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Call for Papers

Thank you for your interest in the Mobile Tartu 2026 Conference and PhD School!

ABSTRACT SUBMISSION IS NOW OPEN!

► Abstract submission is open until 16 January 2026

► Each author may present only one paper at the conference (including the PhD School), but may be listed as a co-author on multiple papers.

► Based on the evaluation and acceptance of abstracts, participants will be invited to present either a poster or an oral presentation. In the abstract submission form, authors can also indicate their own preference.

Those who wish to participate in the PhD School (7-10 June) are encouraged to submit an abstract to the conference, as they will be prioritised in being considered for attendance in the PhD School due to a limited number of places.

Abstract submission is mandatory for EIT Urban Mobility Doctoral Training Network members who wish to participate in the PhD School.

► How to Submit Your Abstract

  1. Download the template: Abstract_Template.docx.
  2. Prepare your abstract following the template.
  3. Create a PDF file from the filled template and rename it (Last name_First name_Short title).
  4. Fill out the submission form on LimeSurvey.
  5. Upload your abstract file to the submission form.
  6. Submit: Send your submission through LimeSurvey.

► Abstract requirements:

The body of the abstract should be 400-600 words in length.
It must include the following subheadings: Motivation and Objective, Study Design/Data and Methods/Approach, Findings/Results, and Originality/Value/Impact. A maximum of five citations and one illustrative element (figure, table, or graphical abstract) with a relevant caption are allowed.

Topics and Themes

Mobile Tartu 2026 features three special themes:

In addition to the special themes, we welcome a broad range of contributions on human mobility based digital data sources—such as mobile phone, smartphone applications, GPS, social media, smart card, bike share, e-scooters—and their combination with qualitative insights, to discuss the following (but not limited to):

  • Travel behaviour and accessibility
  • Socio-spatial and environmental inequalities and human wellbeing
  • Social networks in space and their transformation with digitalisation
  • Disruption management and spatial (im)mobility
  • Domestic and international tourism
  • Connectivity and interactions from local to global scales
  • Land use and transport planning with the incorporation of new mobility solutions
  • Urban transformations and the quality of the living environment
  • Population studies and official statistics
  • Data privacy, surveillance, ethics, and open research
  • Methodological advances in human mobility research
  • GeoAI approaches for analysing human mobility and enhancing location-based services

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