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Platform
Presentation Instructions
Teratology
Society Annual Meeting 2006
Each platform paper, except for those presented in the symposia
or workshops, will be allowed 15 minutes (12 minutes for presentation
and 3 minutes for discussion). The time schedule will be strictly
followed in all sessions.
The Teratology Society will provide a computer and digital projection
in each session room. Presenters will need to load their presentation
on the computer prior to the start of their session to assure
that everything functions properly.
Oral
presentation of a scientific paper with digital projection is
quite different from presentation of the same information in a
journal article. In a journal article, all the details of the
research must be given to allow the reader to evaluate the science.
In an oral presentation, you have a limited amount of time and
a limited number of slides in which to get across the major thrust
of the study. Details cannot be included, only the major ideas.
Therefore, each slide cannot contain more information than the
viewer can comprehend in a short time. Design each slide to communicate
a single idea quickly! Make the print large enough to be seen
on an 8' screen from a distance of 100 feet.
The
following should help you in your presentation preparation:
1. Prepare your slides to communicate ideas, not details. If
someone wants details, let him or her ask you in the discussion
period.
2. Put the minimum amount of information on the slide that is
necessary to communicate the idea you want. After drafting the
slide, see what can be left out while still communicating the
essential idea. Reduce the draft to reduce the material to a
minimum.
3. Graphical presentation of data often communicates an idea
more quickly than tabular presentation of the same data. Photographs
may also be effective, but avoid pictures of animals.
4.
A table in a published article is much too detailed for a slide
presentation. Take the time to think through what conclusion
you want to present from the table and use the least amount
of material you can to communicate that idea. In general, a
table on a slide should contain no more than 3 columns and no
more than 4 rows.
5. A slide presentation should include a title slide, a slide
stating the question or hypothesis to be addressed, and a slide
describing the overall approach you used to address the question.
A "methods" slide or two should be included but should
never provide all the details unless the purpose of the talk
is to describe the method. Drawings or flow charts can sometimes
be used to present complex methods succinctly. The next several
slides should present and interpret the results obtained, and
a final slide should give the conclusions of the study.
6. If you have more than one slide per minute of presentation,
you have too many slides.
7. Color and graphics can enhance and clarify your presentation
but can also be distracting if not carefully chosen. In general,
text shown on a dark background should be very light and text
shown on a light background should be very dark. Some color
combinations that work fine on a computer monitor do not project
well.
8.
Be sure to try out your slides or digital presentation before
the Annual Meeting to make certain that everything is easy to
read from the back of the room.
All
participants, including platform presenters, are required to register
for the Annual Meeting. Registration and Housing information can
be obtained on the Teratology Society’s Web site (http://teratology.org/).
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