1 / 31

Presenting Your Research as a Poster

Presenting Your Research as a Poster . Typical Poster Sections. Title Banner. Same as the one submitted for The Chronicle As large as possible Even lengths on lines Capitalize all words except short prepositions and articles

miles
Télécharger la présentation

Presenting Your Research as a Poster

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Presenting Your Research as a Poster

  2. Typical Poster Sections

  3. Title Banner • Same as the one submitted for The Chronicle • As large as possible • Even lengths on lines • Capitalize all words except short prepositions and articles • Must have PRISM logo, CUNY logo, and JJC logo – all the “acceptable size” – don’t distort! • Under the title should be your name, followed by John Jay College and your mentor’s name, followed by John Jay College • Insert a line to separate your title banner from your content – make it just under your text. • Should not be a color background this time as we have printer limitations!

  4. Title of Your Presentation – It Can Extend to Two Lines or Even Three if Necessary, But Try to Keep Line Lengths Similar First Name Last Name, John Jay College Mentor’s First Name Last Name, John Jay College Conclusions Results Abstract Introduction This is ok, BUT… References Methods Acknowledgements

  5. Abstract

  6. Introduction A good poster introduction … • Is brief • Orients the reader, even a non-scientist • Includes necessary background • Includes a small amount of citations (no websites!!) • Ties your research goal to this background • May include figures

  7. Figures in an Introduction • Should have titles and captions in this format: Figure 1. Title. Caption. (Underneath picture or diagram.) • Figures must have proper citations unless you created or re-created them yourself. Good Example:

  8. Methods • Make this section brief! • Bullet for easier reading. • Consider graphic organizers/smart art for steps or processes, especially if your project is developmental in nature:

  9. Methods - Remember These 2 P’s!

  10. Results • Should be the focus! Take up main part of central panel! • Tables vs. Figures • Tables are numbered independently of figures, but numbering starts at beginning of poster and does not re-start at the results. • Make sure figures are clear and not photocopied! • Graphs should have error bars when appropriate and distinctly different line colors for multiple sets of data. Table 1 Pilot Data Analysis

  11. Titles on Figures Figure 7. Determination of Successful Plasmid Isolation. The marker in Lane 1 is from the digested HaeIII lambda DNA. The samples were denatured before being run on the gel.

  12. Conclusions • Recommended to bullet this section. • Summarize key results. • Discuss significance and/or future work but keep it brief! • If you are a newer student, especially first semester, you may not have a lot of results, in which case you may wish to either elaborate here more extensively on where your project will go next semester or even have an extra section called “Future Work.”

  13. References • List those references cited by you on your poster, only! • List should probably be < 5 total. • Use a referencing style that is appropriate for your discipline. • Every reference must be in the same style! Don’t just copy and paste! • Reference lists often and really should use the hanging indent.

  14. Examples of Reference Lists • Zhang, H. (2006). Photochemical Redox Reactions of Mercury. Recent Developments in Mercury Science. Structure and Bonding, 120: 37-79. • Gustin, M. & Stamenkovic, J. (2005). Effect of watering and soil moisture on mercury emission from soils. Biogeochemistry, 76: 215-232.

  15. Acknowledgements • Generally, you don’t acknowledge your mentor if his/her name is listed with yours at the top of the poster. • Do acknowledge all funding sources. • You must include this statement amongst your references verbatim: Support for student stipends, supplies, and/or equipment used in this research was supplied by the Program for Research Initiatives for Science Majors (PRISM) at John Jay College. PRISM is funded by the Title V, HSI-STEM and MSEIP programs within the U.S. Department of Education; the PAESMEM program through the National Science Foundation; and New York State’s Graduate Research and Technology Initiative.

  16. Oral Poster Presentation Tips • What is someone most likely to say when they come up to you at your poster?

  17. You will be asked…. • “So – what’s your project about?” • “Tell me about your project?” • What are you going to say? PREPARE!!!!

  18. Have Two Versions! • Your “speech” should have two versions… • Know your audience:

  19. 30/45 Second Version

  20. For Example, do not do this: • My work studies the role of futABC, which produce the fucosylated Lewis antigens (Lewis A, B, Y, or X) present on the lipopolysaccaride of Helicobacter pylori, in the chronic colonization of the gastric mucosa by this bacterium. We find that most of these fucosylases undergo SSM-mediated phase variation, leading to hypervariable phenotypes within the population, from which sub-populations are selected by molecular mimicry of host antigenic profiles through a yet-unknown mechanism. In the next steps we want to explore the molecular basis of this mechanism, and shed light on the genetic factors leading to chronic persistance by H. pylori.

  21. Do this… • My research is focused on a type of molecules named Lewis antigens that are present in the surface of a bacterial species (named Helicobacter pylori, or Hp for short) that lives in the stomach of some humans, and how they help Hp survive there for decades. We found that the genes responsible for manufacturing the Lewis antigens in the bacteria can switch and stay on and off every time Hp replicates, which creates a mixed population of the Hp cells but each one producing a different Lewis antigen. Some Hp inside the same stomach will produce Lewis antigens that are more compatible with the person and can evade the natural defenses of the immune system and stay there. Next, we want to understand what makes some antigens more compatible than others inside each individual person to explain how this bacteria can live in the stomach for such a long time.

  22. 2 – 3 Minute Version

  23. Tips for Keeping Audience Attention • Rehearse many times but don’t memorize! • Keep a slow pace, with emphatic pauses. • Use your poster, especially figures, as a visual guide when helpful. • Don’t be afraid to let people interject – you aren’t actually being kept to a time limit overall. • Think of it as teaching instead of speech giving. • Think of it also as story-telling, it should have a beginning (purpose), some action/adventure in the middle (what you actually did), and then the moral (conclusion) at the end.

  24. Not the Goal!! • Someone says to you … “Wow – I don’t even understand half of what you just said. It’s like another language – this science stuff.”

  25. Final Reminders!! • Make sure that you have proofread your entire poster for typos, spelling errors, grammatical mistakes, font and spacing consistency, etc. • Your mentor MUST approve your poster before you submit it to PRISM. • Review the posted guidelines before submitting to make sure that you comply with everything. • Print out a small copy of your poster so that you can check to see if all the section titles and columns are properly aligned and so that you can see if there are any inconsistencies in fonts or spacing.

  26. Writing the Main Content • Do not write your poster on the template. Write it as a Word document. Then have your mentor review it, have a peer review it, have someone you know to be a good writer review it (not necessary in that order). • Then you can copy and paste into the template. • We have >40 posters to review, and is unlikely that we’ll be able to fully review all of them. This poster is YOUR presentation, YOUR work and is YOUR responsibility for it to be ready.

  27. Poster Submission Spring 2014DEADLINES – REVISED 4/7/14 PRINTER ISSUES – No longer? • Now that the department poster printer is fixed, we can slightly relax our initial poster submission procedures: • If you want your poster printed in higher quality on the newly fixed departmental printer, you must submit it by Wednesday, April 16 by noon. • All other posters must be submitted between Wednesday, April 16 and Wednesday, April 23 by noon. These posters may be printed in lower quality (possible picture pixilation, etc.) using the printer in the OUR office as their printer is faster and able to handle a bigger load. If time allows and the machine holds up, some of the posters submitted after 4/16 at noon will be printed on the department higher quality printer, but there is absolutely no guarantee of this. • Anyone without a poster for ANY reason will be denied summer or possible other future funding.

  28. How to Submit • Submit to prism.jjay@gmail.comand save your email sent as proof of submission. • There will be NO extensions (4/23 at noon is the absolute final call) and no re-prints for typos that you find later or new results. • *You MUST MUSTMUST put your mentor’s email address in the CC of the email so that we know he/she has seen and approved it. • Your posters will be reviewed and probably edited by the PRISM staff. They will be sent back to you for a final approval of these edits or so that you yourself can make needed edits. If edits are needed you must make the edits, consult your mentor if needed, and respond or resubmit within 24 hours of getting our email so be checking your email every day for that two weeks until you hear that we printed it!!

  29. Seniors in the OUR Contest • You are all presenting on Thursday from 1:30 – 2:45 regardless of what their email said. • You will likely be using the same poster. For now, assume that we will print your poster, mount it and give it to them for that day. • So – you DO NOT have to submit your poster to them by email as their email says. • You will be responsible for carrying your poster from the OUR session to the PRISM session between 2:45 and 2:50 p.m. on May 1. • There will be updates to this as we continue to work with OUR – look for email updates.

  30. Poster Contest • ** (Change here) All graduating students will be considered if they are turned in on time by noon on April 16 and may be considered if turned in by the final 4/23 deadline. • PRISM coordinators, Fran, Ed, and Ron will review them to decide on finalists. • Then an independent panel of judges will score the finalists with winner(s) to be announced at the Symposium. • Initial judging is based on the poster itself with final awards also based on oral presentation to judges either at the OUR session or the PRISM poster session. • Some of the criteria: Clarity, Depth of Knowledge, Research Merit, Format, Appearance, Professionalism

  31. Don’t forget… • RSVP for you and for any family by April 10!! • Pick up an invitation to bring home!! • Make a plan with your mentor for meeting the early 4/16 deadline if at all possible!

More Related