DEADLINE: January 01, 2026

AI can empower creativity and amplify manipulation. This workshop brings researchers together to build safer, more transparent AI-generated experiences.

Generative AI is becoming a powerful assistant in design work. Tools like LLMs and image generators can create interfaces, content, and entire digital experiences in seconds. But these models also learn from the web, including harmful design patterns. As a result, AI can introduce or even amplify deceptive elements that manipulate users without their awareness.

This workshop brings together the HCI community to better understand these risks and to design safeguards that keep user autonomy and transparency at the center of AI-generated experiences.

Call for Participation

Join us to explore how generative AI can reproduce and amplify deceptive design patterns and how we can prevent them.

We invite researchers and practitioners to share ideas, demos, and visions for more transparent and user-friendly AI-generated experiences.

Have a perspective on AI-enabled deception? A prototype that exposes manipulative patterns? A concept for stronger user protection? Submit a short paper or demonstration and join us for an active, hands-on workshop developing concrete strategies for more transparent AI-driven experiences. We are looking for following submissions:

Position Paper

Position Papers should present ideas, challenges, or perspectives on how generative AIs can enable or prevent deceptive design patterns. They can include early insights, conceptual arguments, or open research questions to spark discussion during the workshop. Submissions should be in the ACM two-column format with a lenght between two and four pages, excluding references.

Research Statement

Research Statements should outline ongoing or planned work that investigates deceptive design in generative AIs. They allow authors to share preliminary findings or research directions and receive feedback from the community. Submissions should be in the ACM two-column format with a lenght between two and four pages, excluding references.

Demonstration

Demonstrations can showcase tools, prototypes, or practical examples that highlight deceptive designs in AI-generated content. Alternatively they can propose ways to counter them. They will be explore hands-on during the workshop to inspire discussion and new ideas. Submissions should be in the ACM two-column format with a lenght between two and four pages, excluding references.

Schedule

AM

09:00 : 10:00

Meeting CEO
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

10:15 : 11:00

Registeration
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

11:10 : 12:00

Meeting Zoya Khan
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

12:00 : 12:45

Lunch Time
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

PM

01:00 : 02:00

Working On Project
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

02:15 : 03:00

A Little Sleep
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

03:10 : 04:00

Football Match
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.

04:20 : 05:30

Hanging Around
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.