<html><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"></head><body style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; line-break: after-white-space;" class=""><div class=""><b class="">**Deadline extended to <u class="">Monday, June 17th, 2019</u>**</b></div><div class=""><br class=""></div><b class="" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); caret-color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><div class=""><b class=""><br class=""></b></div>Meaning in Flux 2019: Connecting development, variation, and change</b><br class="" style="caret-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><div class="" style="caret-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"><div class="" style="word-wrap: break-word; -webkit-nbsp-mode: space; line-break: after-white-space;"><span class="">Yale University, New Haven, CT</span><br class=""><span class="">October 10th -12th, 2019</span><br class=""><span class=""> </span><br class=""><b class="">Description</b><span class="">: The connections between meanings and the pronunciations through which they are linguistically conveyed vary systematically within a speech community and change systematically over time. Many synchronic and diachronic patterns that instantiate such dynamics have been well described, yet the cognitive and communicative forces that support them—including their discourse-based, linguistic, conceptual, and cognitive components—remain poorly understood. The focus of this conference is to bring together researchers working on one or more of these facets with the aim of connecting development, variation, and change.</span><br class=""><br class=""><span class="">We invite abstracts for talks at the intersection of semantics/pragmatics, information/discourse structure, phonetics/phonology (of spoken and signed languages), language variation, language change, and language and cognitive development. We highly encourage submissions presenting in-progress results, covering not only connections between existing analyses and cognitively-grounded explanatory models but also the methodological challenges that arise. </span><br class=""><span class=""> </span><br class=""><span class="">Specifically, in this workshop we would like to address the following questions:</span><br class=""><span class="">(a) to what extent are trajectories of meaning-pronunciation dynamics construable as dynamics that emerge from and are guided by real-time implementation of the architecture of language and the larger cognitive system?</span><br class=""><span class="">(b) how are the actuation and propagation of these dynamics driven by discourse context and other communicative constraints?</span><br class=""><span class="">(c) how are the causal relations between the arcs of acquisition/development and change in meaning-pronunciations informed by processing constraints?</span><br class=""><span class=""> </span><br class=""><span class="">We are planning this very much as a retreat, with discussion driven by foundational questions on meaning-pronunciation development, variation, and change, as well as the struggle of messy data. We are seeking to bring together all kinds of perspectives on meaning and phonetics/phonology representation, as well as all experimental and empirical approaches, as exemplified by our invited speakers. </span><br class=""><span class=""> </span><br class=""><b class="">Confirmed invited speakers</b><span class="">:</span><br class=""><span class="">Susan Carey, Harvard U. Psychology</span><br class=""><span class="">Herbert Clark, Stanford U. Psychology</span><br class=""><span class="">Jennifer Cole, Northwestern U. Linguistics </span><br class=""><span class="">Veneeta Dayal, Yale U. Linguistics</span><br class=""><span class="">Joy Hirsch, Haskins Labs/Yale U. Psychiatry and Neurobiology </span><br class=""><br class=""><b class="">Deadline</b><span class="">: 11:59 PM of your local time zone on </span><b class=""><strike class="">Monday June 10th</strike>, Monday June 17th, 2019 </b><br class=""><br class=""><b class="">Notification</b><span class="">: Monday July 15th, 2019</span><br class=""><br class=""><b class="">Format</b><span class="">: Two pages, 8.5” x 11” or A4, comprising text, figures, tables, references, etc., as needed. Please maintain 1” margins on all sides, and use at least size 12 font. Abstracts should be headed by the title in bold, and should not contain any author information.Please submit your abstracts using the form at: </span><a href="http://tinyurl.com/meaningflux" class="">http://tinyurl.com/meaningflux</a><span class=""> and address any questions to </span><a href="mailto:meaninginflux@gmail.com" class="">meaninginflux@gmail.com</a><span class="">.</span><div class=""><br class=""><b class="">Confirmed scientific committee</b>: <br class="">Claire Bowern, Yale U. Linguistics<br class="">António Branco, U. of Lisbon Informatics<br class="">Kathryn Davidson, Harvard U. Linguistics<br class="">Ashwini Deo, The Ohio State U. Linguistics<br class="">Kathryn Franich, U. of Delaware Linguistics and Cognitive Science<br class="">Roberta Golinkoff, U. of Delaware Education/Psychology/Linguistics<br class="">Argyro Katsika, UC Santa Barbara Linguistics<br class="">María Mercedes Piñango, Yale U. Linguistics/Psychology<br class="">Jennie Pyers, Wellesley C. Psychology<br class="">Federico Rossano, UC San Diego Cognitive Science<br class="">Paula Rubio-Fernández, MIT Brain and Cognitive Sciences<br class="">Petra Schumacher, U. of Cologne German<br class="">Jason Shaw, Yale U. Linguistics<br class="">Heike Wiese, Humboldt U. Linguistics<br class="">Alan Yu, U. of Chicago Linguistics<br class=""> <br class=""><b class="">Executive committee</b>:<br class="">Martín Fuchs, Catalina Mourgues, María Mercedes Piñango, Jason Shaw, Jisu Sheen, Nanyan Wu, and Muye (Andy) Zhang<br class=""> <br class=""><b class="">Organizing committee</b>:<br class="">ExCom + Sarah Babinski, Randi Martinez, Joshua Phillips, and Kate Stanton</div></div></div></body></html>