♫musicjinni

Susan McConnell (Stanford): Designing effective scientific presentations

video thumbnail
https://www.ibiology.org/professional-development/scientific-presentations/

What is the best way to give a talk that engages and informs your audience? Dr. McConnell gives helpful advice on preparing and presenting an effective scientific talk. She reviews the basics of PowerPoint or Key Note and gives advice on choosing fonts, colors and slide styles. She also recommends ways to structure your talk so the audience stays awake and engaged. Her final recommendation is practice, practice, practice! Whether you are a graduate student presenting journal club or a tenured professor giving an invited lecture, this talk is sure to prove useful.

Susan McConnell (Stanford): Designing effective scientific presentations

Michael Alley (Penn State) 3: Attaining Confidence in Your Scientific Presentations

Michael Alley (Penn State) 1: Rethinking Scientific Presentations: The Assertion-Evidence Approach

Michael Alley (Penn State) 2: Assertion-Evidence Slides for a Research Talk

Hans Clevers (Hubrecht I., UU) 1: Discovery and Characterization of Adult Stem Cells in the Gut

iBiology and NRMN Live Q&A: Getting the Most Out of a Conference

Laci Gerhart-Barley (UCD): Educational science videos: Paper discussion and Q&A

Roy Parker (U. Colorado Boulder/HHMI) Part 2: P-bodies and the mRNA Cycle

Mohamed El-Brolosy (Harvard University): Adapting to Mutations: How to Cope with Nonsense

Emery Brown (Harvard Med., MIT) 1: Unconsciousness Under General Anesthetic is a Dynamic State

Susan Wessler (UC Riverside) Part 1: Introduction to transposable elements

Ben Barres (Stanford) 1: What do reactive astrocytes do?

Deshaies (Amgen) 2: Cullin-RING ubiquitin ligases: structure, mechanism, and regulation

Cliff Brangwynne (Princeton & HHMI) 2: Multiphase Liquid Behavior of the Nucleus

Kristala L. J. Prather (MIT) Part 2: Teaching an Old Bacterium New Tricks

“Stochasticity in the Bacterial World” by Dr. Richard Losick

Susan Wessler (UC Riverside) Part 2: How transposable elements amplify throughout genomes

Daniel Colon-Ramos (Yale/HHMI) 2: Mechanisms of neuronal synapse assembly and function

Overview of Polyketides and Polyketide Biosynthesis

Chaitan Khosla (Stanford) Part 1: An Introduction to Polyketide Assembly Lines

Baldwin (Max Planck Inst.) 2: Nicotiana attenuata’s responses to attack from the moth’s caterpillar

Taekjip Ha (Johns Hopkins / HHMI) 2: Combining FRET and optical trap to study the nucleosome

Disclaimer DMCA