Jean-Luc Lebrun

When the Scientist Presents

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Check out the author's website at www.scientific-presentations.com
<!-- /remove -->This book looks at the presenting scientist from a novel angle: the presenter-host. When scientists give a talk, the audience (“guests”) expects the title of the talk to determine presentation content, they require understandable slides, and they demand visible and audible scientific authority. To each expectation corresponds a set of skills: personal (voice, host qualities, time control), technical (presentation tools and slide design), and scientific (Q&A, slide content).
The author takes an original human factor view of the presentation delivery, in which the audience is easily distracted, rapidly forgetful, and increasingly impatient. Thus, insightful pointers are given on how to deliver the talk, how to craft the slides, and how to prevent the computer from rendering the presenting host-scientist into a “ghost”. In addition, the book goes in-depth over the treatment of questions by examining the motives and style of the questioners, and advising on how best to answer to each type of questioner.
The book comes with a DVD for audio and video examples, and includes essential PowerPoint and Keynote techniques that a presenter cannot live without.
Contents:Content Selection:Paper and Oral Presentation: The DifferenceContent Filtering CriteriaAudience Expectations:General Audience ExpectationsScientific Audience ExpectationsThe Slides:Five Slide Types, Five RolesSlide DesignThe Presenter:The Master of ToolsScientist and Perfect HostThe Grabbing VoiceThe Answerable ScientistReadership: Students, graduates, postgraduates, and professionals seeking help in improving their scientific presentation skills.
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397 printed pages
Original publication
2009
Publication year
2009
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