A recent paper by Prasad and colleagues (2025) provided some advice on how to turn a conference poster or presentation into a publication. For the most part, these are common sense if you understand both formats. For example, you will need far more detail in the Methods section to a journal manuscript.
The authors write:
The title of the final manuscript may occasionally and sometimes may need to be different from the title of the conference abstract.
This undersells the problem. I think that every poster, presentation, and publication should have a unique title.
First, someone reading a CV may underestimate the number of presentations, or think that you have made a mistake by including the same presentation twice.
Second, conference abstracts are uploaded, read by machines, and included in indexing services. You do not want citations to one project being misdirected to another, or combined, or anything else that might happen.
It just reduces confusion.
And do not tell me that your work can only be described by one possible title! Here are some conference presentation and poster titles I used during my PhD work:
- Analysis of digging movements by the sand crab Blepharipoda occidentalis.
- Digging by the sand crab Blepharipoda occidentalis.
- Digging by the sand crabs Blepharipoda occidentalis and Emerita analoga: a comparative analysis using movement notation and EMGs.
- Integrating movements and motor patterns in sand crab digging.
- Interjoint coordination and muscle activity in legs of digging sand crabs.
- Sand crab digging: a neuroethological study of the evolution of a “new” behaviour.
- Coupling of different locomotor rhythms in sand crabs.
- Sand crab digging is not homologous to reptantian walking.
- Sand crab digging: an evolutionary mosaic of disparate ancestral locomotor modules?
- Digging in pearly sand crabs, Lepidopa californica: does size or phylogeny determine coordination?
- “New” behaviours as evolutionary mosaics.
The obvious change is that the first titles mention just one species, and more species get added into they mix as we studied them. And none of those titles are the same as the final published papers.
Reference
Prasad S, Garg A, Saini J. 2025. Turning your presentations/posters to publications. Indian Journal of Radiology and Imaging 35(S01): S143-S147. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0044-1800864