Reader Comments
Post a new comment on this article
Post Your Discussion Comment
Please follow our guidelines for comments and review our competing interests policy. Comments that do not conform to our guidelines will be promptly removed and the user account disabled. The following must be avoided:
- Remarks that could be interpreted as allegations of misconduct
- Unsupported assertions or statements
- Inflammatory or insulting language
Thank You!
Thank you for taking the time to flag this posting; we review flagged postings on a regular basis.
closeMake it a standalone poster
Posted by PLOS_CompBiol on 21 Feb 2008 at 12:43 GMT
Originally posted as a reader Response on 4th June, 2007
I wish to emphasize a particular aim of posters referred to in the introduction: "Posters should be considered a snapshot of your work intended (...), if you are not present, to be a summary that will encourage the reader to want to learn more".
Especially at large conferences, when your poster is up for an extended period of time,a significant number of attendees screen posters before or after the official time allocated to poster presentations, in order to avoid the big crowd. Then they may come back briefly directly to your poster to ask you specific questions, or talk to you at some other time.
Hence, it should always be kept in mind that the poster should be understandable as a standalone (also because as a presenter you might get late to the session or have to leave for bathroom breaks, to get a drink, etc.). Carefully following Rules 2–3 and 5–7 is therefore critical. Limiting text and favoring visual representations are the key. Too much people still do what seems to be a cut and paste of all the text from their future manuscript onto their poster. This is far from satisfying these rules and misses the point of a poster presentation.
You want these "early birds" to come back!
Submitted by: Quentin Vicens
E-mail: quentin.vicens@colorado.edu
Occupation: PhD
Howard Hughes Medical Institute