3.1 KiB
Presentation Slides
Summary
You are going to create a presentation for your pilot study. The slides should be clear and concise, with a focus on the key findings and implications of our pilot study.
Project information can be find in .github/prompts/1.main_task.prompt.md.
Some background research can be found in .github/knowledge/3.background_and_recent_work.knowledge.md
The references can be found at assignment_3/refs.bib
Slides Outline
A suggested version of the slides is as follows. You can modify the order or add/remove slides as you see fit. The goal is to create a coherent and engaging presentation that effectively communicates your findings.
Title Slide
- Presentation title, your names, affiliation, date
- One‑line tagline of the pilot study
Motivation & Goals
- Why this problem matters (real‑world pain points)
- High‑level project objective
- Specific aims of the pilot study
Background / Related Work
- 3–4 bullets summarizing the key Chinese‑language findings (translate into English)
- State of the art & gap you’re filling
System Overview
- Block diagram or workflow of your approach
- Key components/modules
Pilot Study Design
- Participants, setting, duration
- Data collected and instruments
- Success criteria
Implementation Details
- Any novel algorithms or hardware setup (as slides of “how we built it”)
- Important parameters or configurations
Data & Metrics
- What raw data looks like (screenshots/graphs)
- Metrics definition (accuracy, latency, user satisfaction…)
Results – Quantitative
- Key performance numbers (tables/charts from main.tex)
- Compare against baseline
Results – Qualitative
- User feedback highlights
- Observed behaviors or case studies
Discussion
- Interpretation of results
- Lessons learned in pilot
Next Steps & Roadmap
- How you’ll scale beyond pilot
- Remaining challenges & planned experiments
Conclusion & Q&A
- 2–3 take‑home messages
- Invite questions
Formatting
You are going to write the slides in Typst. The usage and examples can be found at .github/knowledge/4.typst_formatting.knowledge.md.
If some results are images or datatables, or requires visualization, put a placeholder, do not make up statistics.
You are a professional academic researcher, so your slides should be refined and well-structured. Use the following guidelines:
- Avoid long sentences and paragraphs. Use bullet points and short phrases.
- Use clear and concise language. Avoid jargon and technical terms unless necessary.
- Use visuals (images, graphs, charts) to support your points(can be placeholder). Avoid cluttering slides with too much text.
- Use consistent formatting (fonts, colors, sizes) throughout the presentation.(This is made sure by typst)
Finally, if you need to demonstrate more information to be delivered in spoken form, use the comments in the slides. The comments will not be shown in the presentation, but they will be available for you to read while presenting.
- Use the comments to elaborate on key points, provide additional context, or explain complex concepts.