Structural Analysis Person One M D and Person

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Structural Analysis Person One ‡ M. D. and Person Two § Ph. D. ‡Surgical

Structural Analysis Person One ‡ M. D. and Person Two § Ph. D. ‡Surgical Planning Laboratory, Brigham and Women’s Hospital §Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Overview Put the overview of theme here. Pick one eye-catching image that most represents your work and place it to the right. Notice how this “big picture” idea stands out from the rest of the poster text, attracting would-be browsers and making a quick scan of the material easier. Don’t put too much text here: stick to high-level motivation, concepts, findings, or conclusions. Resize this text box, gray background, and image to fit your content. Move them down as a unit if you need to fit more credits in the header. Notice that the border on the right of this text block visually continues into the section below. Try to maintain it; it helps tie the whole poster together. Also try to keep the left edges of this text, the title, and the content below aligned. Project 1 Support Select one project from the progress report and use these smaller spaces below the overview to describe details of. We use a two column asymmetric format here, but you can use whatever works for you. Just try to maintain the width of the left and right margins to be consistent with the header and overview above. This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health, Roadmap Initiative for Bioinformatics and Computational Biology under grant ID 1 -U 54 EB 005149. For more information, see http: //www. bisti. nih. gov/ncbc If you need to add more sponsor or affiliation logos, make them small and put them beside NA-MIC. Again, try to avoid using too much text: visitors will want to read your text and will be distracted from listening to you. For many real posters, for example, this text would be too wordy. When in doubt, use more pictures that you can point to while speaking. This sample poster uses Arial as a font (sans serif fonts are easier to read at a distance). The overview is 32 pt, while this text is 28 pt. The line spacing is 1 line, the space before and after 0. 2 lines. Headers are 44 pt. Project 2 Notice that the margins between this text and the picture to the left is pretty small: it helps associate the text with the image. Do not try to cheat by making your fonts much smaller so that you can fit more text or equations into the space. Small text cannot be read at a comfortable conversation distance. This poster is not meant to be a substitute for a published paper: it is a teaser to get people more familiar and more interested in your work. http: //www. na-mic. org http: //wiki. na-mic. org