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Tips for a good “Journal club” presentation

Tips for a good “Journal club” presentation. In a dark room, consider a dark background with pale pastel text. Pale yellow and blue work well. White does not project well, particularly in large rooms with much magnification

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Tips for a good “Journal club” presentation

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  1. Tips for a good “Journal club” presentation • In a dark room, consider a dark background with pale pastel text. • Pale yellow and blue work well. White does not project well, particularly in large rooms with much magnification • If the room will be bright, a pale background with dark text works well • Overall, be careful with color. Use no more than 2 colors/slide for text and not many more for graphics. • Red should be reserved for creating emphasis as the eye is immediately drawn to red in a slide. • Always strive for large differences in contrast between text and background, otherwise the slide will be difficult to read • The “golden rule” is 5 lines with 5 words/line for text slides • large blocks of text is to be avoided

  2. This color is not bad for the title • But as • You • Get • Farther • Down • The page • The contrast is getting less and less

  3. I saw a seminar recently by a very famous scientist from UCSF • It was astoundingly bad, primarily because the text was nearly completely unreadable due to the color scheme Bad example • I saw a seminar recently by a very famous scientist from UCSF • It was astoundingly bad, primarily because the text was nearly completely unreadable due to the color scheme

  4. Fonts and Backgrounds are important • Simple black and white is very good for journal club presentations • Other high contrast combinations work well too • White on black sometimes has too much contrast and does not always project well • Pale pastels on a dark background project very nicely • Yellowandblue work well, white less so • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Trebuchet • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Arial • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Helvetica • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Times • Fonts make a big difference in clarity - Courier

  5. Selecting fonts • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Trebuchet • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Arial • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Helvetica • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Times • Fonts make a big difference in clarity – Courier • Red text is to be avoided except for emphasis as it draws the eye • Fluorescent colors are also to be avoided as they distract the audience • Bold text does not project well when blown up as in a large meeting hall • Bold white text is a complete disaster • Particularly with serif fonts like Times

  6. Use animations with extreme care • Simple appears are ok • As are sliding in from one part of the slide or another • As are sliding in from one part of the slide or another • As are sliding in from one part of the slide or another • Getting too fancy is distracting to the audience • Getting too fancy is distracting to the audience • Getting too fancy is distracting to the audience • Getting too fancy is distracting to the audience • You get the idea, right?

  7. Titles should be 28 to 32 point fonts • Text should be either 24 point • Or 20 point • Or rarely 18 point but • Not smaller • Do not make images too small

  8. For more information • An excellent Powerpoint tutorial can be found here http://gethelp.library.upenn.edu/workshops/biomed/ppt/index.html • Every person who has the need to convey information graphically, particularly quantitative information, needs to read “The Visual Display of Quantitative Information” by Edward R. Tufte

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