Publié le 4 février 2026–Mis à jour le 9 février 2026
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Summer School 2026 Digital Media
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digital media
Chatbots for Internet Research?
école d'été
The LT2D is organising a Digital Media summer school from 15 to 19 June 2026.
For Whom? MA students, PhD students, early career researchers or any researcher willing to improve their digital methodologies skills.
Where? CY Cergy Paris University, a dynamic university in the Parisian area. RER A station Neuville University.
Key- conferences by Prof. Richard Rogers, Chair in New Media & Digital Culture at the University of Amsterdam.
Programme:
Introduction: Chatbots for Internet Research?
Prompting strategies and ‘research personas’
Annotating and classifying, reflexively
Auditing LLMs. How offensive and sensitive are they?
Synthetic data. How real is it?
Conclusions: Machine-researcher alignment and misalignment
A Data Sprint Project
Chatbots have become a ‘part of the pipeline’ in a number of research methodologies in the social sciences and humanities, contributing to formatting, summaries, annotation, labelling and the generation of synthetic data. One question is how to go about using chatbots in the first place for such research tasks and make use of the many best practice guides that have been shared across the research landscape. These guides contain steps about how to prompt and interact with chatbots properly as researchers. But they also advise that the chatbots explain themselves and that researchers validate their outputs. How does one gain confidence in how the chatbots work for the researchers? What to do when the machine and the researcher findings misalign?
When gaining confidence in the chatbot output, one could consider how to ground chatbot findings. These moments raise a series of questions such as when to undertake a manual and/or multiple chatbot comparison. But it would also ask, how does the medium or the platform affect the data and the findings? Here is where guardrail auditing comes into the picture. How to detect the guardrails that have been put up by the chatbots so that they can interact with users without offence? How do they affect the quality of the data and the findings? The goal here is to identify medium and platform issues when using chatbots for research.
Participation fees:
300 euros without housing, 550 euros housing included.
Are you interested in participating?
Contact us at lt2d@cyu.fr
Pre-registration before 15 March 2026 (2-page letter on your interest in the programme and your current research)
Registration: 15 May 2026
Organisers:
Luciana Radut-Gaghi, Adel Tayebi, Axel Boursier