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Presenting Your Research Writing Abstracts, Creating Posters Jason I. Hong July 30, 2003 University of California Berkeley SUPERB 2003.

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Presentation on theme: "Presenting Your Research Writing Abstracts, Creating Posters Jason I. Hong July 30, 2003 University of California Berkeley SUPERB 2003."— Presentation transcript:

1 Presenting Your Research Writing Abstracts, Creating Posters Jason I. Hong July 30, 2003 University of California Berkeley SUPERB 2003

2 Jul 30 20032 Clarify your thinking Get feedback from others Sell your research Why Present Research?

3 Jul 30 20033 Papers Presentations Web Sites Research Abstracts Posters Some Ways of Presenting Research

4 Jul 30 20034 What are Research Abstracts? Stand-alone summary of the research –What is the problem? –What did you do? –What were your results? –What do the results mean? Abstracts are important because: –Some conferences ask for abstracts first –First thing people read in papers –Used in searchable databases Is this research interesting to me?

5 Jul 30 20035 What are Research Abstracts?

6 Jul 30 20036 What are Research Abstracts?

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8 8 Example Abstract Through a study of web site design practice, we observed that web site designers design sites at different levels of refinement—site map, storyboard, and individual page—and that designers sketch at all levels during the early stages of design. However, existing web design tools do not support these tasks very well. Informed by these observations, we created DENIM, a system that helps web site designers in the early stages of design. DENIM supports sketching input, allows design at different refinement levels, and unifies the levels through zooming. We performed an informal evaluation with seven professional designers and found that they reacted positively to the concept and were interested in using such a system in their work. (CHI2000) What is the Problem? What did we do? What were the results? What do they mean?

9 Jul 30 20039 Example Abstract Caspase 8 is a cysteine protease regulated in both a death-receptor-dependent and –independent manner during apoptosis. Here, we report that the gene for caspase 8 is frequently inactivated in neuroblastoma, a childhood tumor of the peripheral nervous system. The gene is silenced through DNA methylation as well as through gene deletion. Complete inactivation of CASP8 occurred almost exclusively in neuroblastomas with amplification of the oncogene MYCN. Caspase 8-null neuroblastoma cells were resistant to death receptor- and doxorubicin- mediated apoptosis, deficits that were corrected by programmed expression of the enzyme. Thus, caspase 8 acts as a tumor suppressor in neuroblastomas with amplification of MYCN. (Nature, May 2000) What is the Problem? What did we do? What were the results? What do the results mean?

10 Jul 30 200310 Tips on Writing Abstracts Write the abstract for your audience –Researchers in your field vs. General audience Abstract is stand-alone –Often read first to see if paper is interesting Length of abstracts vary –1¶ for posters, tech reports, conference papers –1-2¶ for journals –Some conferences 1-2 page abstracts first Different kind of research abstract, explains what you want to do, why it's important, and any early results

11 Jul 30 200311 Abstracts vs Introductions Both present an overview of the research –Introduction is longer, needs to have stronger, broader problem motivation –Introduction also provides background info, describing history of the research area Okay to duplicate some info in both Abstracts should not have: –References –Lots of background info

12 Jul 30 200312 Abstract Writing Exercise 10 minute exercise Get in groups of 2-3 Write 1¶ abstract on SUPERB research –"This is what I did" or "This is what I will do" Pass your abstract to others in your group and get feedback –Practice covering the basics Problem, what you did, results, and conclusions

13 Jul 30 200313 Creating Posters Use the poster to draw people in –Poster doesn’t have to cover everything –Pictures, graphs, and demos are great

14 Jul 30 200314 Creating Posters Use the poster to draw people in –Poster doesn’t have to cover everything –Pictures, graphs, and demos are great Cover the basics –What is the problem? (Why is it interesting?) –What did you do? –What were your results? –What do the results mean?

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19 Jul 30 200319 Some Tips on Creating Posters Common mistakes in posters –Too much text –Text too small –Disorganized content –Not writing for your audience The little things –Email address, Web page –Business cards –Have copies of any papers –Notebook for writing down comments –Post-its for people to leave comments

20 Jul 30 200320 Some Tips on Creating Posters SUPERB Poster session is general audience –Describe how your work fits in the big picture –Also have specifics for researchers in your field Prepare 5 min spiel –Elevator talk


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