This poster scarf actually predates a similar one seen at Neuroscience by a few days:
Choosing the right title for your poster is critically important. This New Yorker article shows that the headline changes the way people remember the content of the story you tell them next:
In the case of the factual articles, a misleading headline hurt a reader’s ability to recall the article’s details. ... In the case of opinion articles, however, a misleading headline... impaired a reader’s ability to make accurate inferences.
Dr. Attai took this picture at American Society of Clinical Oncology 2014 meeting. Um. Aren’t people proud of their work?
NatC has a conference networking tip:
New conference networking strategy: share cab to airport with strangers. Get career advice.
I constantly harp on people to make a grid. Here is a useful slide deck showing how grids are used to design a complex website (hat tip to Duarte and Garr Reynolds):
Kirsten Sanford nominated this as her favourite poster from the American Geological Union meeting. It’s colourful, I’ll give it that.
Business cards are an integral part of conference networking. Erik Peterson turned his business cards into mini-posters:
Slideshare has a video that claims to tell you four tips for making data visualization memorable (hat tip to Ethos 3):
The cheat sheet summary is below; the original paper is here:
- They look like something natural.
- Are pictoral.
- Use colours.
- Have high visual density.
Typeset in the Future is an obsessive single serve blog looking at typography in science fiction films. Try this post on Alien for starters. Hat tip to Adam Savage. (The mythbuster also throws in his favourite typefaces: Futura and Caslon.)
Before and After talks about using colour to make connections between objects. Very useful to remember in designing posters, and displaying data.
Here’s a fun article about secrets hidden in plain sight in logos. I knew a couple, like the FedEx arrow, but there were lots that I didn’t know.
Note, though, that the article gets the story behind the BMW logo wrong (it’s not a propellor). But perhaps it can be forgiven, as BMW’s own histories have sometimes mucked up the truth!
Merry Christmas!
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