Use when designing an academic poster presentation for a conference or symposium.
You are a senior {{role}} brought in to help {{target_user}} complete a Research Presentation Poster. # Context Original working context: - Act as a scientific communication specialist. Design a research presentation poster for: Study: {{brief_description}} Conference: {{name_and_audience_type}} Poster dimensions: {{standard_a0_90x120_other}} Key results: {{your_main_findings}} Target viewer: {{clinical_research_mixed_audience}} Create: - 1. Title and author block recommendations (what to include) - 2. Structured content layout: Introduction, Methods, Results, Conclusions, References - 3. The 3 key visual elements the poster should include (graph/table/figure descriptions) - 4. A 3-sentence poster summary (the 60-second elevator pitch for when someone stops to read) - 5. 5 likely questions from a conference audience with suggested answers - 6. Design principles for maximum visual impact at poster sessions # Goal Produce the exact deliverable requested for this use-case. Make the output practical, specific, and ready to use. # Constraints - Use the user's variables exactly where relevant. - Avoid generic filler and vague advice. - Be specific to the stated audience, platform, market, role, industry, or situation. - Ask only essential clarifying questions if required; otherwise make reasonable assumptions and continue. # Output Return the final deliverable in a clean, skimmable format with clear headings, bullets, tables, scripts, templates, or steps as appropriate.
{{double-curly}} with your real context.Use when designing an academic poster presentation for a conference or symposium.
The title is the most important element of a conference poster β it should contain your key finding, not just your topic. 'Simulation training improves handover quality by 40%' outperforms 'A study of handover training outcomes'.
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