name: scientific-slides description: "Scientific presentations for conferences, seminars, thesis defenses, and grant pitches. Slide design, talk structure, timing, data viz for slides, QA. PowerPoint and LaTeX Beamer. For posters use latex-research-posters." license: CC-BY-4.0
Scientific Slides — Presentation Design and Delivery
Overview
Scientific presentations are a critical medium for communicating research at conferences, seminars, defenses, and professional talks. This knowhow covers end-to-end presentation development: structure and content planning, visual design principles, data visualization adaptation, timing and pacing, and quality assurance across PowerPoint and LaTeX Beamer formats.
Key Concepts
1. Talk Types and Their Requirements
| Talk Type | Duration | Slides | Focus | Key Finding Count |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conference talk | 10–20 min | 12–20 | 1–2 key findings | 1–2 |
| Academic seminar | 45–60 min | 40–60 | Comprehensive coverage | 3–6 |
| Thesis defense | 45–60 min | 45–65 | Full dissertation | All studies |
| Grant pitch | 10–20 min | 12–18 | Significance + feasibility | Preliminary data |
| Journal club | 20–45 min | 20–40 | Critical analysis | Paper's findings |
2. Visual Design Principles
Visual-first approach: Start with visuals (figures, diagrams, images), then add text as support. Target 60–70% visual content, 30–40% text. Every slide should have a strong visual element.
Typography:
- Title: 36–44 pt, bold, sans-serif (Arial, Calibri, Helvetica)
- Body: 24–28 pt (not just 18 pt minimum — aim higher for readability)
- Captions/annotations: 18–20 pt
- Maximum 2–3 font families
Color:
- Select a modern palette matching your topic (biotech = vibrant, physics = sleek darks, health = warm tones)
- 3–5 colors total with high contrast (7:1 preferred)
- Color-blind safe (avoid red-green combinations)
- Do NOT use default PowerPoint/Beamer themes without customization
Layout:
- One main idea per slide
- 40–50% white space
- Vary layouts: full-figure, two-column (text + figure), visual overlay (not all bullet lists)
- Asymmetric compositions (more engaging than centered)
- Rule of thirds for focal points
3. Data Visualization for Slides
Key differences from journal figures:
- Simplify: fewer panels per slide, split complex figures across slides
- Enlarge: 18–24 pt minimum for labels (larger than journal standard)
- Direct label: put labels on the data, not in legends
- Emphasize: use color and size to highlight key findings
- Progressive disclosure: reveal data incrementally for complex figures
| Chart Type | Best For | Slide Adaptation |
|---|---|---|
| Bar chart | Category comparison | Max 6–8 bars, large labels |
| Line graph | Trends over time | Bold lines, 2–3 series max |
| Scatter plot | Correlations | Large points, trend line |
| Heatmap | Matrix patterns | High contrast, annotate key cells |
| Flowchart | Methodology | Build step-by-step with animations |
4. Universal Story Arc
Every scientific talk follows this narrative structure:
- Hook — grab attention (30–60 seconds)
- Context — establish importance (5–10% of talk)
- Problem/Gap — identify what's unknown (5–10%)
- Approach — explain your solution (15–25%)
- Results — present key findings (40–50%)
- Implications — discuss meaning (15–20%)
- Closure — memorable conclusion (1–2 minutes)
Decision Framework
Implementation Tool Selection
Start: What is your priority?
├── Mathematical content, equations, version control?
│ └── YES → LaTeX Beamer (see assets/beamer templates)
├── Editable slides, company templates, animations?
│ └── YES → PowerPoint (programmatic or template-based)
├── Fast creation, non-technical audience, visual impact?
│ └── YES → PowerPoint or image-based PDF
└── Not sure
└── PowerPoint (most flexible default)
Slide Count Decision Table
| Duration | Simple Topic | Average | Complex Topic |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 min | 5–6 | 6–8 | 5–7 |
| 10 min | 10–12 | 12–14 | 10–12 |
| 15 min | 14–16 | 16–18 | 14–16 |
| 30 min | 25–30 | 30–35 | 25–30 |
| 45 min | 38–45 | 45–50 | 38–45 |
| 60 min | 50–55 | 55–65 | 50–60 |
General rule: ~1 slide per minute. Complex slides (results, methodology) may take 2–3 minutes; simple slides (transitions, section dividers) take 15–30 seconds.
Time Allocation
| Section | % of Time | 15-min Talk | 45-min Talk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Introduction | 15–20% | 2–3 min | 7–9 min |
| Methods | 15–20% | 2–3 min | 7–9 min |
| Results | 40–50% | 6–7 min | 18–22 min |
| Discussion | 15–20% | 2–3 min | 7–9 min |
| Conclusion | 5% | 45 sec | 2 min |
Best Practices
-
MANDATORY: Every slide must have a strong visual element — figure, chart, diagram, image, or icon. Text-only bullet list slides fail to communicate science effectively. Target minimum 2 visual elements per content slide.
-
MANDATORY: Practice with a timer at least 3 times before presenting. Set timing checkpoints: for a 15-minute talk, check at 3–4 min (finishing intro), 7–8 min (midway through results), 12–13 min (starting conclusions).
-
Use minimal text as visual support. 3–4 bullets per slide, 4–6 words per bullet. Text is the supporting role; visuals are the stars. Never put full paragraphs on slides.
-
Include proper citations. Cite 3–5 papers in the introduction (establishing context) and 3–5 in the discussion (comparison). Use author-year format (Smith et al., 2023) for readability.
-
Design section dividers with visual breaks. Insert visually distinctive slides between major sections (intro → methods → results → conclusion). These help the audience reset and follow the narrative.
-
Anti-pattern — using default templates without customization. Default PowerPoint/Beamer themes signal "minimal effort." Choose a modern color palette, customize fonts, and add visual personality matching your topic.
-
Simplify journal figures for slides. Increase all labels to 18–24 pt, remove non-essential panels, use direct labeling instead of legends, emphasize the key finding with color or annotation.
-
Anti-pattern — cramming full paper content into slides. A 15-minute talk should cover 1–2 key findings, not the entire paper. Leave details for the written paper and prepare backup slides for Q&A.
-
Prepare backup slides. Put additional data, detailed methods, alternative analyses after the "Thank You" slide. Reference them during Q&A without disrupting the main talk flow.
-
Never skip conclusions. If running behind, cut earlier content (skip a results slide or compress methods). The conclusion is the audience's take-away message — skipping it wastes the entire talk.
Common Pitfalls
-
Text-heavy, visual-poor slides. Walls of text, no images or graphics, bullet points as the only content. How to avoid: Start slide creation with visuals first (which figure/diagram?), then add minimal text as support.
-
Font sizes too small (under 24pt body text). Back-row audience can't read, slides look cramped. How to avoid: Set body text to 24–28 pt, titles to 36–44 pt. Test by viewing slides at 50% zoom — if you can't read it, the audience can't either.
-
Too many findings for the time slot. Trying to present 5 findings in a 15-minute talk rushes everything. How to avoid: Conference talks = 1–2 findings. Seminars = 3–5. Choose ruthlessly.
-
Missing research context (no citations). Claims without supporting literature undermine credibility. How to avoid: Search literature before creating slides. Cite 3–5 papers in intro and 3–5 in discussion.
-
Inconsistent formatting across slides. Different fonts, colors, and layouts from slide to slide look unprofessional. How to avoid: Use master slides/templates. Define your color palette, fonts, and layout grid before starting content.
-
Low contrast text on background. Light gray text on white, or colored text on busy images. How to avoid: Ensure text-background contrast ratio ≥ 7:1. Use solid color overlays on image backgrounds.
-
Not practicing with timer. First run-through is during the actual presentation, causing time overruns. How to avoid: Practice minimum 3 times. Mark timing checkpoints on your notes.
-
Skipping conclusions when running over time. Rushing through or omitting the take-away message. How to avoid: Cut earlier content (a results slide) rather than the conclusion. Prepare a "Plan B" with marked skip-able slides.
Workflow
Stage 1: Planning
- Define context: talk type (conference/seminar/defense), duration, audience (specialist/general/mixed), venue (room size, virtual/in-person)
- Develop content outline: identify 1–3 core messages, select 3–6 key figures, allocate time per section
- Search literature: find 8–15 relevant papers for citations (3–5 for introduction context, 3–5 for discussion comparison)
- Choose implementation tool: PowerPoint (editable, animations, company templates) vs. LaTeX Beamer (equations, version control, mathematical content)
- Plan slide-by-slide: title, key points, visual element for each slide
Stage 2: Design and Creation
- Start from template (see Companion Assets for Beamer; use master slides for PowerPoint)
- Select modern color palette: match your topic — 3–5 colors with high contrast
- Configure typography: sans-serif, 24–28 pt body, 36–44 pt titles
- Create varied layouts: mix full-figure slides, two-column (text + figure), visual overlays
- Add section dividers: visually distinctive slides between major sections
Stage 3: Content Development
- Visual backbone first: place all figures, charts, diagrams, images before adding text
- Generate figures: create presentation-appropriate plots using matplotlib, plotly, or seaborn — larger fonts (18–24 pt labels), fewer panels, direct labeling, high contrast
- Add minimal text: bullet points complement visuals, don't replace them
- Include citations: author-year format on relevant slides (small text, bottom or near data)
- Add transitions: control information flow with builds for complex slides
- Prepare presentation aids: for physical presentations, bring backup copies, adapters, handouts
Stage 4: Validation and Refinement
- Visual inspection: check each slide for text overflow, element overlap, font sizes, contrast
- Readability test: view at 50% zoom — everything should still be readable
- Content review: verify narrative flow, one idea per slide, consistent formatting
- Peer review: ask colleague for 30-second test (can they identify the main message?)
- Compilation check (Beamer): verify no LaTeX warnings, all figures render correctly
Stage 5: Practice and Delivery
- Practice 3–5 times with timer: run 1 (rough), run 2 (smooth transitions), run 3 (exact timing), run 4+ (polish)
- Set timing checkpoints: mark 3–4 points on notes (e.g., "should be here by 4 min")
- Practice transitions: connecting phrases between sections
- Prepare for Q&A: anticipate questions, prepare backup slides with additional data
- Final checks: multiple copies (laptop, cloud, USB), test on presentation computer, backup PDF
Protocol Guidelines
LaTeX Beamer Compilation
# Basic compilation
pdflatex presentation.tex
# With bibliography
pdflatex presentation.tex && bibtex presentation && pdflatex presentation.tex && pdflatex presentation.tex
# Better font support
lualatex presentation.tex
PowerPoint Quality Control
- Export to PDF and review at 100% zoom
- Check all slides in Slide Sorter view for consistency
- Test animations and builds in Slideshow mode
- Verify file size (< 50 MB for email; compress images if needed)
Bundled Resources
Detailed reference files in references/:
| File | Content |
|---|---|
talk_types_guide.md | Detailed structure and strategy for each talk type (conference, seminar, defense, grant pitch, journal club) with example outlines |
slide_design_guide.md | Extended design principles: color theory, typography tables, layout patterns, accessibility guidelines, Gestalt principles for visual composition |
Further Reading
- Edward Tufte, The Visual Display of Quantitative Information — foundational principles for data visualization
- Web AIM Contrast Checker — WCAG compliance for slide readability
- Jean-Luc Doumont, Trees, Maps, and Theorems — structured scientific communication
- Coblis Color Blindness Simulator — test slide accessibility
Related Skills
- matplotlib-scientific-plotting — generate publication-quality figures adapted for slide presentation (larger fonts, simplified panels)
- plotly-interactive-visualization — create interactive figures exportable as static images for slides
- seaborn-statistical-visualization — statistical plots with automatic aggregation for results slides
- latex-research-posters — poster-specific design guidance; shares typography and color principles with slides
Companion Assets
Templates and guides in assets/:
| File | Description |
|---|---|
beamer_template_conference.tex | LaTeX Beamer template for 15-minute conference talks |
beamer_template_seminar.tex | LaTeX Beamer template for 45-minute academic seminars |
beamer_template_defense.tex | LaTeX Beamer template for thesis/dissertation defenses |
timing_guidelines.md | Comprehensive timing and pacing strategies for all talk types |