAW Hamburg, Germany, 15th – 17th September 2026.

Following the success of SEASON 2025, which brought together an engaged and diverse international community of researchers, practitioners, and students, SEASON continues as a dedicated conference series for critical and interdisciplinary research on search engines and their societal implications.

SEASON is an annual conference that explores the multifaceted role of search engines in today’s culture and society. The conference brings together researchers from different fields and fosters interdisciplinary dialogue and collaboration to deepen our understanding of search engines as cultural, societal, political, and technical artefacts, as well as their use in everyday practices.

Building on the momentum of last year’s conference, we invite submissions for presentations, interactive sessions (including panels and workshops), posters, and experimental formats.

Conference Theme

We welcome submissions on topics such as:

  • Social and cultural aspects of relevance
  • Epistemic implications of search-engine use
  • Search engines and Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG)
  • Search engines and information disorders (e.g., data voids, disinformation…)
  • AI and changing patterns of search engine use
  • Search and search engines and environmental crises (e.g., climate change)
  • The political economy of search and search engines
  • Search engine providers’ responsibility and accountability
  • Search engines as multi-sided platforms
  • History of web search and web search engines
  • Search engine bias and fair search
  • Ethical considerations related to search engines
  • Affect and emotional aspects of search engine use
  • Media and Information literacy related to search engines
  • Search engines and specific groups or communities (children, elderly, …)
  • Search engines and studies of ignorance and information avoidance
  • Search engines in everyday life and in social practices
  • Search engines in educational settings
  • Alternative approaches to concepts of indexing in search engines
  • Negotiations of search results (search engine optimization, paid search advertising)
  • Search engine comparisons (e.g., comparing results tailored to different locations, comparing results from different search engines)
  • Methods for search engine research
  • Data collection for search engine studies
  • Approaches to “opening the Black Box of search engine rankings”

We welcome conceptual and empirical submissions from a broad range of disciplinary backgrounds, including the humanities, social sciences, and technical disciplines. We welcome approaches transgressing disciplinary boundaries and submissions from individuals from outside academia. Submissions discussing work in progress are welcome. We also encourage students to submit contributions.

Submission Categories

Long presentations: Long presentations should be submitted in the form of an extended abstract. The maximum length is 1000 words (excluding references).

Interactive Sessions (for example, panels and workshops): Should be designed for 90-180 minutes. The proposal should include the purpose, abstract, and format, and be a maximum of 1000 words (excluding references).

Posters: Posters should be submitted in the form of an abstract with a maximum of 500 words (excluding references).

Short presentations: An opportunity to discuss ongoing research or present interventions (short informal presentations of less than 20 minutes). Proposals should be submitted in the form of abstracts (maximum 500 words, excluding references) that describe the topic of your presentation and include some information about its structure.

Submission Guidelines

  • Papers should be submitted as a .PDF file.
  • Place the title of the paper in bold at the top of the first page only. On the next line, include the names of the author(s), along with their email addresses and affiliations.
  • References should follow the APA referencing style.
  • Please ensure the paper has been carefully proofread.

Please submit your contribution via EasyChair:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=season2026

Submission Deadline:  30th April 2026 10th May 2026

Accepted contributions will be available for downloading for conference participants in advance of the conference. All accepted abstracts will be freely accessible to everyone after the conference.