Can I add this reseach to my CV?

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kdburton

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I did a block of research a little while ago and worked on a project start to finish with a resident. He put my name on a poster that he presented and has submitted abstracts with my name on it as well. Is the poster fair game for my CV even if I wasn't physically there to present it (although it was a result of my work)? Pardon me if this is a stupid question.
 
Your name on it = you're part of it regardless of who presented it= goes on CV

Not a stupid question. A lot of people wonder about this. I got this info from a former research mentor.
 
It should go in the "congress proceedings and abstracts" section of your CV. If it was presented as an abstract and poster at the same conference, it should go under just one heading.

If it was awarded a podium talk, that should be noted separately, even if you did not give the podium talk.
 
It should go in the "congress proceedings and abstracts" section of your CV. If it was presented as an abstract and poster at the same conference, it should go under just one heading.

If it was awarded a podium talk, that should be noted separately, even if you did not give the podium talk.

How should you distinguish the podium/paper talks from just regular posters that were presented?

I'm wondering what type of headings I should have on my CV for my research stuff.
 
It should go in the "congress proceedings and abstracts" section of your CV. If it was presented as an abstract and poster at the same conference, it should go under just one heading.

If it was awarded a podium talk, that should be noted separately, even if you did not give the podium talk.

Is there a website or something I can go to and reference more of this type of information in the future? Or how did you figure it out? Thank you
 
Is there a website or something I can go to and reference more of this type of information in the future? Or how did you figure it out? Thank you

one thing you can do is look at the CVs of faculty members (often posted on websites) and get a feel for how they are organized. Most follow a similar outline/format.
 
This absolutely should go on your CV. Make sure you keep a copy of the text of the poster and the info on the project. It will likely come up at a residency interview down the line, and you'll feel more comfortable having reviewed it before your interviews so you aren't stumbling through the basic findings of the project.

Oh and congrats by the way on getting your work out there.
 
This absolutely should go on your CV. Make sure you keep a copy of the text of the poster and the info on the project. It will likely come up at a residency interview down the line, and you'll feel more comfortable having reviewed it before your interviews so you aren't stumbling through the basic findings of the project.

Oh and congrats by the way on getting your work out there.

What do you guys think of posters that were presented at institutional research days or research days held locally? Should those be on a CV too?
 
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