Latest modern science | Link roundup for November 2013 - Si Bejo Science
link roundup presentationI�ve featured posters from Michael Barton here and here. Here�s another great description of his process, and the result is this nice poster he did last year. (Hat tip to Sam Evans.)
ScientifFig claims to produce publication ready figures. We�ll see.
Holly Bik looks at dress style. While she frames it in the context of job interviews, it can also apply to times when you're giving a poster presentation.
Peter Tennant has evidence about what going to a conference can do for you. Correlation is not causation, but still...
The Neuroscience conference is the biggest congregation of posters in the world, so here are selected tweets:
Nicky Pentilla ponders travel:
As does Kristen Delevich:
Ed Wilson, Jr., reminds us that you�re there to present, not talk.
Similarly, Taking a Cat Apart asks that you not drop names.
Phat Ma notes that you should also ask about what isn�t shown on a poster:
Drug Monkey has a handout tip:
Still, one might go too far. Felipe Gerhard saw an optimistic presenter:
Valerie Thompson has presentation advice:
Unfortunately, Doc Becca found presenters who hadn�t taken heed of Valerie�s advice. Remember, presenters, to get to the point!
Adam Calhoun reminds you all to show up to your session!
This might be music to the ears of Bob Graybeard, who indulges in imposteration:
And not being by your poster that could be a bad movie if My T CHondria is around; if you're not by your poster:
ScientifFig claims to produce publication ready figures. We�ll see.
Holly Bik looks at dress style. While she frames it in the context of job interviews, it can also apply to times when you're giving a poster presentation.
Peter Tennant has evidence about what going to a conference can do for you. Correlation is not causation, but still...
The Neuroscience conference is the biggest congregation of posters in the world, so here are selected tweets:
Nicky Pentilla ponders travel:
Shoe test for #SfN13: Can I walk the poster floor in them without wincing by the end?
As does Kristen Delevich:
Must stop using my poster tube as a walking stick.
Ed Wilson, Jr., reminds us that you�re there to present, not talk.
It�s incredibly frustrating when presenting author socializes rather than being avail to discuss work during poster session.
Similarly, Taking a Cat Apart asks that you not drop names.
Dude, you really don�t need all the name dropping when you talk me through your poster. It�s cool by itself. Relax.
Phat Ma notes that you should also ask about what isn�t shown on a poster:
I usually get more value from talking to people about the data they aren't showing than from the graphs on the poster.
Drug Monkey has a handout tip:
If you don't have page sized copies of your #SFN13 poster to hand out you are screwing up.
Still, one might go too far. Felipe Gerhard saw an optimistic presenter:
Saw somebody having approximately 500 printed hand-outs of his poster.
Valerie Thompson has presentation advice:
Ask visitors how familiar they are with your work before launching into your spiel, and adjust accordingly.
Unfortunately, Doc Becca found presenters who hadn�t taken heed of Valerie�s advice. Remember, presenters, to get to the point!
Poster spiel in 2 min or my brain starts to drift. Figure it out, folks.
Adam Calhoun reminds you all to show up to your session!
Worm community you�re letting me down! I went to three C. elegans posters this afternoon, and one had no presenter while other two posters totally missing!
This might be music to the ears of Bob Graybeard, who indulges in imposteration:
Sometimes I'll pick an unattended #SfN13 poster at random and present the shit out of it, just to prove I can.
And not being by your poster that could be a bad movie if My T CHondria is around; if you're not by your poster:
If you aren't standing by your poster, I'll assume you want me to just leave my comments on it with Sharpie.