The 30th Semantics and Linguistic Theory (SALT30) conference was hosted by Cornell University on August 17 – 20, 2020 and held online. Current students and alumni friends at the conference included:
- Itai Bassi (6th year) and Tatiana Bondarenko (4th year): Composing CPs: evidence from disjunction and conjunction
- Keny Chatain (5th year): Cumulative readings of every: weak and asymmetric
- Filipe Hisao Kobayashi (4th year) and Vincent Rouillard (4th year): High and low exhaustification in singular which-questions
- Filipe Hisao Kobayashi (4th year): Composing reciprocity: An analysis of scattered reciprocals
- Patrick Elliott (faculty) and Yasutada Sudo (PhD 2012): Generalized Crossover
- Bernhard Schwarz (McGill), based on joint work with Aron Hirsch (PhD 2017) and Michaela Socolof (McGill): Severing uniqueness from answerhood
- Paul Marty (PhD 2017), Jacopo Romoli (University of Bergen), and Paolo Santorio (University of Maryland, College Park): Counterfactuals and undefinedness: homogeneity vs. supervaluations
- Floris Roelofsen (ILLC, Amsterdam) and Wataru Uegaki (PhD 2015): Searching for a universal constraint on the denotations of clause-embedding predicates
- Michael Yoshitaka Erlewine (PhD 2014) and Meghan Lim (National University of Singapore): Anti-uniqueness without articles
- Marie-Christine Meyer (PhD 2013) and Roman Feiman (Brown University): Priming reveals similarities and differences between three purported cases of implicature: Some, number and free choice disjunctions
- Luka Crnic (PhD 2011) and Tue Trinh (PhD 2011): Ignorance, introspection, and epistemic modals
- Pranav Anand (PhD 2006) and Maziar Toosarvandani (UC Santa Cruz): Embedded presents and the structure of narratives
- Dorothy Ahn (Harvard), Ankana Saha (Harvard), and Uli Sauerland (PhD 1998): Positively polar plurals