2801 unit 11: knowledge translation Flashcards

1
Q

what is knowledge translation

A

dynamic and iterative process that includes synthesis, dissemination, exchange, and an ethically sounding application of knowledge

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2
Q

what is synthesis?

A

the research you produce

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3
Q

what is dissemination?

A

conference presentation and publication

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4
Q

a conference is a presentation

A

true

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5
Q

what is the purpose of a conference

A

networking and getting feedback

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6
Q

structure of a conference

A
  • plenary session with a keynote speaker
  • concurrent sessions of oral presentations
  • poster sessions
  • exhibitions
  • business meetings
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7
Q

how to be a part of a conference

A
  • conduct good research
  • find a conference interested in YOUR research
  • submit an abstract
  • respect all requirements (due date, word count)
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8
Q

which step is the most important in becoming a part of the conference

A

conducting good research

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9
Q

t/f? in a poster presentation the design and aesthetic is equally as important as the content

A

true

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10
Q

true or false? you should have 5+ citations in a poster

A

fale… no more than 5

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11
Q

things a poster should include

A

Title
Author information
Intro
Methods
Results (3)
Conclusions
References and acknowledgements

these are not formal

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12
Q

oral presentation

A

using computer slides to guide a talk and provide visual info to the audience

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13
Q

3 tules to follow in oral presentation

A
  • highlight key messages in only a few words
  • use images as often as possible
  • dont read off the slides
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14
Q

content in an oral presentation

A

opening lines, message, phrasing, flow, closing lines
COMFP
“could Olly make fried potatoes”

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15
Q

voice in an oral presentation

A

volume, pitch, enunciation, pronunciation, fillers
VEFPP
“very excited for perfect pie”

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16
Q

performance in an oral presentation

A

Engagement, posture, delivery, movement, technology
TEMPD
“turn every moment positive daily”

17
Q

how do scientists communicate publicly with each other

A

through publishing in peer reviewed journals

18
Q

3 reasons why we have to publish

A
  1. unpublished research is nonexistent research
  2. direct professional benefits for researchers
  3. respect for time and efforts of participants and collaborators
19
Q

the peer review process

A
  • time consuming and can be disappointing
  • an opportunity for expert and constructive feedback
20
Q

what is the best opportunity to get feedback

A

peer review

21
Q

Responding to suggestions from reviewers and editors requires authors to

A

UBRR: understand, balance, rewrite, recover
(u)nderstand appreciate different persepctives
(b)balance conflicting sets of advice
(r)ewrite the parts of the paper that were confusing to reviewers
(r)ecover from negative comments and be resilient

22
Q

the scope

A

subject areas the publication covers

23
Q

audience

A

readership the publication intends to reach

24
Q

subscription journal

A

covers its costs from library and/or individual subscriptions and advertising and does not charge any author fees
- Most articles are placed behind a paywal

25
Q

open access journal

A

mandates that authors pay a publication fee (sometimes several thousand dollars!) before their manuscripts are published
- The content of these journals is freely available to readers on the Internet

26
Q

hybrid journal

A

option of paying to make an article freely available to all

27
Q

target journal

A

the journal a researcher intends to submit a manuscript to first

28
Q

double blind peer review process

A

the reviewer’s do not know the identity of the authors and the authors do not learn the identity of the reviewer’s

29
Q

single blind peer review process

A

the reviewers are provided with the authors names, but authors are not given reviewer’s names

30
Q

data sharing

A

willingness of a research team to make their data and methods freely available to other researchers

31
Q

copyright

A

The legal rights assigned to the owners of intellectual property such as written and artistic works

32
Q

Authors require to assign the copyright for a manuscript to the publisher before their articles are published

A

true

33
Q

Creative Commons lisence

A

a public copyright license that enables the free distribution of a copyrighted work

34
Q

Predatory (open access) journals

A

An exploit that does not provide the quality editorial and peer review services associated with legitimate journals