Student Portal
Making a Research Poster
Poster presentations are typically displayed in a 4 x 4 foot area (on a 4 x 8 foot poster board) so your poster can be in any format that will fit in your assigned area. A standard poster size that can easily print on most large format printers is 3ft x 4ft.
You may tile 8.5 x 11" sheets or print on a large format printer.
Gordon-CenSSIS posters should have the title and contributors in the largest font possible, the Gordon-CenSSIS logo and the following language:
""This work was supported in part by Gordon-CenSSIS, The Bernard M. Gordon Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems, under the Engineering Research Centers Program of the National Science Foundation (Award Number EEC-9986821)."
Topics Each Poster Presentation Should Cover:
- Brief Abstract of the Research Project
- State of the Art - How does your work advance the State of the Art in any or all of the thrust areas, and/or system application areas?
- Challenges and Significance
- Technical Approach
- Accomplishments up through Current Year
- Opportunities for Technology Transfer - What are the next steps for development and/or testing to prove concepts or demonstrate results? Use this section of your poster to highlight the quality of your research and to explain its relevance to current technology. If you can, demonstrate a pathway from your research to a viable commercial opportunity.
- Gordon-CenSSIS Three Level Diagram completed for your project - Circle or mark the appropriate C-level(s), F-level(s), T-level(s), R-level(s), TestBED(s), or S-Area(s) that your project will impact, if any.
- Publications acknowledging NSF Support for Gordon-CenSSIS posters.
- Other References
- Contact Info