Title: Making presentations
1Making presentations
- Psych 231 Research Methods in Psychology
2Presentations
- Presenting your research
- Posters
- Talks
- Papers
3Why do presentations?
- To present your work/theory/research
- Get feedback
- It is an opportunity for peers to ask you
questions about your work - For you to ask them questions
- You want your audience to walk away remembering a
few key points - So your goal is to be as clear as possible
4Rough sketch of a presentation
Broad
- Introduction of the issue
- Background information
- Specific hypotheses
- Design
- Results
- Interpret the results
- General Conclusions
Specifics of your study
Broad
5Preparation
- Consider your audience
- - who are they, what do they want, what do they
already know - Start collecting the things that you think that
youll need - - graphs, tables, pictures, examples, data
analyses, etc. - Determine the key points that you want them to
remember - focus your presentation on these points
- Camping trip analogy
- Your initial pack usually has too much stuff
- Need to figure out what to take out
- Practice, rehearse, and then practice again
6Poster content
- Stick to the hourglass shape for content
- Balance of text and figures
- Use bullet points
- Give example stimuli
- Use large enough font to read from 6 feet away
- End with 3 or 4 key take home points
7Title Authors and affiliation
- Introduction
- Not a lot of detail
- Just the main points
- Hypotheses
- predictions
- Results
- Graphs/tables
- Bullet points of
- main results
- Conclusions
- 3 or 4 take home
- points
- Potential limitations
- Methods
- Not a lot of detail
- just the main points
- Participants
- Design
- IVs DVs
- Examples of stimuli
- References
- If you cite something
- give the full reference
8Title Authors and affiliation
Introduction
9Brief checklist for the poster
- Initial sketch/outline
- Rough layout
- Balance (text/pictures, data/conclusions)
- Typography
- Movement
- Simplicity
- Final layout
10The pen is mightier than the brush Using
mnemonics Leon DaVinci and Bill
Shakespear Illinois State University
Introduction
- Remembering things is often a
- challenge in everyday life.
- What was I supposed to
- get at the grocery store?
- (Cutting, 2000)
- We examined two factors
- We predicted
- mnemonic devices will help
- memory for both pictures and words
- effect larger for words than pictures
Results
- Stimulus type matters
- participants remembered words
- better than pictures
- Use of mnemonic devices helps
- memory performance
- Potential limitations
- stimulus type pictures/words
- use of mnemonics
- 900 native English speakers
- 2 x 2 between groups design
- Measured the percent correctly recalled
- items from a free recall procedure
- 24 pictures and words
words
pictures
books
Cutting J. C. (2000). Finding things in your
house. Journal of Memory and Stuff, 17,
pg 1-230.
frog
11Presentation of the poster
- Arrive early and set up
- Author(s) stand next to poster
- Have a short walk through presentation ready
- Answer questions (also ask questions)
- Handout copies of the poster available
(sometimes), or a request sign-up
12Your posters (our checklist)
- Content
- Introduction
- Problem of interest
- Very brief summary of past research
- Basic purpose of experiment(s)
- Hypotheses
- Method
- Brief but clear
- Design
- Materials
- Procedure (brief)
13Your posters (our checklist)
- Content cont.
- Results
- Descriptive statistics
- Inferential results
- Discussion
- Hypothesis rejected or supported
- Implication of results
- A few take home points
- References
- Tables and figures
- Useful info to reader
- Easy to understand
14Your posters (our checklist)
- Format
- Overall clarity
- Organization
- Font size
- Figure/text balance
- Title
- Authors
15Different kinds of talks
- Research Presentations
- (typically 10 to 30 mins)
- Paper with respondent
- Panel Presentation
- Workshop
16Talk Content
- Create a logical progression to the talk
- Hourglass shape
- Work on the transitions between slides
- Be brief, but include enough details so that the
audience can follow the arguments - Use slides to help simplify/clarify points
- Include tables, graphs, pictures, etc.
- Dont just read the slides
- but do walk through those that need it (e.g.
graphs of results) - Be careful of jargon, explain terms (if in fact
you really need them)
17Presentation of the talk
- Make it smooth (lots of practice will help)
- Watch your speaking rate (again, practice)
- Maintain eye contact with whole audience
- Emphasize the key points, make sure that the
audience can identify these - Point to the slides if it helps
- Beware jokes, can be a double-edged sword
- Dont go over your time
18Dealing with questions
- Repeat the question in your own words
- so that the rest of the audience can hear it
- to make sure that you understood the question
- to buy yourself some time to think about the
answer - Try not to be nervous
- you know your study better than anyone else
- When preparing, try to think of likely questions
and prepare answers
19Checklist for the talk
- Preparation
- Analyze the audience
- Choose your main points
- etc.
- Prepare the Final Outline
- fix any problems/loose ends
- Construct your speaking outline
- e.g., the note cards that youll read
- Rehearse, rehearse, rehearse