This year's LSA Annual Meeting had a plethora of Stanford posters and abstracts:
- "Faroese ballad meter: a constraint-based approach" by Daniel Galbraith
- "'At Most' Readings for Bare Numerals under Necessity Modality" by Sara Kessler
- "Consistency in Variation: Preference for syntactic end-weight varies by individual, stable across constructions" by Robin Melnick
- "To be grammatical or not to be grammatical -- is that the question? Evidence for gradience" by Tom Wasow, Jana Häussler, and Tom Juzek
- "Something from nothing: pragmatic parsing of partitive possessives" by Simon Todd
- "Head movement to specifier positions in Bulgarian participle fronting" by Boris Harizanov
- "Persona-based information and memory of a sociolinguistic variable" by Annette D'Onofrio (also given LSA Student Abstract Award)
- "A Discourse-Theoretic Account of Intra-speaker Variation" by Andrea Kortenhoven and Livia Polanyi
- "The Social and Pragmatic Meaning of Non-Rising Terminal Contours in Yes-No Questions" by Sunwoo Jeong
- "Agreement in English Existentials with Conjoined Associates" by Philip Crone and Bonnie Krejci
- "The curious case of the negatively biased Mandarin belief verb "yiwei"" by Lelia Glass
- "Necessity, sufficiency, and implcativity" by Prerna Nadathur
- "The scope of futures" by James Collins
Great work, all!