Poster templates
Bildmakarna and the Communication Department at KI provide templates that follow KI's graphic guidelines. You can find them in both PowerPoint and InDesign format.
The University Library provides general support in visualisation. At the library you will also find Bildmakarna, our photographers and film makers who can be hired to perform various types of visual presentations.
Illustration by David S. Goodsell, RCSB Protein Data Bank; doi: 10.2210/rcsb_pdb/goodsell-gallery-019
Bildmakarna and the Communication Department at KI provide templates that follow KI's graphic guidelines. You can find them in both PowerPoint and InDesign format.
Your scientific poster is a showcase for your research and thus it must be eye-catching and straightforward. You only have seconds, or at best a few minutes, to attract the visitor's attention to your particular poster.
There are many different resources for creating visualisations. Here we address some of these and their strengths.
Being able to create a visual summary of the key findings of an article is becoming more and more important. The summary is usually comprised of a single image designed to help the reader to quickly identify the relevance of the written material.
The University Library’s free, open online course on research data visualisation provides you with a basic introduction to the field. Through case studies and practical exercises, you will learn to graphically represent and communicate data in an effective and accessible way.