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Nick Camp

Graduate Student
ncamp@stanford.edu
Stanford
University
Psychology Department
450 Serra Mall
Stanford, CA 94305
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About me
I am currently a first-year graduate student
at Stanford University working in the
Interpersonal Communication and Perception
Lab. I graduated from Columbia University in
2009 with a B.A. in Psychology, and was the
lab manager for Columbia's Intergroup
Relations and Diversity Lab from 2009-2012.
My research examines how identities
(stigmatized, cultural, and concealed) and
contexts (physical and social) influence
cognition.
My CV can be
found
on my
website.
Publications
Sedlovskaya, A., Purdie-Vaughns, V.,
Eibach, R., LaFrance, M., Romero-Canyas,
R., & Camp, N. (in press).
Internalizing the Closet: Stigma
Concealment Heightens the Cognitive
Distinction between Public and Private
Selves. Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology.
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