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Priprema i objavljivanje rezultata

Priprema i objavljivanje rezultata. Preparing a scientific result. So, you did a research, test you hypotheses, introduced new findings and get quality-checked amount of data – how to prepare them to be “user-friendly”?

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Priprema i objavljivanje rezultata

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  1. Priprema i objavljivanje rezultata

  2. Preparing a scientific result • So, you did a research, test you hypotheses, introduced new findings and get quality-checked amount of data – how to prepare them to be “user-friendly”? • Your conclusions should fully rely on the results achieved through a research and on the existing knowledge – do not change/delete/add the data without well-argued peer-reviewed arguments. • A great number of software (Excel, Primer, Grapher, Surfer, Statistica, Matlab, ...), but how to use to them to produce a reliable and readable result

  3. Vrste grafova

  4. Različiti prikazi istog parametra

  5. A great number of choices makes you nervous – you should select the easiest-for-you method

  6. Focus on Your Data!Keep Graphics Clean and Simple

  7. To Table or to Graph, that is the question Tables Exact comparisons between data points Excellent for presenting specific data Bar/pie charts Show dramatic comparisons differences not trends make comparisons in sizes, magnitudes, amounts Line graphs Demonstrate movement, change, trends Estimate v. a scale

  8. Simple line drawings are often best • Don’t make graphs and tables complicated • The audience can’t read a graph with too much information • The audience can’t read a graph with lots of thin lines • The audience can’t read a graph with dotted, dashed, or other specialty lines unless they are very bold and thick.

  9. Putting your results on presentations You should be careful on: Text Layout • Legible, large fonts • No underlining • Bold, color, italics • 6 lines, 6 words • Key points • Recommended fonts • Serif vs. Sans Serif

  10. Colour • Choose colors wisely • Stick to a theme • Darker backgrounds • Lighter text and graphics • Know your lighting conditions Bad examples

  11. Za koga? • Prezentacije (usmene, posteri) • Uglavnom u boji • Grafički kompleksne, atraktivne • Što više grafičkih prikaza, a što manje tablica • Namjenjeno širem krugu slušatelja • Znanstveni radovi • CB&B (boja se najčešće plaća, on-line obično u boji) • Što jasnije sa čistim linijama, točno određeni format • Tablice bez horizontalnih linija • Doktorat • Kombinacija crno-bijelog i u boji • Veća sloboda formata slika i tablica nego kod znanstvenog rada • Bitna konzistentnost kroz cijeli rad • Velike tablice s podacima često se stavljaju u prilog

  12. Presentation

  13. Presentation Article

  14. http://www.fao.org/fi/FCP/en/GHA/PICS/Table1.jpg Presentation Article

  15. Presentation Article

  16. Ways of advertising and communicating a scientific result • informal communication • scientific conferences (oral and poster presentations) • peer-review article in a scientific journal • books, monographs, technical reports... • media reports (TV, radio, internet, newspapers, ...) • popular articles, public lectures • web pages

  17. Informal communication • Ways of communication: • Discussion with the colleagues from • the lab or employing institution • Direct communication with other • researchers • Email communication • Newsgroups • Advantages: • Rapidity • Selectivity, sensibility to the personal demands • Interactivity (lecturer vs audience, discussions in “real-time”) • Honesty (personal opinions, wearing out your “dirty” clothes – negative, non-affirmative results)

  18. Conference presentations • They usually precede other ways of advertising • It is an excellent place for evaluation of your research, and for getting useful advices and critics which you can use to finalize your research • Better choice is highly-specialised small conferences and workshops (e.g. less than 100 people), as the audience is more “qualified” for the evaluation

  19. Key Points • Know your audience • What do they know? - What do they want to know? • Figure out what they will learn and why they want to learn it • Be professional • - Organise yourself, your materials,and your time • A good talk can usually be split into five parts: • Definition and motivation of the problem • General theory • Details • Conclusions • Question time

  20. Peer-reviewed articles • You will learn how to write them in the next lesson

  21. Media reports • Done by journalists (educated and non-educated) • Large journals and newspapers have proffesional science journalists – they inspect the scientific resources (journals, books, ...) and write popular articles • However, smaller newspapers do the same thing by “general” journalists – this may be a large problem – always ask for authorisation! • “Smart” journalists ask authors to write the basics, and they put that in the journal frame

  22. Personal example “Poslovni dnevnik” – journalist did a translation of a part of peer-reviewed article “Jutarnji list” – journalist did a conversation to the author, but the Editor put some nasty figures and headlines

  23. Crackpot presenters • Crackpot is a person who promotes pseudoscience.

  24. Web pages If you consider your work a good one, you can produce a web page with your results, and spread the URL address.

  25. Popular articles, public lectures • You can write a popular article (written for an ordinary people) in some weekly or montly magazine (e.g. Nautica, Hrvatske vode, Geo, Meridijani, ...) – different writing style, you should take advises of the journalists • Public lectures or even press-conferences may be organised through some established science seminars (e.g. Festival znanosti, ...), non-governmental organisations or by yourself – the information about the lecture should be disseminate towards media, colleagues and researchers and wider audience.

  26. And that’s all, folks! Any questions ???

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