Registration is now full for the 2024 ERP Boot Camp

The demand for the 2024 ERP Boot Camp was far beyond our expectations, and we reached our maximum registration of 30 people within one day. We already have a waiting list of over 30 people, so we have closed the registration site.

We realize that this is very disappointing to many people. We hope to offer another workshop like this next summer, or possibly earlier.

If you would like to get announcements about upcoming boot camps and webinars, you should join our email list.

You may also consider hosting a Mini ERP Boot Camp at your institution (in person or over Zoom).

Important Changes to the 2024 ERP Boot Camp

We are disappointed to announce that we will not be holding a regular 10-day ERP Boot Camp this summer.

We have held Boot Camps nearly every summer since 2007, supported by a series of generous grants from NIMH that allowed us to provide scholarships for all attendees. Unfortunately, although our recent renewal proposal received extremely positive reviews and scores, we were recently given the surprising and disappointing news that the renewal will not be funded this year. We believe that the ERP Boot Camp provides essential training to the field, and we will continue to pursue financial support to continue holding 10-day ERP Boot Camps in the future.

In the meantime, we have partial funding that will allow us to hold a 5-day ERP Boot Camp this summer from July 8-12, 2024 in Davis, California. The workshop will include 5-days of lectures and activities on EEG and ERP measures, including practical and theoretical issues.

Unfortunately, we will not be able to provide scholarships to pay for travel and lodging costs, and we must charge a registration fee. We are very sorry if this causes a hardship.

We are no longer taking applications through our application portal. Instead of a competitive application process, we will simply accept the first 30 people who complete the registration process and pay the registration fee. This provides an opportunity to attend for individuals who might otherwise not make it through our ordinary application process, which is highly competitive.

The registration fee will be $1000 (or $900 for people who register by April 15). The registration fee will cover 6 nights in a single occupancy hotel room (arriving July 7 and departing July 13), daily breakfast at the hotel, a catered lunch for each day of the workshop, and a group dinner. You must pay the registration fee with a credit card when you register. There are no exceptions to the registration fee policy.

Registration is now open at https://na.eventscloud.com/793175.

Given that we will accept the first 30 registrants, we encourage you to register as soon as possible. Registration will close on May 20, but we anticipate that the workshop will be filled up long before then.

You must pay for your own transportation to Davis. Davis is approximately 20 minutes away from the Sacramento Airport (SMF). You can take the Davis Airporter shuttle service or a rideshare service from SMF to Davis. If you are coming from outside North America, you may want to fly into the San Francisco airport (SFO), which is 135 km (84 miles) from Davis. We recommend taking the Davis Airporter from SFO to Davis.

Pre- and post-conference workshops at virtual SPR meeting

We will be holding both pre- and post-conference workshops at this year’s virtual SPR meeting.

The pre-conference workshop will be a Mini ERP Boot Camp presented by Steve Luck (click here for details). Participants will first complete our free online Introduction to ERPs course. We will then have a series of three 4-hour synchronous online sessions (October 4, 5, and 6). These sessions will include lectures on more advanced topics and plenty of opportunity for interactive Q&A. Attendance requires registering for the SPR meeting and paying an additional workshop fee. Click here for the registration site.

The post-conference workshop will be a webinar on ERP decoding presented by Steve Luck, Gi-Yeul Bae, and Aaron Simmons (click here and scroll down for details). It will be a slightly updated version of the decoding webinars we gave in June. Attendance is free for meeting registrants but requires additional pre-registration. Click here for the registration site.

We will also be presenting a poster on our new metric of ERP data quality (Poster 3-085, Friday, October 9, 2020, 1:30 p.m.-2:30 p.m. EDT).

New resources for teaching about ERPs (especially for remote teaching during the COVID-19 pandemic)

Will you be teaching a course about ERPs (or a broader course with significant ERP content) this year? Will you need to be teaching remotely as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic? Are you concerned that you and your students will suffer from Zoom fatigue if you try to replace all your in-person classes with synchronous Zoom meetings? If so, we have some resources that might help!

We’ve created a free, fully online “Introduction to ERPs” course. It’s designed for people who want to be able to read and evaluate ERP studies or who need to get a basic background prior to learning to conduct ERP research. It can be accessed at https://courses.erpinfo.org/courses/Intro-to-ERPs.

The main goal of this blog post is to let you know that you can use any or all of the individual materials for this course in the courses you teach. These materials should be particularly helpful if you’re teaching remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic (but I think you’ll find them useful even after the pandemic). You can access the materials at https://erpinfo.org/intro-to-erps-course-materials.

All of the course materials have been released with a Creative Commons license so that you can use them in any way you want. You just need to provide an attribution (“by Steven J. Luck, https://erpinfo.org/”).

The course consists primarily of a series of 5-minute lecture videos hosted on YouTube (including closed captioning for ADA compliance). You can preview the videos here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLXKXgcv8muTKKSReNVWsOUBiIOvinSIrD

The videos are organized into “chapters,” each of which contains 4-8 videos. You can use any or all of them. If you’re going to use more than a few, we recommend that you keep them in their current order. You can see a table of contents here.

The first five chapters focus on what ERPs are and how they’re used, and the last three chapters focus on the methodological information that students need to learn so that they can read, understand, and critically evaluate ERP papers and/or start working in an ERP lab.

Each lecture video is followed by 1-2 quiz questions (which are very important for keeping the students engaged and maximizing their understanding and retention of the materials). 

Each chapter also includes a PDF with lecture notes for that chapter. 

We can provide you with links to the videos, the lecture notes (in PDF or PowerPoint format), files containing the quiz questions, transcripts of the videos, etc. If you use the Canvas learning management system, we can also provide the materials in a format that you can import with a few keystrokes.

We’ve also provided a special version of the first lecture video designed for undergrad courses at other colleges and universities. If you’d like, we can work with you to provide a custom introductory video to make it seem even more natural that your course includes lecture videos provided by a professor from a different university.

Most of the materials are available for download at https://erpinfo.org/intro-to-erps-course-materials. Some of the course materials (e.g., the quiz questions and answers) are on a password-protected web site so that your students won’t find them. We can give you access to this site.

Questions and requests for materials can be directed to Steve Luck (sjluck@ucdavis.edu). I really want people to take advantage of these materials, so don’t hesitate to contact me!

I’m planning to use these videos myself in an undergraduate-level ERP course that I’ll be developing next year. By having the students watch these lecture videos outside of class, I’ll be able to focus the class meetings on discussing journal articles and on teaching students to analyze ERP data (using the ERP CORE data). The lecture videos are designed to give the students the background knowledge necessary to read and critically evaluate ERP papers. One of the chapters goes through the methods section of an actual ERP paper, explaining every typical step of recording and analysis. And the final chapter goes through 10 common problems in ERP studies so that the students will know what to look for when they’re critically evaluating a paper. Toward the end of the term, I’ll have students find ERP papers on topics that they find interesting and write reviews of them as if they were journal submissions. This is something I’d ordinarily reserve for a grad course, but I’m pretty sure that my UC Davis juniors and seniors will be able to handle this after watching these videos and going through several papers in class.

Webinar on the ERP CORE

Note: This webinar was originally scheduled for August 12, but it has been rescheduled for August 26.

We will be holding a webinar on the ERP CORE, a freely available online resource we developed for the ERP community.

The ERP CORE includes: 1) experiment control scripts for 6 optimized ERP paradigms that collectively elicit 7 ERP components (N170, MMN, N2pc, N400, P3, LRP, and ERN) in just one hour of recording time, 2) raw and processed data from 40 neurotypical young adults in each paradigm, 3) EEG/ERP data processing pipelines and analysis scripts in EEGLAB and ERPLAB Matlab Toolboxes, and 4) a broad set of ERP results and EEG/ERP data quality measures for comparison across laboratories.

Check out this blog post for more information about the ERP CORE and how you can use it.

The webinar will be presented by Emily Kappenman, and it will be held on Wednesday, August 26 at 9:00 AM Pacific Daylight Time (GMT-7). We expect that it will last 60-90 minutes.

During the webinar, we will (a) provide an overview of the ERP CORE paradigms; (b) introduce the data set, analysis files, and Matlab scripts provided in the resource; and (c) describe some ways that you might use the ERP CORE in your research.

Advance registration is required and will be limited to the first 950 registrants. You can register at https://ucdavis.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_BlozaZr-QeW6htlBqQXtpQ.

When you register, you will immediately receive an email with an individualized Zoom link. If you do not see the email, check your spam folder. If you still don’t see it, you may have entered your email address incorrectly.

If you can’t attend, we will make a recording available for 1 week after the webinar. The link to the recording will be provided at https://erpinfo.org/virtual-boot-camp within 24 hours of the end of the webinar. You do NOT need to register to watch the recording.

Questions can be directed to erpbootcamp@gmail.com.

2020 ERP Boot Camp Cancelled Because of Covid-19 Pandemic

We are very sorry to announce that, due to the covid-19 pandemic, we are cancelling the 2020 ERP Boot Camp that was originally scheduled for June 22 – July 1 in San Diego. We really love running the boot camp, and we will greatly miss the opportunity to meet you and provide this important training.

As an alternative, we are planning to host a few larger-scale webinars. Most of these will be open to anyone (perhaps with limited, first-come/first-served registration). Stay tuned to this web site for announcements.

We plan to hold the next regular ERP Boot Camp in the summer of 2021 in San Diego (dates to be determined). Applications for the 2020 boot camp will not automatically carry over to the 2021 boot camp. The application portal will open approximately January 1, 2021.

If you would like to schedule a 2- or 3-day mini ERP boot camp at your institution, click here information.