Call for abstracts

CAMP 3 takes place October 26-27, 2019. Abstracts are due September 27, 2019. (Deadline extended).

Abstracts and registration

The abstract and registration deadline is September 27th, 2019, at 11:59 PM PST. Please confirm participation by going to Register.

Student and post-doc researchers will be prioritized over faculty authors, and junior faculty over more senior faculty for presentations. Head authors must be based at a university in California.

If you are even considering submitting your work, we invite you to fill out a "soft registration" by September 11, 2019 via the same form as above. It puts you under no obligation to submit or to attend, but it helps us line up reviewers and make plans within a relatively short time window.

Submit your abstract.

Please submit your abstracts via our EasyAbs submission portal.

Consistent with CAMP's spirit of providing a forum for development, preliminary results and work-in-progress may be accepted as long as the problem and approach are clearly demarcated for reviewers’ evaluations.

If multiple abstracts are submitted by the exact same team of authors, it is probable that only one can be selected for presentation as a talk.

Abstract Format Requirements.

Abstracts should conform to the basic format of the upcoming CUNY Conference on Human Sentence Processing:

  1. Abstracts should be submitted in letter format (8.5" x 11", not A4), with 1-inch margins on all sides, and in Arial 11 point font.
  2. The abstract text may be no longer than one page; a second page containing figures, tables, other graphics and/or references may be included.
  3. Your abstract must include the title at the top, and must not include authors’ names and affiliations, or any identifying information.
  4. Finally, please provide 2-5 keywords on the line between the title and the start of the abstract text (e.g. production, comprehension, language acquisition, bilingualism, second-language processing, eye-tracking, brain-based methods, computational psycholinguistics, syntax, semantics, phonology, phonetics, pragmatics/discourse, morphology, etc.)