Date : 11-11-18 09:32
Poster Perfect - How to Drive Home Your Science with a Visually Pleasing Poster
 Author : 07 (141.♡.215.154)
Views : 9,843   recommend : 0  
   http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/postings.php [1840]
Although occasionally there would be visually pleasing posters that promoted less-than-stellar science, Purrington usually found that “the attractiveness of a poster is highly correlated with the quality of the science,” he said. Graphic design and scientific inquiry require different skills, but oddly enough, it appeared that “the people who understood the beauty of fonts had a sense of pitching their science,” he said.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOMORROW'S PROFESSOR(sm) eMAIL NEWSLETTER
http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/postings.php

Archives of all past postings can be found at:
http://cgi.stanford.edu/~dept-ctl/cgi-bin/tomprof/postings.php

Sponsored by
Stanford Center for Teaching and Learning
http://ctl.stanford.edu

Folks:

The posting below gives some great tips on preparing posters for professional meetings, and not just for scientists. It is by Edyta Zielinska and it appeared in the August 31, 2011 Careers issue of The Scientist: Magazine of the Life Science [http://www.the-scientist.com/toc/2011/03/]. © Copyright 2011, The Scientist, Inc. All rights reserved. Reprinted with permission.

Regards,

Rick Reis
reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: The Graduate Student Writer: Tips to Make the Writing Process Work for You


Tomorrow's Research

------------------------------- 1,576 words ----------------------------

Poster Perfect - How to Drive Home Your Science with a Visually Pleasing Poster

After many years of walking through poster sessions, Colin Purrington, a professor of evolutionary biology at Swarthmore College, noticed a trend. Usually, as he wandered the aisles looking for something to spark his interest, he’d see a lot of badly designed posters that buried their scientific messages. Although occasionally there would be visually pleasing posters that promoted less-than-stellar science, Purrington usually found that “the attractiveness of a poster is highly correlated with the quality of the science,” he said. Graphic design and scientific inquiry require different skills, but oddly enough, it appeared that “the people who understood the beauty of fonts had a sense of pitching their science,” he said.

Scientists have a lot of good reasons for making bad-looking posters. Mentors often tell students to go into the hallway and make a poster like the ones hanging there; posters present preliminary data, which is sometimes collected up to the last moment before a conference, making poster design and layout a last-minute affair. Finally, visual and graphic design is a specialty unto itself, and one that researchers rarely study.

However, there are important reasons for making concise, well-presented, and eye-catching posters. “We have really big brains, and a big part of that brain is dedicated to sight. If the poster doesn’t fit in some nice visual sense, it just doesn’t work,” and viewers are likely to move on, says Purrington, who has written an extensive online primer on scientific poster-making.

The Scientist talked to researchers who have sharpened their scientific pitches, as well as to graphic designers who understand the rationale behind color, font, and layout choices. Here’s their advice for making a better poster.

TIPS FOR DESIGN AND FORMATTING

Design pointers from the pros

* Shorten your text lines
Long lines of text are more difficult to read, which is why magazines and newspapers always break up their text into narrower columns. If your poster has a landscape orientation, consider breaking your text into four columns.

* Justify the right way: to the left
While justifying text on both the right and left (i.e., full justification) makes for very neat-looking columns, designers are beginning to move away from the practice, says Nichole Jonas, a graphics specialist at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. It can cause distracting vertical “rivers” of spaces down the page. Left justifying text makes for an easier read.

* Consider your font
You don’t have to stick with just one. Adding a little variety, and even downloading a font that isn’t available on PowerPoint, can make your poster stand out. But never use more than two or three fonts, says Jonas. She suggests using sans serif fonts like Helvetica or Gill Sans for the body and a serif for the titles. (Other designers prefer serif fonts for the body, as they “can help guide the eye through the word,” said Jonas.) “Anything but Comic Sans,” she says, as it tends to look amateurish.

* Don’t put conclusions on the floor
Even though it’s the most important part of the poster, the conclusion is often placed “at the bottom, [where] it’s at people’s feet,” says Graves. She suggests placing it at top of the rightmost column—or, if you feel daring, start the body of the poster with it.

* Bigger is better
“People have this weird love of small font,” says Purrington. “They think it looks professional and that large fonts are for children.” But that’s not the case, he says. In low light conditions, or when scientists are reading over other people’s shoulders, larger fonts are essential. LiLynn Graves, graphic and web designer at the Cornell Center for Materials Research at Cornell University, suggests a font size of 85pt for the title, 36–44 for the headers, and 24–34 for the body text.

* Dump PowerPoint’s color palette
Many people use PowerPoint to create their poster, but the program was designed for projecting images in a darkened room. The deep blues and fluorescent greens that look good in that setting often produce posters that are too dark and difficult to read, says Graves. Stay away from primary colors on primary colors (no reds on blues, or reds on yellows). Instead, Jonas suggests a background in a muted color—one that is closer to white on the color spectrum—for a more professional tone.

* Sundries
Check for readability at 6 feet; print out a small copy to better judge your layout choices; use a ruler to make sure all columns are aligned; stick with black as the text color.

How to make your data easy on the eyes

* Title with a message
Titles are the best way to quickly tell readers what they are supposed to take away from your data. Always title your graphs, says Purrington.

* Make your findings obvious
Highlight the peak, trough, or other comparison of interest with an arrow containing the value of that data point. It’s better than making a reader work out the value from the axes.

* Include the method
While many posters do include a methods section, it is almost always useful to include a simple description of how you got the data you’re presenting near the graph, says biochemist Joseph Provost of Minnesota State University Moorhead, a frequent judge of student posters. Without a simple caption that describes the experimental method, “it’s hard to understand how an experiment was done,” he says.

* Temporarily dump your text
A good way to test to see whether your graphics are serving their intended purpose: “If you removed all the info besides the graphics, the poster should still be pretty good,” says Purrington. “Scientists are lazy, they don’t read,” says marine biologist Nando Boero, from the Università del Salento in Lecce, Italy. The graphs should tell the whole story, he says.

* Banish the legend
Legends or keys to multicolored line graphs give a viewer one more thing to interpret. If possible, annotate your data with labels directly on the image, says Purrington.

* Sundries
Use graphs rather than tables; avoid cluttered figures; arrange experiments to tell a story, not in the order they were performed; include enough data to defend your hypothesis; keep about a 50/50 ratio of graphics to text.


TIPS FOR CLEARER CONTENT

How to write a title

Bad: “Mural architecture of planula larvae of a cniderian might be suggestive of the central nervous system”

Good: “The first brain”

Rationale: A poster is more of an advertisement for your work than a definitive account, says Boero. There are some things you can’t get away with when you’re writing a paper. But you can be on the cheeky side of accurate in posters to capture the attention of a busy passerby.

Bad: “The MES mess, a good buffer gone bad”

Good: “How a common cell culture pH buffer interferes with transport assays”

Rationale: It’s best to avoid acronyms and jargon when aiming for a general audience. Scientists tend to wander through poster sessions. If you can nab a researcher from another field, you may have won a future collaborator, or someone who will offer a new perspective on your work, says Mark Wallert, a researcher at Minnesota State University Moorhead and frequent poster judge.

Sundries:
Never use ALL CAPS in titles; emphasize titles in one way: boldface, italics, or underline, but never all three.

Improve your body

* Link images and text
Unlike journal articles, where tables and graphs are often located at a distance from their description in the text, “in a poster, the words must be near the visual aid,” says Boero. “You have that possibility, so use it.”

* Cut your text
Once you’ve created your content, read it again to see how many words you can cut, says Boero. Pretend you’re writing a telegram, and paying for every word, he suggests.

* Make killer bullets
Limit bulleted lists to the conclusion section, if possible. There, lay out 4–5 summary statements that capture what your data means and its wider implications.

* Answer your hypothesis
Make sure your conclusion is more than a restatement of your results. It should directly address the hypothesis you lay out in the intro or abstract.

The Checklist: What to do before you print

* Give it a test run
In his experience, Wallert says, “you find [mistakes] when you’re standing in front of your poster” at the conference. To save yourself the embarrassment, project your poster on the wall of your lab and run through your presentation, he suggests.

* Check your file size
Make sure you haven’t inserted a 500 MB image, or one that’s low resolution. “If a person has never done a poster, they’ll probably make one of those mistakes,” says Purrington

* Are your axes labeled?
Oddly enough, missing axis labels are something that poster judges Wallert and Provost see often.

* Check your message
Once you’ve made your poster look its best, give it one more read-through to make sure that it presents the point of your research in the most convincing light.

* Color check
Make sure the colors you’ve chosen are readable in low light. It’s hard to predict where your poster will be placed, so make sure your choices work in different settings.

* Check dimensions
Although this should really be the first thing you do, not the last, it’s a good idea to make sure your poster conforms to the meeting’s size and orientation specifications.

Resources

* Get feedback on your science
Post your poster on Faculty of 1000 (posters.f1000.com) to get feedback from experts (F1000 is The Scientist’s sister company). More tips at posters.f1000.com/postertips

* Buy software that does it for you
Check out Poster Genius, a program that formats your content into a clean layout. You simply enter your text and figures, and it selects the right font and tests for optimal readability under conference-hall conditions. www.postergenius.com/cms/index.php

* Add technology
Add a QR (Quick Response) code, the multimedia bar code, for access to your video or sound files (or a digital handout of your poster). Pros: you can add those cool videos of your fluorescing C. elegans. Cons: they only work for smart-phone owners. Download QR codes here:www.qrstuff.com or here qrcode.kaywa.com

* Scientific Poster Design
A visual how-to for improving posters, with many examples: www.cns.cornell.edu/documents/ScientificPosters.pdf

* Elements of Style
Graphic design elements as they apply to scientific posters: Science.nichd.nih.gov/confluence/display/~jonasnic/Elements+of+Style

* Better Posters
Great blog with constantly updated resources for better poster-making: betterposters.blogspot.com

* * * * * * *
NOTE: Anyone can SUBSCRIBE to the Tomorrows-Professor Mailing List by going to:
https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/tomorrows-professor

To UNSUBSCRIBE just reply to this posting with the word "unsubscribe" in the top body of the text.


--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**==--++**== tomorrows-professor mailing list tomorrows-professor@lists.stanford.edu https://mailman.stanford.edu/mailman/listinfo/tomorrows-professor

 
 

Total 16
No Topic Author Date Views Recommend
16 SK이노베이션 "자원개발 사업 패러다임 바꾼… 07 07-14 27555 0
15 U.P. mines seeing a resurgence as companies hope to cash in 072 11-28 6395 0
14 Poster Perfect - How to Drive Home Your Science with a Visua… 07 11-18 9844 0
13 The $200,000-a-Year Mine Worker 07 11-18 4212 0
12 link-Future of CO2 Storage May Be Etched in German Sandstone 07 11-16 4609 0
11 Archaeologists who study the structure of Anatolian civiliza… 07 11-03 5885 0
10 Pennington Named President of American Geosciences Institute 07 10-08 4620 0
9 This is the "Stay Hungry. Stay Foolish" address delivered by… (1) 07 10-07 4196 0
8 Let the U.S. Oil and Gas Industry Create New Jobs 07 09-12 4131 0
7 Hydraulic Fracturing in Michigan 07 09-08 4443 0
6 Mega Channel Seismic Survey System: Networking a million dev… 07 09-08 4935 0
5 Is science interesting? 07 09-08 4262 0
4 Earthquake Prediction Still Stymies Scientists By ALICIA CHA… 07 09-05 6238 0
3 Exxon Reaches Arctic Oil Deal With Russians 09-03 4761 0
2 Marcellus Shale - Appalachian Basin Natural Gas Play 09-03 5666 0
1 Hydraulic Fracturing Fluids - Composition and Additives 09-03 7673 0

Warning: Unknown: open(../data/session/sess_9eda2a8810218cc065d1d265348aeabf, O_RDWR) failed: No such file or directory (2) in Unknown on line 0

Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (../data/session) in Unknown on line 0