We invite submissions that address issues in phonology and phonological theory based on evidence from EEG / MEG. Work in EEG / MEG may pursue goals that do not directly speak to issues in phonological theory, but which are actually relevant for this area. Thus contributions are invited to make explicit in which way their experimental evidence or results impact phonological theory. Submissions are also invited which do not involve genuine neurophysiological data but rather link existing EEG / MEG-based evidence with phonological theory.
Please submit an anonymous abstract that does not exceed 600 words (one inch margin, Arial 11pt font, please include a word count). The title should be visible and figures / tables / references may be included on a separate page. Figure captions and table legends should not contain excessive amounts of substantial text (i.e., should not be used to circumvent the length limit on the main text).
Abstract submission is currently open via the Easy Abstract platform here. It will close on March 25th April 15th.