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Communication in Computer Science

Planning your talk

Olivier Danvy

version of 05 Dec 2015 at 11:30

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 0 / 28

The point

You have to give a talk:

• scientific (seminar, retreat, or conference);

• interview (post-doc, job);

• other (oral exam / PhD defense, teaching,

administrative meeting, lunch / dinner).

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 1 / 28

Commonalities

You are the speaker.

You have an audience

You want to transmit an information.

You use a medium:• your voice;

• your body language;

• a black/white/active board;

• slides.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 2 / 28

Specifics

The information is new to the audience:

• scientific talk;

• teaching;

• administrative meeting.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 3 / 28

Specifics

The information is new to the audience:

• scientific talk;

• teaching;

• administrative meeting.

The information is known to the audience:

• oral exam.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 3 / 28

Information and meta-information

Interview talk: you want to express that

• you are well-rounded, and

• you have potential.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 4 / 28

Why giving a good talk?

• Positively:

to do justice to your topic.

• Non-negatively:

to not waste your audience’s brain cycles.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 5 / 28

Before the talk: what to say

Assumption: you have a message.

• A thesis.

• A refutation.

• A theorem or a corollary.

• An idea.

• A report (implementation, benchmarks).

• A tutorial.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 6 / 28

The content of the talk

• Think backwards: what do you want people

to remember from your talk?

• Don’t say everything.

• Simplify.

Rumour: people can only remember

5 new things from a talk.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 7 / 28

Debunking the rumour

People remember very little from your talk.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 8 / 28

Debunking the rumour

People remember very little from your talk.

• Your audience is at PhD level and beyond.

• They are trained professionals.

• They take notes.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 8 / 28

Debunking the rumour

People remember very little from your talk.

• Your audience is at PhD level and beyond.

• They are trained professionals.

• They take notes.

Their challenge is the 49 other talks that day.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 8 / 28

Debunking the rumour

People remember very little from your talk.

• Your audience is at PhD level and beyond.

• They are trained professionals.

• They take notes.

Their challenge is the 49 other talks that day.

Do not underestimate your audience.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 8 / 28

Debunking the rumour

People remember very little from your talk.

• Your audience is at PhD level and beyond.

• They are trained professionals.

• They take notes.

Their challenge is the 49 other talks that day.

Help your audience get your message.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 8 / 28

Rules of thumb

Of course rules are made to be broken,

but still: be aware of

• which message you want to send, and

• what you want your audience to remember.

Make at least one point comprehensively.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 9 / 28

Have a compelling example

An example makes your audience

aware of your contribution.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 10 / 28

Have a compelling example

An example makes your audience

aware of your contribution.

(But your audience is still passive.)

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 10 / 28

Have a compelling example

An example makes your audience

aware of your contribution.

(But your audience is still passive.)

Then it is up to you to make them

appreciate your contribution.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 10 / 28

Have a compelling example

An example makes your audience

aware of your contribution.

(But your audience is still passive.)

Then it is up to you to make them

appreciate your contribution.

(Now your audience is active.)

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 10 / 28

A personal anecdote?

You are too young to do that, but:

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 11 / 28

A personal anecdote?

You are too young to do that, but:

• Only if it helps your message.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 11 / 28

A personal anecdote?

You are too young to do that, but:

• Only if it helps your message.

• Never at the expense of others.

“Looking down on others does not elevate you.”

– Albus Dumbledore

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 11 / 28

A personal anecdote?

You are too young to do that, but:

• Only if it helps your message.

• Never at the expense of others.

• Only if it doesn’t break confidentiality.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 11 / 28

Before the talk: how to say it

Use all the help you can round up, e.g., slides.

Alternatives include:

• passive demo (film);

• interactive demo (always risky).

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 12 / 28

What is the point of a slide?

Like the light of Earendil,

it supports and guides your talk

(for those lecture halls can be so dark).

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 13 / 28

What is the point of a slide?

Like the light of Earendil,

it supports and guides your talk

(for those lecture halls can be so dark).

So try to cooperate with your slides!

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 13 / 28

Writing slides

Non-goal: editing or writing the slides upfront.

Danger:

• atomic and linear view;

• irrelevant formatting concerns.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 14 / 28

Active goal: the comic strip

Assemble your future slides

on a hand-drawn comic strip:

• it gives you an overview (1 to 2 pages);

• you can’t write too much on each slide;

So be telegraphic rather than literary.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 15 / 28

Active means: the plan (1/2)

Planning is not like playing with LEGO bricks.

It reflects your understanding,

and thus it evolves with time.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 16 / 28

Active means: the plan (1/2)

Planning is not like playing with LEGO bricks.

It reflects your understanding,

and thus it evolves with time.

You should not plan your talk

in the same chronological order

as you carried out your research.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 16 / 28

Active means: the plan (2/2)

You probably chose

a logical plan

for the paper.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 17 / 28

Active means: the plan (2/2)

You probably chose

a logical plan

for the paper.

Choose a pedagogical plan

for the presentation

(i.e., one adapted to the audience,

the duration of the talk, etc.).

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 17 / 28

Pedagogy at work

So you will have several versions of your talk:

• one for your research group,

• one for your department, maybe,

• one for the conference, and

• one for each lab you will visit

after the conference,

for reheated dishes don’t taste that good.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 18 / 28

An analogy

Classical musicians, by training,

and Stevie Wonder, who has an absolute ear,

always “give the same talk.”

Modern musicians (blues, rock, jazz, etc.)

virtually never “give the same talk.”

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 (source: Wikipedia and samanthafish.com) 19 / 28

An analogy

Classical musicians, by training,

and Stevie Wonder, who has an absolute ear,

always “give the same talk.”

Modern musicians (blues, rock, jazz, etc.)

virtually never “give the same talk.”

Which kind of musican are you?

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 (source: Wikipedia and samanthafish.com) 19 / 28

In the beginning, there is your title

Dare to start by explaining your title.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 20 / 28

In the beginning, there is your title

Dare to start by explaining your title.

And dare to take the time to do so.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 20 / 28

Pictures?

Only if they support your message.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 21 / 28

Only pictures?

No: the slides are a support for your talk,

not something cryptic, symbolic, or mystical.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 22 / 28

Only pictures?

No: the slides are a support for your talk,

not something cryptic, symbolic, or mystical.

Plus, nobody will understand your accent...

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 22 / 28

Only pictures?

No: the slides are a support for your talk,

not something cryptic, symbolic, or mystical.

Plus, nobody will understand your accent...

They should at least understand your slides!

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 22 / 28

Visual design?

Only if you have educated visual artistry.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 (source: tumblr, uncredited) 23 / 28

Plus, you are a geek, and so are they

Your audience uses the same software.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 24 / 28

Plus, you are a geek, and so are they

Your audience uses the same software.

So they know how you did your artistry,

and that is super-distracting.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 24 / 28

Subliminals?

Of course no.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 25 / 28

No. Subliminals?

No, no, no.

Not a chance.

Of course no. No.

Non.

Don’t even think about it.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 Seriously. It’s a bad idea. 25 / 28

Thinking out of the box

Real audience participation?

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 26 / 28

Thinking out of the box

Real audience participation?

No: you want to stay in control.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 26 / 28

Thinking out of the box

Real audience participation?

No: you want to stay in control.

Fake audience participation?

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 26 / 28

Thinking out of the box

Real audience participation?

No: you want to stay in control.

Fake audience participation?

Only if it contributes to your message.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 26 / 28

Thinking out of the box

Real audience participation?

No: you want to stay in control.

Fake audience participation?

Only if it contributes to your message.

A theater play?

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 26 / 28

Thinking out of the box

Real audience participation?

No: you want to stay in control.

Fake audience participation?

Only if it contributes to your message.

A theater play?

Only for the pros.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 26 / 28

Summary

• Your talk: your way to deliver your message.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 27 / 28

Summary

• Your talk: your way to deliver your message.

• So plan your talk so that it delivers.

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 27 / 28

Exercise

Outline a talk based on

• who is your audience and

• what is your message.

What will you include in your talk

that will make it effective?

Olivier Danvy, 2015-09-28 28 / 28

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