[Apologies for cross-posting, please distribute]

29th International Conference on Digital Audio Effects (DAFx26)

September 1–4, 2026

Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America

https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://dafx26.mit.edu/__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubAp4cbxyPu$
 

We are pleased to announce that the 29th International Conference on
Digital Audio Effects (DAFx26) will be organized at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Massachusetts from September
1–4, 2026. The conference will be held in MIT's new Edward and Joyce Linde
Music Building, across the river from Boston. The conference will feature
oral presentations, poster and demo sessions, keynote addresses, and
tutorials. The social program will offer opportunities for more informal
interactions.

Call for Papers

This annual conference brings together research practitioners across the
globe working with digital audio processing for music and speech, sound
design, sound art, acoustics, and related applications. Original
contributions for DAFx26 are encouraged in, but not limited to, the
following topics:

Signal processing and analysis

Creative audio effects, sound synthesis, and composition

Physical modeling and virtual analog

Spatial sound, room acoustics, and artificial reverberation

Music information retrieval, source separation, and audio restoration

Machine learning for audio

Audio coding and data representation

Perception and psychoacoustics

Hardware and software design

This year, we especially welcome papers on the topic of novel creative
audio effects.

Prospective authors are invited to submit full-length papers (8 pages
maximum) for oral or poster presentation by March 30, 2026.
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://dafx26.mit.edu/call-for-papers/__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubApwgrHpEQ$
 

Volumes 1998 to 2025 of DAFx proceedings are now indexed in Scopus, and
this will apply similarly to DAFx26 proceedings.

Parameter Estimation Challenge

We are pleased to announce the 1st DAFx Parameter Estimation Challenge,
proposed at DAFx25. The challenge sets up a benchmark for system
identification of audio effects, centred on plate reverberation as a
representative case of a dense, weakly damped acoustic system.


There are two main tasks:


Task A, Physical Parameter Identification: estimate a subset of the plate’s
physical parameters (density, Young’s modulus, thickness, tension, etc.)
from synthetic impulse responses.


Task B, Modal Parameter Estimation: recover modal parameters (natural
frequencies, decay rates, and gains) from simulated or measured frequency
responses.


Both tasks rely on data generated from a damped Kirchhoff-Love plate model,
with baselines, metrics, and scripts provided in the public repo at
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://github.com/LOGUNIVPM/1st-DAFx-Challenge__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubApyiNYCRx$
 .


Challenge participants should submit their results by May 31, 2026.

Other Calls

In addition to the paper session, there will be a devoted session for
demonstrations. See 
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://dafx26.mit.edu/call-for-demonstrations/__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubApypIVldN$
 
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://dafx26.mit.edu/tutorials/__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubAp6hhwkf8$
 > for more information.

This year, we are running a Call for Tutorials, to be held on the first day
of the conference. See 
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://dafx26.mit.edu/call-for-tutorials/__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubAp58YTXYa$
 
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://dafx26.mit.edu/tutorials/__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubAp6hhwkf8$
 > for more information.

Grants to help support conference costs will be available. See
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://dafx26.mit.edu/grants/__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubAp_QwLMP_$
  for more information.

Finally, there is a Call for Sponsorships if you are interested in
financially supporting DAFx26.  More information can be found at
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://dafx26.mit.edu/sponsors/__;!!BDUfV1Et5lrpZQ!UGDB6x6yTsc9Rs8lLbkx2xh_ELpK1OhH5w0H4nRI3qjgDRI_OweNOgDwEUxkk7VV_gNWKsntlAocImFS2D41CHu43ubAp5seXec8$
 .

Organizing Committee

Mark Rau (MIT), Co-Organizer

Kurt J. Werner (Soundtoys), Co-Organizer

Elliot K. Canfield-Dafilou (Yale University)

Jatin Chowdhury (MIT)

Champ Darabundit (McGill University)

Orchisama Das (King’s College London)

Kaylyn Holmes (Harvard University)

Jin Woo Lee (MIT)

Shahan Nercessian (Splice)

Paris Smaragdis (MIT)

Alex Tung (MIT)

-- 
Dr. Kurt James Werner
Senior Research Scientist
Soundtoys, Inc.

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