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Why would someone want to present their thesis in three minutes?
Author(s) -
Czarina Evangelista
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
neuroanatomy and behaviour
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2652-1768
DOI - 10.35430/nab.2019.e5
Subject(s) - presentation (obstetrics) , event (particle physics) , competition (biology) , visual arts , center (category theory) , psychology , media studies , public relations , mathematics education , sociology , political science , art , medicine , ecology , chemistry , physics , quantum mechanics , biology , radiology , crystallography
The three-minute thesis (3MT) competition was founded in the Univeristy of Queensland in 2008, and has since spread globally. The goal of the event is for graduate students to present their research to a non-specialist audience with no props and only one non-animated slide. To top it all off, this presentation must be under three minutes! Why would someone want to do take on this challenge? Czarina Evangelista is a PhD student at Concordia Univeristy's Center for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, and she explains the motivation behind her participation and what she learned from the experience.

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