“What do you think of German coffee?”
On her social, Vicky wrote:
I finally realised, a poster should be about starting conversations, not just showing results.
I appreciate this post because it epitomizes something I’ve been saying (and write in bold in Better Posters book): “Whoever starts the most conversations, wins.”
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A book on basic and clinical research that weighs in around 800 pages devotes just five to poster presentations, that is, well under one percent.
Gokulakrishnan K, Srikumar BN. 2023. Poster presentation at scientific meetings. In: Jagadeesh G, Balakumar P, Senatore F, eds. The Quintessence of Basic and Clinical Research and Scientific Publishing, pp. 785-790. Springer Nature Singapore. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-981-99-1284-1_49
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New paper on judging posters has some interesting data. For instance: What do judges of conference posters judge hardest?
Judges were more critical of the presenters ability to answer questions (than poster design or presentation).
Another interesting feature, though There is some correlation between poster design and someone’s ability to present it well, but the scatter is large.
If you want to win a poster competition, you should definitely check out:
Patience GS, Villasana Y, Blais B. Perspectives on judging posters. The Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering: in press. https://doi.org/10.1002/cjce.25109
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And that’s the roundup for this month of Northern Hemisphere autumn!
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