Structural study of the presentation.
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- Nakagawa Ayaka
- Canon Marketing Japan Inc.
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- Ashizawa Yusuke
- Shibaura Institute of Technology
Bibliographic Information
- Other Title
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- プレゼンテーションの構成に関する研究
Abstract
<p>This study aimed to extract the know-how to make more attractive presentations. We hypothesized that in presentations that are considered good, there may be an unconscious conversation between the presenter and the audience. As a result, we found that unconscious conversations were established in many cases in presentations with high evaluations, while in presentations with low evaluations, there were many questions that were not established as conversations or questions that did not generate questions or responses in the first place, etc. It was also found that the timing when unconscious conversation was established was when the listener's question was resolved by the presenter's statement. Furthermore, it was found that it is likely to be effective to first analyze one's own proposal before creating a presentation and classify it into four categories: "what we can do," "what we designed," "what we wanted to do," and "problems/challenges.</p>
Journal
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- PROCEEDINGS OF THE ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF JSSD
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PROCEEDINGS OF THE ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF JSSD 70 (0), 380-, 2023
Japanese Society for the Science of Design
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Keywords
Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390298444167479680
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- Text Lang
- ja
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
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- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed