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How to Make a PowerPoint Presentation of Your Research Paper
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A research paper presentation is often used at conferences and in other settings where you have an opportunity to share your research, and get feedback from your colleagues. Although it may seem as simple as summarizing your research and sharing your knowledge, successful research paper PowerPoint presentation examples show us that thereâs a little bit more than that involved.
In this article, weâll highlight how to make a PowerPoint presentation from a research paper, and what to include (as well as what NOT to include). Weâll also touch on how to present a research paper at a conference.
Purpose of a Research Paper Presentation
The purpose of presenting your paper at a conference or forum is different from the purpose of conducting your research and writing up your paper. In this setting, you want to highlight your work instead of including every detail of your research. Likewise, a presentation is an excellent opportunity to get direct feedback from your colleagues in the field. But, perhaps the main reason for presenting your research is to spark interest in your work, and entice the audience to read your research paper.
So, yes, your presentation should summarize your work, but it needs to do so in a way that encourages your audience to seek out your work, and share their interest in your work with others. Itâs not enough just to present your research dryly, to get information out there. More important is to encourage engagement with you, your research, and your work.
Tips for Creating Your Research Paper Presentation
In addition to basic PowerPoint presentation recommendations, which weâll cover later in this article, think about the following when youâre putting together your research paper presentation:
- Know your audience : First and foremost, who are you presenting to? Students? Experts in your field? Potential funders? Non-experts? The truth is that your audience will probably have a bit of a mix of all of the above. So, make sure you keep that in mind as you prepare your presentation.
Know more about: Discover the Target Audience .
- Your audience is human : In other words, they may be tired, they might be wondering why theyâre there, and they will, at some point, be tuning out. So, take steps to help them stay interested in your presentation. You can do that by utilizing effective visuals, summarize your conclusions early, and keep your research easy to understand.
- Running outline : Itâs not IF your audience will drift off, or get lostâŚitâs WHEN. Keep a running outline, either within the presentation or via a handout. Use visual and verbal clues to highlight where you are in the presentation.
- Where does your research fit in? You should know of work related to your research, but you donât have to cite every example. In addition, keep references in your presentation to the end, or in the handout. Your audience is there to hear about your work.
- Plan B : Anticipate possible questions for your presentation, and prepare slides that answer those specific questions in more detail, but have them at the END of your presentation. You can then jump to them, IF needed.
What Makes a PowerPoint Presentation Effective?
Youâve probably attended a presentation where the presenter reads off of their PowerPoint outline, word for word. Or where the presentation is busy, disorganized, or includes too much information. Here are some simple tips for creating an effective PowerPoint Presentation.
- Less is more: You want to give enough information to make your audience want to read your paper. So include details, but not too many, and avoid too many formulas and technical jargon.
- Clean and professional : Avoid excessive colors, distracting backgrounds, font changes, animations, and too many words. Instead of whole paragraphs, bullet points with just a few words to summarize and highlight are best.
- Know your real-estate : Each slide has a limited amount of space. Use it wisely. Typically one, no more than two points per slide. Balance each slide visually. Utilize illustrations when needed; not extraneously.
- Keep things visual : Remember, a PowerPoint presentation is a powerful tool to present things visually. Use visual graphs over tables and scientific illustrations over long text. Keep your visuals clean and professional, just like any text you include in your presentation.
Know more about our Scientific Illustrations Services .
Another key to an effective presentation is to practice, practice, and then practice some more. When youâre done with your PowerPoint, go through it with friends and colleagues to see if you need to add (or delete excessive) information. Double and triple check for typos and errors. Know the presentation inside and out, so when youâre in front of your audience, youâll feel confident and comfortable.
How to Present a Research Paper
If your PowerPoint presentation is solid, and youâve practiced your presentation, thatâs half the battle. Follow the basic advice to keep your audience engaged and interested by making eye contact, encouraging questions, and presenting your information with enthusiasm.
We encourage you to read our articles on how to present a scientific journal article and tips on giving good scientific presentations .
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How to Write Article Summaries, Reviews & Critiques
Writing an article summary.
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When writing a summary, the goal is to compose a concise and objective overview of the original article. The summary should focus only on the article's main ideas and important details that support those ideas.
Guidelines for summarizing an article:
- State the main ideas.
- Identify the most important details that support the main ideas.
- Summarize in your own words.
- Do not copy phrases or sentences unless they are being used as direct quotations.
- Express the underlying meaning of the article, but do not critique or analyze.
- The summary should be about one third the length of the original article.
Your summary should include:
- Give an overview of the article, including the title and the name of the author.
- Provide a thesis statement that states the main idea of the article.
- Use the body paragraphs to explain the supporting ideas of your thesis statement.
- One-paragraph summary - one sentence per supporting detail, providing 1-2 examples for each.
- Multi-paragraph summary - one paragraph per supporting detail, providing 2-3 examples for each.
- Start each paragraph with a topic sentence.
- Use transitional words and phrases to connect ideas.
- Summarize your thesis statement and the underlying meaning of the article.
Adapted from "Guidelines for Using In-Text Citations in a Summary (or Research Paper)" by Christine Bauer-Ramazani, 2020
Additional Resources
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How to Write a Summary - Guide & Examples (from Scribbr.com)
Writing a Summary (from The University of Arizona Global Campus Writing Center)
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Presentation Design Guide: How to Summarize Information for Presentations
By Midori Nediger , May 15, 2023
Bad presentations. Weâve all had to sit through them. Heck, weâve probably all given one or two. I know I have.
You know the type: twice as long as they need to be, slides chock-full of text, no visuals in sight.
How can you ensure you donât fall victim to these presentation faux-pas when designing your next presentation for your team, class, or clients?
In this blog, I’ll walk you through tips on how to design an impactful presentation and how you can deliver it with style to leave a lasting impression.
Let’s get started:
- Include less text and more visuals in your presentation design
- Identify one core message to center your presentation design around
- Eliminate any information that doesnât immediately support the core message
- Create a strong presentation outline to keep you focused
- Use text to reinforce, not repeat, what youâre saying
- Design your presentation with one major takeaway per slide
- Use visuals to highlight the key message on each slide
- Use scaffolding slides to orient your audience and keep them engaged
- Use text size, weight, and color for emphasis
- Apply design choices consistently to avoid distraction
- Split a group presentation by topic
- Use a variety of page layouts to maintain your audience’s interest
- Use presentation templates to help you get started
- Include examples of inspiring people
- Dedicate slides to poignant questions
- Find quotes that will inspire your audience
- Emphasize key points with text and images
- Label your slides to prompt your memory
Watch: How to design a presentation [10 ESSENTIAL TIPS]
Tips for designing and delivering an impactful presentation
What makes a presentation memorable?
It usually comes down to three things:
- The main idea.
- The presenter.
- The visuals.
All three elements work together to create a successful presentation. Just like how different presentation styles serve different purposes, having a good presentation idea will give the audience a purpose for listening. A good presenter communicates the main idea so that the audience cares about it. And compelling visuals help clarify concepts and illustrate ideas.
But how the presenter delivers their presentation and what visuals they use can vary drastically while still being effective. There is no perfect presentation style or presentation design.
Here are some top tips to consider to help you design and deliver an impactful presentation:
Tip #1: Include less text and more visuals in your presentation design
According to David Paradiâs annual presentation survey , the 3 things that annoy audiences most about presentations are:
- Speakers reading their slides
- Slides that include full sentences of text
- Text that is too small to read
The common thread that ties all of these presentation annoyances is text. Audiences are very picky about the text found in presentation slide decks .
In my experiences speaking at conferences and in webinars over the past few years, audiences respond much more positively to presentations that use visuals in place of text.
Audiences are more engaged, ask more questions, and find my talks more memorable when I include lots of visual examples in my slide decks.
I’m not the only one who has found this. We recently surveyed nearly 400 conference speakers about their presentation designs and found that 84.3% create presentations that are highly visual.
A great example of a high visual presentation is the iconic AirBnB pitch deck design , which includes no more than 40 words per slide. Instead of repeating the speakerâs script on the slides, it makes an impact with keywords, large numbers, and icons:
Learn how to customize this presentation template:
To help you take your presentations to the next level, Iâd like to share my process for creating a visually-focused presentation like the one above. Iâll give you my top presentation design tips that Iâve learned over years of presenting:
- Class presentations
- Online courses
You can then apply this process to our professional presentation templates or pitch decks , creating unique presentation decks with ease! Our user-friendly editor tools make customizing these templates a breeze.
To leave a lasting impression on your audience, consider transforming your slides into an interactive presentation. Here are 15 interactive presentation ideas to enhance interactivity and engagement.
Weâll cover the most important steps for summarizing lengthy text into a presentation-friendly format. Then weâll touch on some pre sentation design tips to help you get visual with your slide decks. Read on for the best creative presentation ideas.
Tip #2: Identify one core message to center your presentation design around
We know from David Paradiâs survey that audiences are easily overwhelmed with lots of text and data, especially when presentations are long.
(You when you see a presentation with lots of text and data and it’s long)
So unlike in a white paper , report , or essay , you canât expect to tackle many complex ideas within a single presentation.
That would be a recipe for disaster.
Instead, identify a single central message that you would like to communicate to your audience. Then build your presentation around that core message.
By identifying that core message, you can ensure that everything you include in your presentation supports the goal of the presentation .
As seen below, a great presentation tells you exactly what youâre going to learn (the core message), then gets right to the facts (the supporting information).
To ensure you create an asset thatâs clear, concise, impactful, and easy to follow, design your presentation around a single core message.
Tip #3: Create a strong presentation outline to keep you focused
Think of your outline as a roadmap for your presentation. Creating a strong presentation outline straight away helps make sure that you’re hitting all of the key points you need to cover to convey a persuasive presentation .
Take this presentation outline example:
- Introduction and hellos
- Vision and value proposition
- Financial profit
- Your investment
- Thanks and questions
These are all things that we know we need to talk about within the presentation.
Creating a presentation outline makes it much easier to know what to say when it comes to creating the actual presentation slides.
You could even include your presentation outline as a separate slide so that your audience knows what to expect:
The opening moments of your presentation hold immense power â check out these 15 ways to start a presentation to set the stage and captivate your audience.
Tip #4: Eliminate any information that doesnât support the core message
Next, use that core message to identify everything that doesnât belong in the presentation.
Aim to eliminate everything that isnât immediately relevant to the topic at hand, and anything remotely redundant. Cut any information that isnât absolutely essential to understanding the core message.
By cutting these extra details, you can transform forgettable text-heavy slides:
Into memorable slides with minimal text:
Hereâs a quick checklist to help you cut out any extra detail:
Get rid of:
- Detailed descriptions
- Background information
- Redundant statements
- Explanations of common knowledge
- Persuasive facts and figures
- Illustrative examples
- Impactful quotes
This step may seem obvious, but when youâre presenting on a topic that youâre passionate about, itâs easy to get carried away with extraneous detail. Use the recommendations above to keep your text in check.
Clarity is key, especially if you’re presenting virtually rather than in-person. However, Lisa Schneider (Chief Growth Officer at Merriam-Webster) has had plenty of experience making that adjustment. She recently shared her tips for adapting in-person presentations into virtual presentations on Venngage that you can check out.
Tip #5: Use text to reinforce, not repeat, what youâre saying
According to presentation guru Nancy Duarte , your audience should be able to discern the meaning of your slides in 6 seconds or less.
Since your audience will tend to read every word you place on each slide, you must keep your text to an absolute minimum. The text on your slides should provide support for what youâre saying without being distracting.
Never write out, word for word, what youâre going to be saying out loud. If you’re relying on text to remember certain points, resist the urge to cram them into your slides. Instead, use a tool like Venngage’s speaker notes to highlight particular talking points. These can be imported into PowerPoint â along with the rest of your presentation â and will only be viewable to you, not your audience.
For the actual slides, text should only be used to reinforce what you’re saying. Like in the presentation design below, paraphrase long paragraphs into short bulleted lists or statements by eliminating adjectives and articles (like âtheâ and âaâ).
Pull out quotes and important numbers, and make them a focus of each slide.
Tip #6: Design your presentation with one major takeaway per slide
As I mentioned above, audiences struggle when too much information is presented on a single slide.
To make sure you donât overwhelm your audiences with too much information, spread out your content to cover one major takeaway per slide.
By limiting each slide to a single simple statement, you focus your audienceâs attention on the topic at hand.
My favorite way to do this is to pick out the core message of whatever Iâm talking about and express it in a few keywords, as seen in this presentation slide below.
This helps ensure that the visuals remain the focus of the slide.
Using the text in this way, to simply state a single fact per slide, is a sure-fire way to make an impact in your presentation.
Alternatively, pull out a significant statistic that you want to stick in your audienceâs minds and make it a visual focus of the slide, as seen in this popular presentation by Officevibe .
This might mean you end up with a slide deck with a ton of slides. But thatâs totally ok!
Iâve talked to many professionals who are pressured by their management teams to create presentations with a specific number of slides (usually as few as 10 or 15 slides for a 30-minute presentation).
If you ask me, this approach is completely flawed. In my mind, the longer I spend sitting on a single slide, the more likely I am to lose the interest of my audience.
How many slides should I use for a 10 minute presentation?
A good rule of thumb is to have at least as many slides as minutes in your presentation. So for a 10 minute presentation you should have at least 10 slides .
Use as many slides as you need, as long as you are presenting a single message on each slide, (as seen in the lengthy presentation template below). This is especially important if you’re presenting your business, or delivering a product presentation. You want to wow your audience, not bore them.
Tip #7: Use visuals to highlight the key message on each slide
As important as having one major takeaway per slide is having visuals that highlight the major takeaway on each slide.
Unique visuals will help make your message memorable.
Visuals are a great way to eliminate extra text, too.
You can add visuals by creating a timeline infographic to group and integrate information into visual frameworks like this:
Or create a flowchart and funnels:
Or by representing simple concepts with icons, as seen in the modern presentation design below. Using the same color for every icon helps create a polished look.
Using visuals in this way is perfect for when you have to convey messages quickly to audiences that you aren’t familiar with – such as at conferences. This would also make the ideal interview presentation template.
You can alternatively use icons in different colors, like in the presentation templates below. Just make sure the colors are complimentary, and style is consistent throughout the presentation (i.e. don’t use sleek, modern icons on one slide and whimsically illustrated icons on another). In this example, presentation clipart style icons have been used.
Any time you have important stats or trends you want your audience to remember, consider using a chart or data visualization to drive your point home. Confident public speaking combined with strong visualizations can really make an impact, encouraging your audience to act upon your message.
One of my personal favorite presentations (created by a professional designer) takes this âkey message plus a visualâ concept to the extreme, resulting in a slide deck thatâs downright irresistible.
When applying this concept, donât fall into the trap of using bad stock photos . Irrelevant or poorly chosen visuals can hurt you as much as they help you.
Below is an example of how to use stock photos effectively. They are more thematic than literal and are customized with fun, bright icons that set a playful tone.
The content and visual design of a presentation should be seamless.
It should never seem like your text and visuals are plopped onto a template. The format and design of the slides should contribute to and support the audienceâs understanding of the content.
Tip #8: Use scaffolding slides to orient your audience and keep them engaged
Itâs easy for audiences to get lost during long presentations, especially if you have lots of slides. And audiences zone out when they get lost.
To help reorient your audience every once in a while, you can use something I like to call scaffolding slides. Scaffolding slides appear throughout a presentation to denote the start and end of major sections.
The core scaffolding slide is the agenda slide, which should appear right after the introduction or title slide. It outlines the major sections of the presentation.
At the beginning of each section, you should show that agenda again but highlight the relevant section title, as seen below.
This gives audiences the sense that youâre making progress through the presentation and helps keep them anchored and engaged.
Alternatively, you can achieve a similar effect by numbering your sections and showing that number on every slide. Or use a progress bar at the bottom of each slide to indicate how far along you are in your presentation. Just make sure it doesnât distract from the main content of the slides.
You can imagine using this “progress bar” idea for a research presentation, or any presentation where you have a lot of information to get through.
Leila Janah, founder of Sama Group, is great at this. Her Innovation and Inspire talk about Sama Group is an example of a presentation that is well organized and very easy to follow.
Her presentation follows a logical, steady stream of ideas. She seems comfortable talking in front of a crowd but doesnât make any attempts to engage directly with them.
Tip #9: Use text size, weight and color for emphasis
Every slide should have a visual focal point. Something that immediately draws the eye at first glance.
That focal point should be whatever is most important on that slide, be it an important number, a keyword, or simply the slide title.
We can create visual focal points by varying the size, weight, and color of each element on the slide. Larger, brighter, bolder elements will command our audienceâs attention, while smaller, lighter elements will tend to fade into the background.
As seen in the presentation template above, this technique can be especially useful for drawing attention to important words within a long passage of text. Consider using this technique whenever you have more than 5 words on a slide.
And if you really want your audience to pay attention, pick a high-contrast color scheme like the one below.
When picking fonts for your presentation, keep this technique in mind. Pick a font that has a noticeable difference between the âboldâ font face and the âregularâ font face. Source Sans Pro, Times New Roman, Montserrat, Arvo, Roboto, and Open Sans are all good options.
The last thing to remember when using size, weight, and color to create emphasis on a slide: donât try to emphasize too many things on one slide.
If everything is highlighted, nothing is highlighted.
Tip #10: Apply design choices consistently to avoid distraction
Audiences are quick to pick out, and focus on, any inconsistencies in your presentation design. As a result, messy, inconsistent slide decks lead to distracted, disengaged audiences.
Design choices (fonts and colors, especially), must be applied consistently across a slide deck. The last thing you want is for your audience to pay attention to your design choices before your content.
To keep your design in check, it can be helpful to create a color palette and type hierarchy before you start creating your deck, and outline it in a basic style guide like this one:
I know it can sometimes be tempting to fiddle around with text sizes to fit longer bits of text on a slide, but donât do it! If the text is too long to fit on a slide, it should be split up onto multiple slides anyway.
And remember, a consistent design isnât necessarily a boring one. This social media marketing presentation applies a bright color scheme to a variety of 3-column and 2-column layouts, remaining consistent but still using creative presentation ideas.
Tip #11: Split a group presentation by topic
When giving a group presentation it’s always difficult to find the right balance of who should present which part.
Splitting a group presentation by topic is the most natural way to give everybody the chance to attempt without it seeming disjointed.
When presenting this slide deck to investors or potential clients, the team can easily take one topic each. One person can discuss the business model slide, and somebody else can talk about the marketing strategy.
Top tips for group presentations:
- Split your group presentation by topic
- Introduce the next speaker at the end of your slide
- Become an ‘expert’ in the slide that you are presenting
- Rehearse your presentation in advance so that everybody knows their cue to start speaking
Tip #12: Use a variety of page layouts to maintain your audience’s interest
Page after page of the same layout can become repetitive and boring. Mix up the layout of your slides to keep your audience interested.
In this example, the designer has used a variety of combinations of images, text, and icons to create an interesting and varied style.
There are hundreds of different combinations of presentation layers and presentation styles that you can use to help create an engaging presentation . This style is great for when you need to present a variety of information and statistics, like if you were presenting to financial investors, or you were giving a research presentation.
Using a variety of layouts to keep an audience engaged is something that Elon Musk is an expert in. An engaged audience is a hyped audience. Check out this Elon Musk presentation revealing a new model Tesla for a masterclass on how to vary your slides in an interesting way:
Tip #13: Use presentation templates to help you get started
It can be overwhelming to build your own presentation from scratch. Fortunately, my team at Venngage has created hundreds of professional presentation templates , which make it easy to implement these design principles and ensure your audience isn’t deterred by text-heavy slides.
Using a presentation template is a quick and easy way to create professional-looking presentation skills, without any design experience. You can edit all of the text easily, as well as change the colors, fonts, or photos. Plus you can download your work in a PowerPoint or PDF Presentation format.
After your presentation, consider summarizing your presentation in an engaging manner to r each a wider audience through a LinkedIn presentation .
Tip #14: Include examples of inspiring people
People like having role models to look up to. If you want to motivate your audience, include examples of people who demonstrate the traits or achievements, or who have found success through the topic you are presenting.
Tip #15: Dedicate slides to poignant questions
While you might be tempted to fill your slides with decorative visuals and splashes of color, consider that sometimes simplicity is more effective than complexity. The simpler your slide is, the more you can focus on one thought-provoking idea.
Tip #16: Find quotes that will inspire your audience
A really good quote can stick in a personâs mind for weeks after your presentation. Ending your presentation with a quote can be a nice way to either begin or finish your presentation.
A great example of this is Tim Ferriss’ TED talk:
Check out the full talk below.
Tip #17: Emphasize key points with text and images
When you pair concise text with an image, youâre presenting the information to your audience in two simultaneous ways. This can make the information easier to remember, and more memorable.
Use your images and text on slides to reinforce what you’re saying out loud.
Doing this achieves two things:
- When the audience hears a point and simultaneously read it on the screen, itâs easier to retain.
- Audience members can photograph/ screencap the slide and share it with their networks.
Don’t believe us? See this tip in action with a presentation our Chief Marketing Officer Nadya gave recently at Unbounce’s CTA Conference . The combination of text and images on screen leads to a memorable presentation.
Tip #18: Label your slides to prompt your memory
Often, presenters will write out an entire script for their presentation and read it off a teleprompter. The problem is, that can often make your presentation seem too rehearsed and wooden.
But even if you donât write a complete script, you can still put key phrases on your slides to prompt jog your memory. The one thing you have to be wary of is looking back at your slides too much.
A good presentation gets things moving! Check out the top qualities of awesome presentations and learn all about how to make a good presentation to help you nail that captivating delivery.
Audiences donât want to watch presentations with slide decks jam-packed with text. Too much text only hurts audience engagement and understanding. Your presentation design is as important as your presentation style.
By summarizing our text and creating slides with a visual focus, we can give more exciting, memorable and impactful presentations.
Give it a try with one of our popular presentation templates:
Want more presentation design tips? This post should get you started:
120+ Best Presentation Ideas, Design Tips & Examples
How to Summarize a Presentation with AI
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Over the past ten years, I've created hundreds of presentations on PowerPoint (and sometimes on Google Slides) â and I know how important these are for different uses. Whether you want to give a speech, present a product, or share finances in a board meeting, everything is typically possible with a PowerPoint presentation.Â
But there's no point in watching a two-hour-long presentation only to know it does not contain any relevant information, right? Thankfully, that's where summarizing a presentation can help. It's like creating a short description that reveals what the viewers can expect from the long slideshow.Â
So, how to summarize a presentation , especially when you don't have enough time for it? In this guide, I'll reveal my tried and tested tips to create a short summary.Â
What is a Presentation Summary?Â
A presentation summary is a short, sweet, and meaningful version of the long video in which you introduce the different components of the presentation and a few key points that youâre talking about.Â
In other words, it typically includes the main points or key takeaways that'll provide you with the gist of the presentation â without you having to watch the presentation from start to end.Â
Here, you're not trying to convey the entire business strategy or selling points â instead, your goal here is to help the attendees understand the core concept of the presentation.Â
How to Summarize a Presentation Â
As a freelance writer who wears all the hats of the business, I try to save as much time as I can. As much as I value my time, I look for ways to save energy and effort for my audience. Writing a summary of lengthy videos , articles, documents, interviews , and presentations is one method to help everyone get all the important information in a clear and concise way. However, condensing all information into a few paragraphs (or one page) isn't an easy task.Â
Here's the process I follow to summarize presentations in a few paragraphs.Â
Identify the Main GoalÂ
People love free stuff â but only if it's useful. Nobody wants to waste their time and/or effort watching a presentation that does not have the information they need. That's why your first step is to identify the main goal or objective . Here, you'll need to tell them what the presentation is about, what it includes, and what the key takeaways are.Â
Write the SummaryÂ
Your ultimate goal is to write the key points in the most concise, easy-to-read way possible. Before you're tempted to include everything in the summary, know that viewers are looking for specific information before they watch the presentation. Tell them why they should spend time on the presentation and fearlessly let them know who the presentation is not meant for.Â
Use Visual Aids
While summarizing the presentation, write as though you're talking to someone whose attention you don't want to lose. Get your ideas with the fewest, most effective words possible â but don't forget to add visual aids that keep the audience engaged. It's a great practice for every writer to help their audience not feel overwhelmed with a wall of texts.Â
Include Examples and QuotationsÂ
Any presentation is incomplete if you don't include proper examples and quotations. When you write the summary, allot some space for writing examples (two examples per page). Remember, holding onto the reader's attention is very important â and quotations can help you do just that.Â
Example of a Presentation SummaryÂ
The presentation summary begins with a hook that draws the audience in, helps them understand the value you offer, provides some proof, and finally ends with a strong CTA. It's relatively easy to incorporate these elements and create a summary. But if you're still finding it hard, here's a real-life presentation summary example for inspiration.Â
Today, we are excited to share with you our new Product X â the future of eyewear technology. At Company X, glasses aren't just for style â but it's a combination of comfort, innovation, and productivity. That's why we developed Product X, which combines two top technologies â AI and AR. The users reported a 20% boost in productivity and a 40% reduction in eye fatigue. It's now available for everyone â and anyone can place their orders on the website.Â
Tips for Summarizing a PresentationÂ
Summaries can be incredibly effective for both hosts and audiences â only if you know how to craft attention-grabbing ones. Here, I'll show you how I summarize a presentation that gets positive responses from almost all the attendees.Â
Use Simple LanguageÂ
The best presentation summary should be clear, concise, direct, and descriptive . Your main aim is to use simple language and give the attendees what they want.Â
My best tip is to: write for your audience, not yourself â and, for this, you need to put yourself in the shoes of a specific audience as you write.Â
Be ScannableÂ
Use bullet points, numbers, and/or bolding to make your summary skimmable and digestible â that emphasizes the key points. The success of the summary will depend upon making the presentation's key takeaways easy for your readers to quickly process the main points.Â
Use AI Presentation SummarizerÂ
If you struggle to condense information into a basic, short summary, give Notta a try. Unlike nearly all other AI presentation summarizer apps on the market, Notta is a more accurate transcriber and summarizer that can condense long audio/video files into an informative summary.Â
What I really found useful is Notta's ability to structure a summary into an overview, key chapters, and action items. You can even share this summarized version with the presentation attendees once the meeting is over â helping them understand what was covered in the presentation and what the next steps are.Â
Try Notta - the best online transcription & summarization tool. Transcribe and summarize your conversations and meetings quickly with high accuracy.
Start for Free
How to Do a Good Summary on PowerPoint?Â
PowerPoint has become synonymous with presentations â it's a free tool where you can make a slide deck and collaborate with your team. A good summary on PowerPoint can attract more audience to your presentation and even help the attendees get more clarity. Here, I'll reveal the three pillars of writing a good summary.Â
Include Key Points: The first thing is to write the key (or main) points in a concise and focused way. You can even use bullet points or some visual aids to keep things clear and uncluttered on slides.Â
Identify & Summarize Each Section: If you're giving a lengthy presentation, I'm assuming you've categorized it into different sections. While summarizing, you'll need to focus on each section and identify the key takeaway from it.Â
Highlight the Main Takeaway: If the presentation focuses on any problem and offers a solution, it's time to highlight it. As a presenter, you'll need to introduce the problem in the first line, followed by the solution that's offered in the presentation.Â
Is There an AI that Summarizes PowerPoint Slides?Â
Yes, there are many AI online summarizers that can summarize PowerPoint slides. Copilot in PowerPoint, for example, can read through the slides and provide a bulleted summary with key points. If you've pre-recorded presentation recordings, you are probably searching for a dedicated way to summarize the slides.Â
Notta is one powerful and popular AI note-taking application â and, that too, for a good reason. There's a summarizing feature for almost imaginable purposes: just upload the presentation audio/video, and Notta will automatically transcribe the spoken words and then summarize the content.Â
Key TakeawaysÂ
Once you discover the power of summaries, the temptation to create summaries for everything is real. But this can leave you with a new problem: a lot of manual work. So, how to summarize a presentation without much time and effort? That's where the third-party AI summary generators make it easy for you.
Notta is an AI note-taking and AI presentation summarizer tool, especially for people who are not making presentations for fun. It comes with a free generous plan and affordable paid plans that help you record, transcribe, and then summarize media files (including presentations) â with high accuracy.
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How To Write a Summary of an Article - Guide & Examples
Learn how to summarize an article, where to start, what to include, and how to keep it short and interesting through this practical guideline.Â
Ivana Vidakovic
Jan 24, 2023
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Trending articles.
Have you ever considered why article summaries yield so much attention online?Â
And why it matters so much to writers?
It would be demoralizing to pour a great deal of effort and enthusiasm into an article only to have it end in a banal, trite manner.
It's like a well-made film with a vague ending.
A poor summary of an article isn't just detrimental to the piece overall, it can also leave you feeling like your precious time has been squandered.
This post will go over some guidelines on how to summarize an article, such as where to start, what to include, and how to keep it short and interesting.Â
Moreover, we will offer some tried-and-true solutions that can help you speed up the summarizing process.
But before we get into that, let's figure out why we have to summarize articles in the first place.
Why Do We Need to Summarize Articles?
When you need to convey the gist of a lengthy article to someone who still needs to read it, a summary is your best bet.
It allows readers to get the brief of an article quickly without having to read it cover to cover. Your readers can easily remember and retain the main points of an article if they are correctly summarized.Â
What's more, article summaries are a time-saving technique that can be used when:
â Writing the last part of an article .
â Writing a review of a book .
â When getting ready for a presentation in class .
â When conducting research for a project .
â When getting ready for an interview .
â When preparing for a test .
â When writing a blog post .
â When making a report for a customer .
â When writing news summaries for a website .
â If you are writing a speech .
Now that you know where to use it, letâs learn how to write a summary of an article in 5 simple steps. .Â
Youâll be surprised when you discover that you were probably unconsciously using all these techniques already.
How To Write a Summary of an Article In 5 Steps
1. read the article.
The first step in writing a summary of an article is, of course, to read the article carefully.Â
Even though this step might seem obvious, you might be surprised by how many people think a quick overview is all they need to understand a concept fully.Â
That may be true, but if you want people to take your summary seriously, take the time to read the article carefully and pay attention to the main points, its details, and the structure of the tex t.
That way, you can ensure you're covering the essentials of the article, which serve as your summary's backbone.
2. Identify The Main Ideas of The Article
Letâs not beat around the bush: a quick glance at the article's outlines will reveal its central arguments .
Outlines of articles emphasize everything of utmost importance for the subject at hand.
However, if the article doesnât have outlines, you can extract the main ideas by looking for the topic sentence in each paragraph.
3. Write Your Understanding of The Topic
The third step in writing a summary of an article is to write its main points in your own words .
The question you should ask yourself when you write an article's summary is this:Â
đŻ What are the most important points that your readers should remember?
At this point, you are free to use more than just a simple statement.
Think about the big picture and focus on conveying the general impression of the argument.
Your summary argument can be more convincing by including specifics directly connected to the main idea.
4. Define Your Thesis Statement
Now that you've laid out your arguments, what do you think of your findings as a whole?
The summary boils down to your assessment.
đŻ What is the bottom line message you are trying to convey?
Unfortunately, there is no silver bullet for putting your ideas into words, therefore we are limited in the advice we can provide you.Â
Just be yourself when you write it â your audience will enjoy the authenticity and originality that comes from your voice .Â
If a reader doesn't care about what he just read, that's the worst possible reaction, right?
Thus, whether they agree or disagree, you've accomplished your goal as a writer if your audience is engaged with your content.Â
5. Rewrite The Summary
Once you've completed the four steps outlined above, you have your first draft of the summary, which needs additional tweaking to make it coherent and effective.
To successfully summarize an article, you will need to rewrite it (either the entire output or just fragments of it) to strengthen your context .
You can get the most out of your sentences by using a rewriting technique that primarily focuses on shifting the working order and experimenting with synonyms.
The following are the essential components of powerful sentences:
đŻ They are clear and easy to read .
đŻ They maintain a consistent and logical line of thought .
đŻ They are engaging .
Moreover, there are two additional factors that necessitate rewriting the original article summary draft:
đTo make sure we are not repeating ourselves .
đTo avoid plagiarism .
Ok, youâre all set. Now we should test what youâve learned from the example.
A Summary of An Article From The Example
Reading instructions is one thing, but doing what you read is entirely different.Â
I'll demonstrate 4 writing strategies that can help you quickly and effectively summarize any piece of writing by applying them to the same section of the article.Â
Here is the piece Iâll be using in the following text:
Additionally, you'll learn how to use AI-enabled tools to produce summary output even more quickly.
Let's start!
1. Summarizing Technique
The art of summarizing allows you to condense a lengthy piece of writing down to its essentials.
Simplifying a text means getting rid of all the fluff and focusing on the core concepts while ignoring the supporting details.
To be effective at summarizing, it's crucial that the summary maintain the same tone and point of view as the original text.
Summarizing Output Example
Tools, such as the TextCortex add-on , can help you quickly and effortlessly summarize large portions of text.
Just highlight your text , and from the rewriting menu that appears at the bottom, hit the â Summarize â button.
You can use TextCortex within 30+ online platforms such as Facebook, LinkedIn, Google Docs, Hemingway, Notion etc.
This means you donât have to switch between the tabs to tweak your text â leverage AI writing assistance within your chosen platform's textbox.
2. Rewriting Technique
The rewriting method allows you to alter a sentence's form without changing its meaning.Â
You can rewrite sentences to make them more understandable, shorter, or engaging.Â
Rewriting techniques can also make your sentence sound more interesting or sophisticated by switching out a few words for synonyms..
Rewriting Output Example
The TextCortex add-on, also offers the â Rewriting â feature in its arsenal.
Again, highlight the sentences or paragraphs in bulk, and choose the option from the rewriting menu.
From this point, you can either copy and paste the output, or click on it to apply changes.
If you are not satisfied with the quality of your output, just click on â Load more â to get additional suggestions.
3. Changing the Tone of Voice Technique
One way to change the narrative and style of your writing is by adjusting the tone of voice .
This writing technique requires a writer to experiment with various sentence structures.
In other words, changing the writer's tone of voice allows you to set the mood and evoke a certain reaction from the audience.
Encouraging Tone of Voice Output Example
You guessed it right.Â
The TextCortex add-on also provides you with the â Tone â feature that enables you to switch between different narrative styles such as âencouragingâ, âcasualâ, âdecisiveâ, and so on.
You can access this feature either from the rewriting menu or by hitting the purple bubble that prompts the creator suite with 60+ AI templates to choose from.
4. Proofreading
The final version of your summary must endure at least one additional writing technique: proofreading .Â
You can use it to find and fix typos and other mistakes in grammar, punctuation, spelling, style, and capitalization.
A proofreading technique ensures a clear, concise, and accurate summary as a result.
The " Text-to-speech " feature is a great way to check your work for errors when using the TextCortex add-on.Â
There aren't enough ways to describe how tedious it is to spot your own mistakes in writing. With this feature, you can have AI read your content aloud, allowing you to gauge its overall impact and spot errors with greater precision.Â
The " Text-to-speech " function can be activated by selecting the text you wish be read aloud and then selecting the appropriate option from the rewriting menu.Â
After a short wait, the " play " button will become available, and you can press it to hear the final version of your content.
What Is The Easiest Way To Summarize An Article?
Congratulations! You have successfully completed a brief course on how to write a summary of an article.
As for the question on what is the easiest way to summarize an article, my answer is clear â utilize AI writing tools to do that for you.
There comes a point in every creative person's life when inspiration dries up, and a deadline looms without mercy.
A smart move to get the ball rolling again and avoid the torture of writer's block is to invest in software that can cut down on your writing time while providing a significant breakthrough in your writing.
With the TextCortex add-on , you can accomplish all that and even more:
đRewrite original sentences without changing the meaning.
đExpand the sentences to add more details in your paragraphs.
đSummarize the original text for a brief output.
đ Change the tone of voice to play with different narratives.
đ Autocomplete your sentences from random thoughts.
đ Generate long-form posts from a 5-word concept.
đ Transform bullets into emails .
The TextCortex tool is easily accessible, enabling you to use its features on more than 30 widely used platforms.
Furthermore, its 60+ AI templates will help you write various content forms like a pro.
Interested in boosting your writing skills for free?
Get your TextCortex free account today to claim your 10 free daily creations and explore a different side of AI-writing power.
What are The 3 Elements of The Summary?
1. Introduction â A quick overview of the article's main points.
2. Body â A detailed description of the main ideas (including evidence and arguments).Â
3. Conclusion â An overall evaluation of the provided solutions.
How Many Paragraphs Are In The Summary?
How many paragraphs an article summary has will depend on how long the article is and what the purpose of the summary is.Â
In general, a summary will have between 1 and 4 paragraphs .Â
However, if the article is very long, it may need more than 4 paragraphs.
Keep Learning
6 Effective Tricks To Rewrite Content And Improve Its Quality
Paraphrasing Vs. Summarizing: The Difference And Best Examples
6 Techniques To Change Tone In Writing Easily
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Questions answers..
TextCortex is a powerful AI-powered writing tool that can help you reduce your writing time, handle big tasks, and create high-quality content without errors. With its customizable platform, personalized intelligence experience, advanced writing and research capabilities, and error-free content, TextCortex is the perfect tool for creative professionals who want to be a creative force in their industry.
Our AI copilot learned how to write from more than 3 billion sentences and has the ability to create unique content. However, fact-checking is something which still requires a human approval.
TextCortex supports more than 25 languages including English, Dutch, German, Ukranian, Romanian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, Italian.
Yes, TextCortex is completely free to use with all of its features. When you sign up, you receive 100 free creations. Then you will receive 20 recurring creations every day on the free plan.
Yes, we have a Text Generation API, please talk to us directly to implement it. You can reach out to us at [email protected]
Account sharing is not allowed. If you have a need for more than 5 seats for an account, you can directly contact us at [email protected]
Yes, TextCortex offers 14-day free trial for users to try out all features extensively with higher number of generations. But keep in mind that you can already try everything with the free plan. There is no feature that is locked behind a premium plan.
Overall, TextCortex AI has over 1000 five-star reviews on reputable review sites such as G2, Trustpilot and Capterra.
TextCortex learns and adapts to your unique writing style and knowledge, making it easier for you to write high-quality & personalized content.
Your premium features will be available until the end of your subscription date, then your account plan will be set to Free plan.
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What It Takes to Give a Great Presentation
- Carmine Gallo
Five tips to set yourself apart.
Never underestimate the power of great communication. It can help you land the job of your dreams, attract investors to back your idea, or elevate your stature within your organization. But while there are plenty of good speakers in the world, you can set yourself apart out by being the person who can deliver something great over and over. Here are a few tips for business professionals who want to move from being good speakers to great ones: be concise (the fewer words, the better); never use bullet points (photos and images paired together are more memorable); don’t underestimate the power of your voice (raise and lower it for emphasis); give your audience something extra (unexpected moments will grab their attention); rehearse (the best speakers are the best because they practice — a lot).
I was sitting across the table from a Silicon Valley CEO who had pioneered a technology that touches many of our lives â the flash memory that stores data on smartphones, digital cameras, and computers. He was a frequent guest on CNBC and had been delivering business presentations for at least 20 years before we met. And yet, the CEO wanted to sharpen his public speaking skills.
- Carmine Gallo is a Harvard University instructor, keynote speaker, and author of 10 books translated into 40 languages. Gallo is the author of The Bezos Blueprint: Communication Secrets of the World’s Greatest Salesman (St. Martin’s Press).
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How to Write an Article Review
Last Updated: September 8, 2023 Fact Checked
This article was co-authored by Jake Adams . Jake Adams is an academic tutor and the owner of Simplifi EDU, a Santa Monica, California based online tutoring business offering learning resources and online tutors for academic subjects K-College, SAT & ACT prep, and college admissions applications. With over 14 years of professional tutoring experience, Jake is dedicated to providing his clients the very best online tutoring experience and access to a network of excellent undergraduate and graduate-level tutors from top colleges all over the nation. Jake holds a BS in International Business and Marketing from Pepperdine University. There are 13 references cited in this article, which can be found at the bottom of the page. This article has been fact-checked, ensuring the accuracy of any cited facts and confirming the authority of its sources. This article has been viewed 3,069,070 times.
An article review is both a summary and an evaluation of another writer's article. Teachers often assign article reviews to introduce students to the work of experts in the field. Experts also are often asked to review the work of other professionals. Understanding the main points and arguments of the article is essential for an accurate summation. Logical evaluation of the article's main theme, supporting arguments, and implications for further research is an important element of a review . Here are a few guidelines for writing an article review.
Education specialist Alexander Peterman recommends: "In the case of a review, your objective should be to reflect on the effectiveness of what has already been written, rather than writing to inform your audience about a subject."
Things You Should Know
- Read the article very closely, and then take time to reflect on your evaluation. Consider whether the article effectively achieves what it set out to.
- Write out a full article review by completing your intro, summary, evaluation, and conclusion. Don't forget to add a title, too!
- Proofread your review for mistakes (like grammar and usage), while also cutting down on needless information. [1] X Research source
Preparing to Write Your Review
- Article reviews present more than just an opinion. You will engage with the text to create a response to the scholarly writer's ideas. You will respond to and use ideas, theories, and research from your studies. Your critique of the article will be based on proof and your own thoughtful reasoning.
- An article review only responds to the author's research. It typically does not provide any new research. However, if you are correcting misleading or otherwise incorrect points, some new data may be presented.
- An article review both summarizes and evaluates the article.
- Summarize the article. Focus on the important points, claims, and information.
- Discuss the positive aspects of the article. Think about what the author does well, good points she makes, and insightful observations.
- Identify contradictions, gaps, and inconsistencies in the text. Determine if there is enough data or research included to support the author's claims. Find any unanswered questions left in the article.
- Make note of words or issues you don't understand and questions you have.
- Look up terms or concepts you are unfamiliar with, so you can fully understand the article. Read about concepts in-depth to make sure you understand their full context.
- Pay careful attention to the meaning of the article. Make sure you fully understand the article. The only way to write a good article review is to understand the article.
- With either method, make an outline of the main points made in the article and the supporting research or arguments. It is strictly a restatement of the main points of the article and does not include your opinions.
- After putting the article in your own words, decide which parts of the article you want to discuss in your review. You can focus on the theoretical approach, the content, the presentation or interpretation of evidence, or the style. You will always discuss the main issues of the article, but you can sometimes also focus on certain aspects. This comes in handy if you want to focus the review towards the content of a course.
- Review the summary outline to eliminate unnecessary items. Erase or cross out the less important arguments or supplemental information. Your revised summary can serve as the basis for the summary you provide at the beginning of your review.
- What does the article set out to do?
- What is the theoretical framework or assumptions?
- Are the central concepts clearly defined?
- How adequate is the evidence?
- How does the article fit into the literature and field?
- Does it advance the knowledge of the subject?
- How clear is the author's writing? Don't: include superficial opinions or your personal reaction. Do: pay attention to your biases, so you can overcome them.
Writing the Article Review
- For example, in MLA , a citation may look like: Duvall, John N. "The (Super)Marketplace of Images: Television as Unmediated Mediation in DeLillo's White Noise ." Arizona Quarterly 50.3 (1994): 127-53. Print. [10] X Trustworthy Source Purdue Online Writing Lab Trusted resource for writing and citation guidelines Go to source
- For example: The article, "Condom use will increase the spread of AIDS," was written by Anthony Zimmerman, a Catholic priest.
- Your introduction should only be 10-25% of your review.
- End the introduction with your thesis. Your thesis should address the above issues. For example: Although the author has some good points, his article is biased and contains some misinterpretation of data from othersâ analysis of the effectiveness of the condom.
- Use direct quotes from the author sparingly.
- Review the summary you have written. Read over your summary many times to ensure that your words are an accurate description of the author's article.
- Support your critique with evidence from the article or other texts.
- The summary portion is very important for your critique. You must make the author's argument clear in the summary section for your evaluation to make sense.
- Remember, this is not where you say if you liked the article or not. You are assessing the significance and relevance of the article.
- Use a topic sentence and supportive arguments for each opinion. For example, you might address a particular strength in the first sentence of the opinion section, followed by several sentences elaborating on the significance of the point.
- This should only be about 10% of your overall essay.
- For example: This critical review has evaluated the article "Condom use will increase the spread of AIDS" by Anthony Zimmerman. The arguments in the article show the presence of bias, prejudice, argumentative writing without supporting details, and misinformation. These points weaken the authorâs arguments and reduce his credibility.
- Make sure you have identified and discussed the 3-4 key issues in the article.
Sample Article Reviews
Expert Q&A
You Might Also Like
- â https://writing.wisc.edu/handbook/grammarpunct/proofreading/
- â https://libguides.cmich.edu/writinghelp/articlereview
- â https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4548566/
- â Jake Adams. Academic Tutor & Test Prep Specialist. Expert Interview. 24 July 2020.
- â https://guides.library.queensu.ca/introduction-research/writing/critical
- â https://www.iup.edu/writingcenter/writing-resources/organization-and-structure/creating-an-outline.html
- â https://writing.umn.edu/sws/assets/pdf/quicktips/titles.pdf
- â https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/mla_style/mla_formatting_and_style_guide/mla_works_cited_periodicals.html
- â https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4548565/
- â https://writingcenter.uconn.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/593/2014/06/How_to_Summarize_a_Research_Article1.pdf
- â https://www.uis.edu/learning-hub/writing-resources/handouts/learning-hub/how-to-review-a-journal-article
- â https://writingcenter.unc.edu/tips-and-tools/editing-and-proofreading/
About This Article
If you have to write an article review, read through the original article closely, taking notes and highlighting important sections as you read. Next, rewrite the article in your own words, either in a long paragraph or as an outline. Open your article review by citing the article, then write an introduction which states the articleâs thesis. Next, summarize the article, followed by your opinion about whether the article was clear, thorough, and useful. Finish with a paragraph that summarizes the main points of the article and your opinions. To learn more about what to include in your personal critique of the article, keep reading the article! Did this summary help you? Yes No
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Identify the important ideas and facts
To help you summarize and analyze your argumentative texts , your articles, your scientific texts, your history texts as well as your well-structured analyses work of art, Resoomer provides you with a "Summary text tool" : an educational tool that identifies and summarizes the important ideas and facts of your documents. Summarize in 1-Click, go to the main idea or skim through so that you can then interpret your texts quickly and develop your syntheses .
Who is Resoomer for ?
College students.
With Resoomer, summarize your Wikipedia pages in a matter of seconds for your productivity.
Identify the most important ideas and arguments of your texts so that you can prepare your lessons.
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Identify your books' or your authors' ideas quickly. Summarize the most important main points.
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Reduce your reading time by summarizing long blocks of text within seconds.
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Why use this summarizer?
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How to Create a Summary Slide in PowerPoint?
Creating a summary slide in PowerPoint is an essential part of putting together a presentation that grabs and holds your audience’s attention. Not only does it help to reinforce the key themes of your presentation, but it also serves as a powerful tool for summarizing complex information and data in an easy-to-understand format for your audience. In this article, we will explore the importance of a summary slide in PowerPoint presentations, how to plan and design an effective summary slide, and some best practices and tips for creating an engaging and informative summary slide.
Table of Contents
The Importance of a Summary Slide in PowerPoint Presentations
One of the key reasons why a summary slide is so important in PowerPoint presentations is its ability to reinforce the main themes and ideas of your presentation. By highlighting the most important points and takeaways, a summary slide can help to ensure that your audience remembers your presentation long after it is over. Additionally, a summary slide provides a clear and concise way to summarize complex data or information, helping to make your presentation more accessible and engaging for your audience.
Another benefit of including a summary slide in your PowerPoint presentation is that it can serve as a roadmap for your audience. By providing a clear overview of the topics covered in your presentation, a summary slide can help your audience to follow along and stay engaged throughout the entire presentation. This can be especially helpful for longer presentations or those that cover a lot of complex information.
Finally, a summary slide can also be a useful tool for reinforcing your call to action or key message. By summarizing the main points of your presentation and highlighting the key takeaways, you can help to ensure that your audience understands the importance of your message and is motivated to take action. This can be particularly important in business or marketing presentations, where the ultimate goal is to persuade your audience to take a specific action or make a purchase.
Understanding the Purpose of a Summary Slide in Your Presentation
Before you start creating your summary slide, it’s essential to understanding its purpose in your overall presentation. The summary slide is typically the last slide of your presentation, and it should summarize the most important points covered in your presentation along with a memorable final thought. For example, if you’re delivering a sales pitch, your summary slide should highlight the key benefits of your product or service and provide a clear call to action for your audience.
Another important aspect of a summary slide is that it helps your audience to remember the key takeaways from your presentation. By providing a concise summary of the main points, your audience is more likely to retain the information and be able to recall it later. Additionally, a well-crafted summary slide can also serve as a visual aid to reinforce your message and leave a lasting impression on your audience.
Planning Your Summary Slide: What to Include and What to Leave Out
When planning your summary slide, it’s important to strike the right balance between including enough information to summarize your presentation effectively while also avoiding overwhelming your audience with too much detail. Some key elements to consider including in your summary slide include the main themes and ideas covered in your presentation, key data points or statistics, any notable quotes or testimonials, and a final call to action. However, be sure to leave out any extraneous information that isn’t directly relevant to your main message or themes.
Another important factor to consider when planning your summary slide is the visual design. Your summary slide should be visually appealing and easy to read, with clear and concise text and graphics. Use a consistent color scheme and font throughout your presentation to create a cohesive and professional look. Additionally, consider using visual aids such as charts, graphs, or images to help illustrate your main points and make your summary slide more engaging for your audience.
Step-by-Step Guide to Creating a Summary Slide in PowerPoint
Creating a summary slide in PowerPoint is a straightforward process that can be accomplished using a few simple steps. First, choose the template or design for your summary slide. Most PowerPoint templates include a suitable summary slide layout, so you don’t need to start from scratch. Next, consider the key message and themes of your presentation and decide what information to include in your summary slide. Be sure to keep your text concise and focused, and use bullet points or other visual aids to help keep things clear and easy to understand. Finally, add any relevant images, charts, or graphs to your summary slide, and make sure to use fonts and colors that are consistent with your overall presentation design.
It’s important to note that the summary slide should be the last slide in your presentation. This slide should provide a quick overview of the key points and takeaways from your presentation. It’s also a good idea to include a call to action or next steps on this slide, so your audience knows what to do next. Remember, the summary slide is often the slide that your audience will remember the most, so make sure it’s clear, concise, and visually appealing.
Designing an Eye-Catching Summary Slide for Your Presentation
While the content of your summary slide is essential, the design also plays a crucial role in creating an engaging and memorable summary slide. To design an eye-catching summary slide, consider using bold colors and fonts, incorporating relevant images or graphics, and using animations or slide transitions to help emphasize key points. Remember to keep your design consistent with your overall presentation theme and style.
Another important aspect to consider when designing your summary slide is the placement of information. You want to make sure that the most important information is prominently displayed and easy to read. This can be achieved by using larger font sizes or bolding key words. Additionally, consider using bullet points or numbered lists to break up information and make it easier to digest.
Finally, don’t forget about the importance of white space. A cluttered summary slide can be overwhelming and difficult to read. Leave enough space between elements to create a clean and organized design. This will not only make your summary slide more visually appealing, but it will also make it easier for your audience to understand and remember the information presented.
Tips and Tricks for Creating an Effective Summary Slide in PowerPoint
When creating your summary slide, there are a few tips and tricks that can help you to ensure its effectiveness. First, consider using a strong headline or tagline that sums up the main message or takeaway from your presentation. Second, use bullets or numbers to break down complex information into manageable chunks, making it easier for your audience to understand. Finally, use visuals like images or charts to help illustrate your key points, making them more memorable and engaging for your audience.
Another important tip to keep in mind when creating a summary slide is to keep it simple and concise. Avoid cluttering the slide with too much information or unnecessary details. Stick to the most important points and use clear and concise language to convey your message effectively.
Additionally, it can be helpful to include a call to action on your summary slide. This could be a request for feedback, a call to visit your website or social media pages, or an invitation to continue the conversation after the presentation. Including a call to action can help to keep your audience engaged and interested in your message beyond the presentation itself.
How to Customize Your Summary Slide with Animations and Transitions
PowerPoint offers a wide range of options for customizing your summary slide with animations and transitions. Animations can be used to bring attention to key points or data, while transitions can help to create a seamless flow between slides. When using animations and transitions, be sure to use them sparingly and consistently throughout your entire presentation.
Best Practices for Using Images and Graphics on Your Summary Slide
Images and graphics can be powerful tools for enhancing the impact of your summary slide. When using images and graphics, be sure to choose visuals that are relevant to your presentation and that help to reinforce your main message or themes. Additionally, use high-quality images and graphics that are visually appealing and easy to understand for your audience.
Adding Charts and Graphs to Your Summary Slide: A Comprehensive Guide
If your presentation includes complex data or information, charts and graphs can be an effective way to present it in a clear and easy-to-understand format. When adding charts and graphs to your summary slide, consider using simple designs and labels that are easy to read and interpret. Additionally, be sure to only include the most important data points or information on your summary slide, leaving out any unnecessary information that could confuse your audience.
Creating a Memorable Conclusion with Your Summary Slide
The last slide of your presentation should leave a lasting impression on your audience. To create a memorable conclusion with your summary slide, consider including a final call to action or memorable quote that reinforces your presentation’s main message. Additionally, use images, graphics, or animations to help emphasize your main points and leave a lasting impression on your audience.
How to Use a Summary Slide to Engage Your Audience
A summary slide can also be an effective tool for engaging your audience throughout your presentation. By previewing your summary slide at the beginning of your presentation, your audience will have a clear understanding of what to expect and will be more engaged and attentive throughout the rest of your presentation. Additionally, use your summary slide to encourage audience participation by asking questions or soliciting feedback on your key messages.
Examples of Amazing Summary Slides: Inspiration for Your Next Presentation
Looking for some inspiration for your next summary slide? There are plenty of examples of amazing summary slides that you can draw inspiration from. Some great examples include TED Talks and other presentations from thought leaders in your industry. Take note of how they use visuals, text, and other design elements to create engaging and memorable summary slides.
Common Mistakes to Avoid When Creating a Summary Slide in PowerPoint
When creating your summary slide, there are a few common mistakes to avoid. These include including too much information or detail, using fonts or colors that are difficult to read, and failing to use visuals or other design elements effectively. Additionally, be sure to proofread your summary slide carefully to avoid any spelling or grammatical errors that could detract from your message.
Wrap Up: Final Thoughts on Creating a Perfect Summary Slide in PowerPoint
Creating an effective summary slide is a crucial part of any PowerPoint presentation. By following the tips and best practices outlined in this article, you can create a summary slide that not only reinforces the key themes and ideas of your presentation but also engages and informs your audience in a memorable and effective way.
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Summarize any | in a click.
TLDR This helps you summarize any piece of text into concise, easy to digest content so you can free yourself from information overload.
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Summarize your presentation with Copilot in PowerPoint
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How To Summarize A Presentation
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- December 14, 2022
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Presentations are a great way to share information and ideas with an audience. But when youâre done presenting, itâs important to summarize the key points and takeaways. Summarizing a presentation is a crucial step in ensuring that your audience has a clear understanding of the information you shared.
Why Summarizing Is Important
Summarizing a presentation is important for a few reasons. First, it helps to reinforce the key points and takeaways that you want your audience to remember. Second, it helps to ensure that your audience understands the information you shared. Third, it helps to ensure that everyone is on the same page and that everyone has the same understanding of the information. Finally, summarizing a presentation helps to provide closure and helps to ensure that everyone leaves with a clear understanding of the information you shared.
Tips For Summarizing A Presentation
Summarizing a presentation can be a challenge, but there are a few tips that can help make it easier.
1. Identify The Main Points
The first step in summarizing a presentation is to identify the main points. Take a few moments to review the presentation and identify the key points and takeaways. This will help you to ensure that you donât miss any important information.
2. Use Simple Language
When summarizing a presentation, itâs important to use simple language. Avoid using jargon or technical terms that your audience may not understand. Instead, use language that is easy to understand and that everyone can follow.
3. Focus On The Big Picture
When summarizing a presentation, itâs important to focus on the big picture. Donât get bogged down in the details. Instead, focus on the main points and takeaways that you want your audience to remember.
4. Ask Questions
Asking questions is a great way to ensure that everyone understands the information. Ask questions to make sure that everyone is on the same page and that everyone has the same understanding of the information.
5. Provide Examples
Providing examples is a great way to help your audience understand the information. Examples can help to illustrate the main points and takeaways and can help to ensure that everyone has a clear understanding of the information.
6. Use Visual Aids
Using visual aids is a great way to help your audience understand the information. Visual aids can help to illustrate the main points and takeaways and can help to ensure that everyone has a clear understanding of the information.
7. Give A Summary
Finally, give a summary of the presentation. This will help to reinforce the key points and takeaways and will help to ensure that everyone has a clear understanding of the information.
Summarizing a presentation is an important step in ensuring that your audience has a clear understanding of the information you shared. By following the tips outlined above, you can ensure that your audience has a clear understanding of the information you shared and that everyone is on the same page.
How To Summarize A Presentation With Speak
Step 1: Create Your Speak Account
To start your transcription and analysis, you first need to create a Speak account . No worries, this is super easy to do!
Get a 7-day trial with 30 minutes of free English audio and video transcription included when you sign up for Speak.
To sign up for Speak and start using Speak Magic Prompts, visit the Speak app register page here .
Step 2: Upload Your Language Data
We typically recommend MP4s for video or MP3s for audio.
However, we accept a range of audio, video and text file types.
You can upload your file for transcription in several ways using Speak:
Accepted Audio File Types
Accepted video file types, accepted text file types, csv imports.
You can also upload CSVs of text files or audio and video files. You can learn more about CSV uploads and download Speak-compatible CSVs here .
With the CSVs, you can upload anything from dozens of YouTube videos to thousands of Interview Data.
Publicly Available URLs
You can also upload media to Speak through a publicly available URL.
As long as the file type extension is available at the end of the URL you will have no problem importing your recording for automatic transcription and analysis.
YouTube URLs
Speak is compatible with YouTube videos. All you have to do is copy the URL of the YouTube video (for example, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKfcLcHeivc ).
Speak will automatically find the file, calculate the length, and import the video.
If using YouTube videos, please make sure you use the full link and not the shortened YouTube snippet. Additionally, make sure you remove the channel name from the URL.
Speak Integrations
As mentioned, Speak also contains a range of integrations for Zoom , Zapier , Vimeo and more that will help you automatically transcribe your media.
This library of integrations continues to grow! Have a request? Feel encouraged to send us a message.
Step 3: Calculate and Pay the Total Automatically
Once you have your file(s) ready and load it into Speak, it will automatically calculate the total cost (you get 30 minutes of audio and video free in the 7-day trial – take advantage of it!).
If you are uploading text data into Speak, you do not currently have to pay any cost. Only the Speak Magic Prompts analysis would create a fee which will be detailed below.
Once you go over your 30 minutes or need to use Speak Magic Prompts, you can pay by subscribing to a personalized plan using our real-time calculator .
You can also add a balance or pay for uploads and analysis without a plan using your credit card .
Step 4: Wait for Speak to Analyze Your Language Data
If you are uploading audio and video, our automated transcription software will prepare your transcript quickly. Once completed, you will get an email notification that your transcript is complete. That email will contain a link back to the file so you can access the interactive media player with the transcript, analysis, and export formats ready for you.
If you are importing CSVs or uploading text files Speak will generally analyze the information much more quickly.
Step 5: Visit Your File Or Folder
Speak is capable of analyzing both individual files and entire folders of data.
When you are viewing any individual file in Speak, all you have to do is click on the “Prompts” button.
If you want to analyze many files, all you have to do is add the files you want to analyze into a folder within Speak.
You can do that by adding new files into Speak or you can organize your current files into your desired folder with the software’s easy editing functionality.
Step 6: Select Speak Magic Prompts To Analyze Your Data
What are magic prompts.
Speak Magic Prompts leverage innovation in artificial intelligence models often referred to as “generative AI”.
These models have analyzed huge amounts of data from across the internet to gain an understanding of language.
With that understanding, these “large language models” are capable of performing mind-bending tasks!
With Speak Magic Prompts, you can now perform those tasks on the audio, video and text data in your Speak account.
Step 7: Select Your Assistant Type
To help you get better results from Speak Magic Prompts, Speak has introduced “Assistant Type”.
These assistant types pre-set and provide context to the prompt engine for more concise, meaningful outputs based on your needs.
To begin, we have included:
Choose the most relevant assistant type from the dropdown.
Step 8: Create Or Select Your Desired Prompt
Here are some examples prompts that you can apply to any file right now:
- Create a SWOT Analysis
- Give me the top action items
- Create a bullet point list summary
- Tell me the key issues that were left unresolved
- Tell me what questions were asked
- Create Your Own Custom Prompts
A modal will pop up so you can use the suggested prompts we shared above to instantly and magically get your answers.
If you have your own prompts you want to create, select “Custom Prompt” from the dropdown and another text box will open where you can ask anything you want of your data!
Step 9: Review & Share Responses
Speak will generate a concise response for you in a text box below the prompt selection dropdown.
In this example, we ask to analyze all the Interview Data in the folder at once for the top product dissatisfiers.
You can easily copy that response for your presentations, content, emails, team members and more!
Speak Magic Prompts As ChatGPT For Interview Data Pricing
Our team at Speak Ai continues to optimize the pricing for Magic Prompts and Speak as a whole.
Right now, anyone in the 7-day trial of Speak gets 100,000 characters included in their account.
If you need more characters, you can easily include Speak Magic Prompts in your plan when you create a subscription.
You can also upgrade the number of characters in your account if you already have a subscription.
Both options are available on the subscription page .
Alternatively, you can use Speak Magic Prompts by adding a balance to your account. The balance will be used as you analyze characters.
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Once you subscribe to a plan, all you have to do is send us a live chat with your selected premium add-on from the list below:
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Hemorrhagic stroke (summary)
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Citation, DOI, disclosures and article data
At the time the article was created Rohit Sharma had no financial relationships to ineligible companies to disclose.
At the time the article was last revised Rohit Sharma had no financial relationships to ineligible companies to disclose.
- Intracerebral haemorrhage (summary)
- Intracerebral hemorrhage (summary)
This is a basic article for medical students and other non-radiologists
Hemorrhagic stroke is a clinical diagnosis where an acute neurological deficit follows a bleed into the brain parenchyma.
On this page:
Reference article.
- Related articles
Cases and figures
This is a summary article ; read more in our article on intracerebral hemorrhage .
epidemiology
common, and accounts for 20% of stroke overall 1 , although is more common in Asian countries
the other 80% is ischemic stroke
a leading cause of disability
presentation
sudden focal neurological deficit whereby the exact clinical features depend on where the hemorrhage is within the brain 1
reduced conscious state, headache, and seizures may also be present 1
pathophysiology
most commonly caused by a spontaneous rupture of small blood vessels within the brain, causing an intracerebral hemorrhage 1
location of the intracerebral hemorrhage may assist with etiology
deep (centrally-located, or infratentorially-located): hypertensive microangiopathy is the most common cause 1
lobar (peripherally within cerebral hemispheres): cerebral amyloid angiopathy is the most common cause 1
less commonly may be due to a vascular malformation, tumor, cerebral venous sinus thrombosis, or other rarer secondary pathology 2
intracerebral hemorrhage due to trauma is not considered to be a hemorrhagic stroke
investigation
non-contrast CT head in the first instance
shows intracerebral hemorrhage and associated complications 2
CT angiography
some centers use this to identify any contrast entering the area of hemorrhage ( spot sign ) which may indicate hematoma expansion 2
may also be used to identify any vascular malformations
contrast-enhanced CT
some centers use this to identify any underlying tumors 2
less commonly used acutely in most centers, but may be performed in some centers months after the stroke to identify any secondary cause 2
all patients with stroke should be managed in a dedicated stroke unit where possible, with input from the local stroke and neurosurgery services 4
acute treatment 4
strict control of blood pressure with antihypertensive medications
reversal of any anticoagulation or coagulopathy
management of raised intracranial pressure, with medical and surgical options
neurosurgical hematoma evacuation can be considered on a case-by-case basis
secondary prevention depends on underlying cause, e.g. long-term management of hypertension, review of anticoagulation 4
role of imaging
is there evidence of intracerebral hemorrhage?
is the hemorrhage lobar or deep in location?
is there evidence of active hematoma expansion?
is there evidence of dangerous mass effect ?
is there evidence of intraventricular extension of the hemorrhage?
is a cause immediately visible, e.g. vascular malformation or tumor?
radiographic features
intracerebral hemorrhage is readily visible as hyperdense and its volume can be calculated 2
around the hemorrhage, there may be surrounding hypodense edema 2
mass effect and other complications may be visible, such as midline shift , hydrocephalus or uncal herniation 2
subtle features of hematoma expansion may be present 3
angiography (CTA/MRA/DSA)
may assist with determining whether there is likelihood of hematoma expansion 2
may identify underlying vascular malformations 2
some centers use this to identify any underlying tumors, although MRI is a better imaging modality for this
often performed in a delayed fashion, once the hematoma has resolved, to determine the cause of the hemorrhage 2
can identify tumors, vascular malformations, and evidence of cerebral small vessel diseases (e.g. hypertensive microangiopathy, cerebral amyloid angiopathy) 2
- 1. An S, Kim T, Yoon B. Epidemiology, Risk Factors, and Clinical Features of Intracerebral Hemorrhage: An Update. J Stroke. 2017;19(1):3-10. doi:10.5853/jos.2016.00864 - Pubmed
- 2. Heit J, Iv M, Wintermark M. Imaging of Intracranial Hemorrhage. J Stroke. 2017;19(1):11-27. doi:10.5853/jos.2016.00563 - Pubmed
- 3. Law Z, Ali A, Krishnan K et al. Noncontrast Computed Tomography Signs as Predictors of Hematoma Expansion, Clinical Outcome, and Response to Tranexamic Acid in Acute Intracerebral Hemorrhage. Stroke. 2020;51(1):121-8. doi:10.1161/strokeaha.119.026128
- 4. Greenberg S, Ziai W, Cordonnier C et al. 2022 Guideline for the Management of Patients With Spontaneous Intracerebral Hemorrhage: A Guideline From the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke. 2022;53(7):e282-361. doi:10.1161/str.0000000000000407 - Pubmed
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What to Know About Capital Oneâs Proposed Acquisition of Discover
Before two of the largest credit card companies in the United States can complete a $35 billion deal, theyâll face an uphill battle with regulators.
By Santul Nerkar and Emily Flitter
Capital One announced on Monday that it would acquire Discover Financial Services, in a deal to combine two of the largest credit card companies in the United States. But before the transaction can be consummated, the deal must overcome regulatory scrutiny.
Hereâs what you need to know about Capital One and Discoverâs potential megadeal, and what it could mean for consumers.
The deal, valued at more than $35 billion, would give Capital One access to a credit card network of more than 300 million cardholders, adding to its existing customer base of 100 million.
Richard D. Fairbank, the chief executive of Capital One, said on a call with analysts Tuesday morning that the deal would help the combined enterprise âcompete more effectively against some of the largest banks and payments companies in the United States.â
Capital One was the nationâs fourth-largest credit card issuer last year, with $122.9 billion in outstanding receivable payments, and Discover was the nationâs sixth largest with $94 billion, according to data from Nilson Report, a newsletter that tracks the payment industry. The merger would place the two companies above last yearâs largest issuer, JPMorgan Chase, which had $191.4 billion in credit card loans.
Credit card debt in the United States has soared , particularly as Americans try to cover rising expenses as a result of high inflation , and more vendors are shifting away from using cash. Capital One issues cards on networks run by Visa and Mastercard, and acquiring Discover would help it expand its payment operations.
The transaction is likely to draw scrutiny from regulators who are concerned that megadeals would give larger financial institutions even more power to set higher rates, said David Robertson, the publisher of the Nilson Report.
Will regulators approve it?
The two companies cannot merge without getting a sign-off from bank regulators, the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission. Some big deals go through without a hitch, but recent developments in the Biden administrationâs approach to mergers suggest that Capital One and Discover might face real hurdles. The biggest question regulators will consider is whether the combined company will have too much influence over the pricing and availability of services in the market in which it operates.
Antitrust officials have kept a close eye on online payments providers. In 2020, the Justice Department sued to block a $5.3 billion merger between Visa and Plaid; the companies abandoned their plans soon after.
After approving a flurry of deals over the past year to try to tamp down a crisis among midsize banks, financial regulators have already signaled a desire to be more selective about the mergers they approve. Last month, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the regulator overseeing the countryâs largest banks, proposed changes to its review process for evaluating bank mergers. If adopted, the changes would end the process of granting approval by default after a certain period has passed since the merger was proposed, giving regulators more time to scrutinize each proposed transaction.
The Bank Policy Institute, a trade group, denounced the proposal as a âlengthy, opaque and uncertain supervisory review process that discourages banks from even contemplating a potential merger in the first place,â while community groups hailed it as a necessary effort to bring more transparency and consideration to the process.
Jesse Van Tol, chief executive of the National Community Reinvestment Coalition, a group that works with banks to meet community needs and that opposes the merger, said, âHistorically, the consolidation of the industry has not led to better prices for consumers.â Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, has called on regulators to kill the deal .
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau published a report last week that found larger issuers, like Capital One, charged higher annual rates than their smaller counterparts, like regional banks and credit unions, which the agency said was fueled by a lack of competition in the industry.
What does this mean for Discover cardholders?
Account holders do not have to worry about any changes happening just yet: Regulators still have to sign off on the merger, as do shareholders of each company.
Mr. Fairbank said on a call with investors that the deal was expected to be completed in late 2024 or early 2025.
âWeâre a long way from knowing, and an even longer way from actually seeing, how cardholder terms may change,â said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at BankRate, a financial services company.
One question that is likely to be on regulatorsâ minds is what Capital One chooses to do with the Discover brand.
Mr. Robertson said that the deal was unlikely to change much for existing Discover users and that regulatory action to stop the transaction would do little to change market concentration.
âIf regulators wanted to do something, they should have acted years and years ago to create more competition,â Mr. Robertson said.
Santul Nerkar is a reporter covering business and sports. More about Santul Nerkar
Emily Flitter writes about finance and how it impacts society. More about Emily Flitter
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Organic Chemistry Frontiers
Recent advances in n-heterocyclic carbene (nhc)-catalyzed fluorination and fluoroalkylation.
* Corresponding authors
a Key Laboratory of the Ministry of Education for Advanced Catalysis Materials, College of Chemistry and Materials Science, Zhejiang Normal University, Jinhua 321004, People's Republic of China E-mail: [email protected] , [email protected]
b Hubei Key Laboratory of Natural Products Research and Development, College of Biological and Pharmaceutical Sciences, China Three Gorges University, Yichang 443002, China E-mail: [email protected]
c Institute of Pharmaceutical Science and Technology, Collaborative Innovation Center of Yangtze River Delta Region Green Pharmaceuticals, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310014, China
Fluorine and fluoroalkyl groups widely exist in organic molecules that are useful in numerous fields such as biological chemistry, medicinal science, agrochemistry, materials science and synthetic chemistry. The efficient modification of organic molecules with fluorine or fluoroalkyl groups is a very important topic in organic synthesis. In addition, N-heterocyclic carbenes (NHCs) are a class of robust and versatile organocatalysts that have been intensely utilized for the assembly of many functionalized organic compounds. NHC-catalyzed fluorination and fluoroalkylation reactions serve as robust and versatile strategies for accessing various fluorine-containing molecules efficiently and conveniently. Herein, we provide an overview of the important advances in this field with an intriguing focus from 2005 to 2023. This review summarizes the recent developments in NHC-catalyzed transformations where the fluorine-containing groups are introduced using fluorinating and fluoroalkylating reagents. These fluorination and fluoroalkylation transformations are illustrated from three major aspects based on the different properties of the reagents.
- This article is part of the themed collections: 2024 Organic Chemistry Frontiers HOT articles and 2024 Organic Chemistry Frontiers Review-type Articles
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Z. Jin, F. Zhang, X. Xiao, N. Wang, X. Lv and L. Zhou, Org. Chem. Front. , 2024, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D3QO02098C
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Press Release Details
Nvidia announces financial results for fourth quarter and fiscal 2024.
- Record quarterly revenue of $22.1 billion, up 22% from Q3, up 265% from year agoÂ
- Record quarterly Data Center revenue of $18.4 billion, up 27% from Q3, up 409% from year ago
- Record full-year revenue of $60.9 billion, up 126%
SANTA CLARA, Calif., Feb. 21, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) today reported revenue for the fourth quarter ended January 28, 2024, of $22.1 billion, up 22% from the previous quarter and up 265% from a year ago.
For the quarter, GAAP earnings per diluted share was $4.93, up 33% from the previous quarter and up 765% from a year ago. Non-GAAP earnings per diluted share was $5.16, up 28% from the previous quarter and up 486% from a year ago.
For fiscal 2024, revenue was up 126% to $60.9 billion. GAAP earnings per diluted share was $11.93, up 586% from a year ago. Non-GAAP earnings per diluted share was $12.96, up 288% from a year ago.
âAccelerated computing and generative AI have hit the tipping point. Demand is surging worldwide across companies, industries and nations,â said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA.
âOur Data Center platform is powered by increasingly diverse drivers â demand for data processing, training and inference from large cloud-service providers and GPU-specialized ones, as well as from enterprise software and consumer internet companies. Vertical industries â led by auto, financial services and healthcare â are now at a multibillion-dollar level.
âNVIDIA RTX, introduced less than six years ago, is now a massive PC platform for generative AI, enjoyed by 100 million gamers and creators. The year ahead will bring major new product cycles with exceptional innovations to help propel our industry forward. Come join us at next monthâs GTC, where we and our rich ecosystem will reveal the exciting future ahead,â he said.
NVIDIA will pay its next quarterly cash dividend of $0.04 per share on March 27, 2024, to all shareholders of record on March 6, 2024.
Q4 Fiscal 2024 Summary
Fiscal 2024 Summary
Outlook NVIDIAâs outlook for the first quarter of fiscal 2025 is as follows:
- Revenue is expected to be $24.0 billion, plus or minus 2%.
- GAAP and non-GAAP gross margins are expected to be 76.3% and 77.0%, respectively, plus or minus 50 basis points.
- GAAP and non-GAAP operating expenses are expected to be approximately $3.5 billion and $2.5 billion, respectively.
- GAAP and non-GAAP other income and expense are expected to be an income of approximately $250 million, excluding gains and losses from non-affiliated investments.
- GAAP and non-GAAP tax rates are expected to be 17.0%, plus or minus 1%, excluding any discrete items.
NVIDIA achieved progress since its previous earnings announcement in these areas:Â
Data Center
- Fourth-quarter revenue was a record $18.4 billion, up 27% from the previous quarter and up 409% from a year ago. Full-year revenue rose 217% to a record $47.5 billion.
- Launched, in collaboration with Google, optimizations across NVIDIAâs data center and PC AI platforms for Gemma , Googleâs groundbreaking open language models.
- Expanded its strategic collaboration with Amazon Web Services to host NVIDIA Ž DGX⢠Cloud on AWS.
- Announced that Amgen will use the NVIDIA DGX SuperPOD ⢠to power insights into drug discovery, diagnostics and precision medicine.
- Announced NVIDIA NeMo⢠Retriever , a generative AI microservice that lets enterprises connect custom large language models with enterprise data to deliver highly accurate responses for AI applications.Â
- Introduced NVIDIA MONAI⢠cloud APIs to help developers and platform providers integrate AI into their medical-imaging offerings.Â
- Announced that Singtel will bring generative AI services to Singapore through energy-efficient data centers that the telco is building with NVIDIA Hopper⢠architecture GPUs.
- Introduced plans with Cisco to help enterprises quickly and easily deploy and manage secure AI infrastructure.
- Supported the National Artificial Intelligence Research Resource pilot program , a major step by the U.S. government toward a shared national research infrastructure.
- Fourth-quarter revenue was $2.9 billion, flat from the previous quarter and up 56% from a year ago. Full-year revenue rose 15% to $10.4 billion.
- Launched GeForce RTX⢠40 SUPER Series GPUs , starting at $599, which support the latest NVIDIA RTX⢠technologies, including DLSS 3.5 Ray Reconstruction and NVIDIA Reflex.
- Announced generative AI capabilities for its installed base of over 100 million RTX AI PCs, including Tensor-RT⢠LLM to accelerate inference on large language models, and Chat with RTX, a tech demo that lets users personalize a chatbot with their own content.
- Introduced microservices for the NVIDIA Avatar Cloud Engine , allowing game and application developers to integrate state-of-the-art generative AI models into non-playable characters.
- Reached the milestone of 500 AI-powered RTX games and applications utilizing NVIDIA DLSS, ray tracing and other NVIDIA RTX technologies.
Professional Visualization
- Fourth-quarter revenue was $463 million, up 11% from the previous quarter and up 105% from a year ago. Full-year revenue rose 1% to $1.6 billion.
- Announced adoption of NVIDIA Omniverse ⢠by the global automotive-configurator ecosystem.
- Announced the NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada Generation GPU , bringing the latest AI, graphics and compute technology to compact workstations.
- Fourth-quarter revenue was $281 million, up 8% from the previous quarter and down 4% from a year ago. Full-year revenue rose 21% to $1.1 billion.
- Announced further adoption of its NVIDIA DRIVE Ž platform , with Great Wall Motors, ZEEKR and Xiaomi using DRIVE Orin⢠to power intelligent automated-driving systems and Li Auto selecting DRIVE Thor⢠as its centralized car computer.
CFO Commentary Commentary on the quarter by Colette Kress, NVIDIAâs executive vice president and chief financial officer, is available at https://investor.nvidia.com .
Conference Call and Webcast Information NVIDIA will conduct a conference call with analysts and investors to discuss its fourth quarter and fiscal 2024 financial results and current financial prospects today at 2 p.m. Pacific time (5 p.m. Eastern time). A live webcast (listen-only mode) of the conference call will be accessible at NVIDIAâs investor relations website, https://investor.nvidia.com . The webcast will be recorded and available for replay until NVIDIAâs conference call to discuss its financial results for its first quarter of fiscal 2025.
Non-GAAP Measures To supplement NVIDIAâs condensed consolidated financial statements presented in accordance with GAAP, the company uses non-GAAP measures of certain components of financial performance. These non-GAAP measures include non-GAAP gross profit, non-GAAP gross margin, non-GAAP operating expenses, non-GAAP income from operations, non-GAAP other income (expense), net, non-GAAP net income, non-GAAP net income, or earnings, per diluted share, and free cash flow. For NVIDIAâs investors to be better able to compare its current results with those of previous periods, the company has shown a reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures. These reconciliations adjust the related GAAP financial measures to exclude acquisition termination costs, stock-based compensation expense, acquisition-related and other costs, IP-related costs, other, gains and losses from non-affiliated investments, interest expense related to amortization of debt discount, and the associated tax impact of these items where applicable. Free cash flow is calculated as GAAP net cash provided by operating activities less both purchases related to property and equipment and intangible assets and principal payments on property and equipment and intangible assets. NVIDIA believes the presentation of its non-GAAP financial measures enhances the userâs overall understanding of the companyâs historical financial performance. The presentation of the companyâs non-GAAP financial measures is not meant to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the companyâs financial results prepared in accordance with GAAP, and the companyâs non-GAAP measures may be different from non-GAAP measures used by other companies.
About NVIDIA Since its founding in 1993, NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been a pioneer in accelerated computing. The companyâs invention of the GPU in 1999 sparked the growth of the PC gaming market, redefined computer graphics, ignited the era of modern AI and is fueling industrial digitalization across markets. NVIDIA is now a full-stack computing infrastructure company with data-center-scale offerings that are reshaping industry. More information at https://nvidianews.nvidia.com/ .
Certain statements in this press release including, but not limited to, statements as to: demand for accelerated computing and generative AI surging worldwide across companies, industries and nations; our Data Center platform being powered by increasingly diverse drivers, including demand for data processing, training and inference from large cloud-service providers and GPU-specialized ones, as well as from enterprise software and consumer internet companies; vertical industries led by auto, financial, services and healthcare now at a multibillion-dollar level; NVIDIA RTX becoming a massive PC platform for generative AI enjoyed by 100 million gamers and creators; the year ahead bringing major new product cycles with exceptional innovations to help propel our industry forward; our upcoming conference at GTC, where we and our rich ecosystem will reveal the exciting future ahead; NVIDIAâs next quarterly cash dividend; NVIDIAâs financial outlook and expected tax rates for the first quarter of fiscal 2025; the benefits, impact, performance, features and availability of NVIDIAâs products and technologies, including NVIDIA AI platforms, NVIDIA DGX Cloud, NVIDIA DGX SuperPOD, NVIDIA NeMo Retriever, NVIDIA MONAI cloud APIs, NVIDIA Hopper architecture GPUs, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 SUPER Series GPUs, NVIDIA DLSS 3.5 Ray Reconstruction, NVIDIA Reflex, NVIDIA TensorRT-LLM, Chat with RTX, microservices for the NVIDIA Avatar Cloud Engine, NVIDIA DLSS, ray tracing and other NVIDIA RTX technologies, NVIDIA Omniverse, NVIDIA RTX 2000 Ada Generation GPU, NVIDIA DRIVE platform, NVIDIA DRIVE Orin and NVIDIA DRIVE Thor; and our collaborations with third parties are forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause results to be materially different than expectations. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially include: global economic conditions; our reliance on third parties to manufacture, assemble, package and test our products; the impact of technological development and competition; development of new products and technologies or enhancements to our existing product and technologies; market acceptance of our products or our partnersâ products; design, manufacturing or software defects; changes in consumer preferences or demands; changes in industry standards and interfaces; and unexpected loss of performance of our products or technologies when integrated into systems, as well as other factors detailed from time to time in the most recent reports NVIDIA files with the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, including, but not limited to, its annual report on Form 10-K and quarterly reports on Form 10-Q. Copies of reports filed with the SEC are posted on the companyâs website and are available from NVIDIA without charge. These forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and speak only as of the date hereof, and, except as required by law, NVIDIA disclaims any obligation to update these forward-looking statements to reflect future events or circumstances.
Š 2024 NVIDIA Corporation. All rights reserved. NVIDIA, the NVIDIA logo, GeForce, GeForce RTX, NVIDIA DGX, NVIDIA DGX SuperPOD, NVIDIA DRIVE, NVIDIA DRIVE Orin, NVIDIA DRIVE Thor, NVIDIA Hopper, NVIDIA MONAI, NVIDIA NeMo, NVIDIA Omniverse, NVIDIA RTX and TensorRT are trademarks and/or registered trademarks of NVIDIA Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries. Other company and product names may be trademarks of the respective companies with which they are associated. Features, pricing, availability and specifications are subject to change without notice.
A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/38343cb8-8bc8-42b0-aa76-e3d280ae5507
NVIDIA Corporate Offices
NVIDIA's Silicon Valley campus in Santa Clara, Calif.
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YouTube prankster invades stage during Oppenheimerâs best picture Bafta presentation
YouTuber who has a history of infiltrating awards ceremonies got on stage while the Oppenheimer team were receiving their award
A âsocial media pranksterâ invaded the stage during the best picture presentation at the Bafta film awards in London on Sunday.
Bafta said in a statement: âA social media prankster was removed by security last night after joining the winners of the final award on stage â we are taking this very seriously, and donât wish to grant him any publicity by commenting further.â
In footage screened on BBC One, the man, wearing a dark suit, walked on to the stage as Oppenheimer producer Emma Thomas was making her acceptance speech, alongside the filmâs director Christopher Nolan and lead actor Cillian Murphy. Having stood behind Thomas as she spoke, he left the stage along with the film-makers, and according to Bafta was subsequently detained by security.
Looks like @LizwaniYT broke onto stage during #Oppenheimer winning at @BAFTA #Oppenheimer #BAFTA pic.twitter.com/fWvpWGN1oC — HeWhoGeeks (@he_who_geeks) February 19, 2024
The prankster was identified on social media as a YouTuber using the name Lizwani; the same user posted on Instagram that police had taken some of his footage away. Lizwani has a history of infiltrating awards ceremonies, including the Fifa Ballon dâOr and Brit awards in 2022.
While Bafta has been spared stage invasions in the past, the Oscars has had its share, notably the celebrated appearance of a streaker in 1974, while David Niven was about to introduce another presenter.
Bafta reports that the audience for the TV broadcast of the awards show was the highest since 2020, rising to 3.8 million at its peak.
- Baftas 2024
- Oppenheimer
- Christopher Nolan
- Cillian Murphy
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In this article, we'll highlight how to make a PowerPoint presentation from a research paper, and what to include (as well as what NOT to include). We'll also touch on how to present a research paper at a conference. Purpose of a Research Paper Presentation
Step 1: Read the text Step 2: Break the text down into sections Step 3: Identify the key points in each section Step 4: Write the summary Step 5: Check the summary against the article Other interesting articles Frequently asked questions about summarizing When to write a summary
How to Summarize a Research Article Research articles use a standard format to clearly communicate information about an experiment. A research article usually has seven major sections: Title, Abstract, Introduction, Method, Results, Discussion, and References. Determine your focus
5. Scan the argument. Continue reading through the various segments of the journal article, highlighting main points discussed by the authors. Focus on key concepts and ideas that have been proposed, trying to connect them back to that main idea the authors have put forward in the beginning of the article.
Writing an article SUMMARY When writing a summary, the goal is to compose a concise and objective overview of the original article. The summary should focus only on the article's main ideas and important details that support those ideas. Guidelines for summarizing an article: State the main ideas.
Tip #1: Include less text and more visuals in your presentation design. According to David Paradi's annual presentation survey, the 3 things that annoy audiences most about presentations are: Speakers reading their slides. Slides that include full sentences of text. Text that is too small to read.
In this article, Anderson, TED's curator, shares five keys to great presentations: Frame your story (figure out where to start and where to end). Plan your delivery (decide whether to memorize ...
Writing a summary of lengthy videos, articles, documents, interviews, and presentations is one method to help everyone get all the important information in a clear and concise way. However, condensing all information into a few paragraphs (or one page) isn't an easy task. Here's the process I follow to summarize presentations in a few paragraphs.
What's more, article summaries are a time-saving technique that can be used when: Writing the last part of an article. Writing a review of a book. When getting ready for a presentation in class. When conducting research for a project. When getting ready for an interview. When preparing for a test. When writing a blog post.
Five key steps that can help you to write a summary. Read the text. Break it down into sections. Identify the key points in each section. Simplify the sentences. Step 1. Read the text. To ensure that you fully comprehend the material, read it more than once. Three levels of reading are frequently useful:
Here are a few tips for business professionals who want to move from being good speakers to great ones: be concise (the fewer words, the better); never use bullet points (photos and images paired ...
1 Understand what an article review is. An article review is written for an audience who is knowledgeable in the subject instead of a general audience. When writing an article review, you will summarize the main ideas, arguments, positions, and findings, and then critique the article's contributions to the field and overall effectiveness. [2]
Identify the important ideas and facts. To help you summarize and analyze your argumentative texts, your articles, your scientific texts, your history texts as well as your well-structured analyses work of art, Resoomer provides you with a "Summary text tool" : an educational tool that identifies and summarizes the important ideas and facts of ...
1. Insert, paste or download your text 2. Pick the way you want to summarize 3. Adjust your summary length 4. Get your summary in seconds!
In this article, we will explore the importance of a summary slide in PowerPoint presentations, how to plan and design an effective summary slide, and some best practices and tips for creating an engaging and informative summary slide. Table of Contents The Importance of a Summary Slide in PowerPoint Presentations
Articles Work/professional emails Technical and white papers SUMMARIZE NOW How does AI-summarizer work? Whether you are reading an academic article or a business report or a blog, you may want to go through the text fast. Intellippt provides a brief summary with bullet points, so that you can go through the content very fast. Academic Article
Article Summarizer - Scholarcy Extract key information from research papers with our AI summarizer. Get a snapshot of what matters - fast. Break down complex concepts into easy-to-read sections. Skim or dive deep with a clean reading experience. Try for free Summarize, analyze, and organize your research in one place.
Article Metadata Extraction. TLDR This, the online article summarizer tool, not only condenses lengthy articles into shorter, digestible content, but it also automatically extracts essential metadata such as author and date information, related images, and the title. Additionally, it estimates the reading time for news articles and blog posts ...
Copilot in PowerPoint can read through the deck and give you a bulleted summary so you can understand the key points. Select the Copilot button from the ribbon. The Copilot pane opens on the right side of your screen. Type Summarize this presentation in the prompt field and send it.
Tips For Summarizing A Presentation. Summarizing a presentation can be a challenge, but there are a few tips that can help make it easier. 1. Identify The Main Points. The first step in summarizing a presentation is to identify the main points. Take a few moments to review the presentation and identify the key points and takeaways.
A summary is a short and direct statement or restatement of the main points of a book, an article/story, a presentation, or a discussion/event. It includes only the essential details of the original material. A summary gives readers a quick and easy-to-understand preview of longer and more complex text.
Step 1: Open your PowerPoint presentation. Step 2: Click on the "File" tab in the top-left corner of the PowerPoint window. Step 3: In the drop-down menu, click on "Save As". Step 4: In ...
Summarize any text with a click of a button. QuillBot's Summarizer can condense articles, papers, or documents down to the key points instantly. Our AI uses natural language processing to locate critical information while maintaining the original context. đŞ AI-powered.
Reference article. This is a summary article; read more in our article on intracerebral hemorrhage.. Summary. epidemiology. common, and accounts for 20% of stroke overall 1, although is more common in Asian countries. the other 80% is ischemic stroke. a leading cause of disability. presentation
Capital One was the nation's fourth-largest credit card issuer last year, with $122.9 billion in outstanding receivable payments, and Discover was the nation's sixth largest with $94 billion ...
This review summarizes the recent developments in NHC-catalyzed transformations where the fluorine-containing groups are introduced using fluorinating and fluoroalkylating reagents. These fluorination and fluoroalkylation transformations are illustrated from three major aspects based on the different properties of the reagents.
Q4 Fiscal 2024 Summary. GAAP ($ in millions, except earnings ... The presentation of the company's non-GAAP financial measures is not meant to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the company's financial results prepared in accordance with GAAP, and the company's non-GAAP measures may be different from non-GAAP measures used ...
A "social media prankster" invaded the stage during the best picture presentation at the Bafta film awards in London on Sunday. Bafta said in a statement: "A social media prankster was ...