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2005 AAG Meeting Abstract Information
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ABSTRACT INSTRUCTIONS Everyone
who presents a paper, poster, or illustrated paper must submit an abstract.
For your abstract to be accepted for publication, it must not exceed 250
words and must be submitted online after you pay your participation fee.
The abstract must describe the presentation's purpose, methods, and conclusions.
• Do not put your name and affiliation in the body of the abstract. • Do not enter the title in the body of the abstract. • Do not use abbreviations. • Do not use underlining, boldface type, italics, subscripts, or superscripts. • Do not include any codes for justification, hyphenation, line height, line centering, margins, spacing, fonts, page centering, page numbering, suppression, or tabs, in your abstract. • Do not use bulleted lists • Do not include phone numbers or email addresses in the body of the abstract. Your abstract will not be edited; you are responsible for avoiding spelling, grammatical, and typographical errors. Use the active voice for your abstract and presentation. Transmit your research results clearly and concisely. Avoid jargon. Submission of an abstract grants permission for the AAG to include it in the meeting abstract compilation and to disseminate it electronically. GUIDE
TO SELECTING KEYWORDS FOR YOUR ABSTRACT If your presentation is about color cartography, an appropriate keyword might be “cartography-color.” Under no circumstance can you use a comma within a keyword. Make certain your geography is not too specific. For example, suppose your paper is about southwestern Kentucky. A user of the abstract volume interested in Kentucky is going to look at the K’s, not at the S’s. Therefore, either use “Kentucky” or “Kentucky-southwest.” In referring to a systematic sub field, do use the word “geography.” Use “economic geography” as the keyword and not “economic.” If you have a choice between the plural and the singular form, use the plural. If your keyword could be “race” or “races,” use “races.” SAMPLE: Keywords: cartography, atlases, United States
Please direct all queries to: Oscar C.Larson
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