Poster Session Discussion
Researchers stand by their scientific posters, explaining their findings and engaging in in-depth discussions with interested colleagues.
Dialogue
Listen and follow along with the conversation
Vocabulary
Essential words and phrases from the dialogue
glioblastoma
A type of aggressive brain cancer that grows quickly. It's a medical term used in discussions about brain tumors.
targeted therapies
Medical treatments designed to attack specific parts of cancer cells, like using smart drugs to fight the disease without harming healthy cells.
progression-free survival
In medical research, this means the length of time patients live without their disease getting worse after treatment.
statistically significant
A term from research meaning the results are real and not just by chance; it's important for proving a treatment works.
adverse events
Unwanted or harmful effects that happen during medical treatment, like side effects from drugs.
methodology
The methods or steps used in a study or research to get reliable results; useful when discussing how work was done.
cutting-edge
Describes the latest and most advanced technology or research; often used to praise innovative work in science.
Key Sentences
Important phrases to remember and practice
Welcome! Thanks for stopping by my poster.
This is a polite greeting to welcome someone to your display in a professional event like a conference. Use it to start a conversation warmly. It uses simple present tense for thanks.
Could you walk me through your primary findings?
A polite way to ask for a detailed explanation of main results. 'Walk me through' means to guide step by step. Useful in meetings or discussions to show interest; it's a request using 'could' for politeness.
We observed a statistically significant improvement in progression-free survival.
This reports a key research result, using past tense 'observed' to describe what was seen. It's useful for presenting data in science talks; 'statistically significant' adds credibility to the finding.
Did you encounter any unexpected adverse events?
A question to ask about problems or side effects in a study. 'Encounter' means to come across; use this in professional discussions to probe deeper. It's a yes/no question in past tense.
These were generally manageable with topical treatments.
This explains how side effects were handled, using passive voice 'were manageable' to focus on the situation. Useful for describing solutions in reports; 'generally' means usually or mostly.
Thank you for taking the time to explain it so thoroughly.
A way to show appreciation after someone shares information. 'Taking the time' means using effort; use this to end conversations politely in professional settings. It highlights thoroughness with 'so thoroughly.'