Call for papers

Abstract submission for AMP 2020 is now closed

We are seeking high-quality unpublished research in all areas of theoretical, experimental and computational phonology for presentation at the 2020 Annual Meeting on Phonology (AMP 2020). A tutorial on intonation will be held in conjunction with AMP 2020. Submissions to the main AMP conference which deal with intonation, phrasal phonology, and other areas of prosody are particularly encouraged.

The conference, which will take place September 18-20, 2020, will be hosted by the University of California, Santa Cruz, and held virtually, using the Zoom web conferencing platform, rather than in person. This is the eighth installment of the Annual Meetings on Phonology, following the 2013 inaugural meeting at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and subsequent meetings hosted by MIT, UBC/SFU, USC, NYU, UC San Diego and Stony Brook University.

Submission guidelines

We invite abstracts for either oral presentations (20 minutes, followed by 10 minutes of discussion) or poster presentations. Abstracts must be anonymous, so please be sure to eliminate any identifying information and metadata from the document. Length is limited to a maximum of two single-spaced pages (US Letter), figures and references included. Font size should be 12-point, with margins of at least one inch (2.54cm) left on all sides. Abstracts must be submitted in .pdf file format.

Submissions are limited to two per author, with at most one submission being single- or primary-authored.

The deadline for abstract submission is Sunday, May 10, 2020 at 11:59 p.m. Friday, May 22, 2020 at 11:59 p.m. (Pacific Time). Abstract submission is open as of February 18, 2020.

Abstract submission link: https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=amp2020ucsantacruz

Proceedings

All presentations at AMP 2020 are eligible for publication in the open-access on-line conference proceedings hosted by the Linguistic Society of America. Oral presentations will appear in the main Proceedings and poster presentations will appear in the Supplemental Proceedings.