Multiple Posters, Same Conference

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.hematoma.

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I was recently accepted to a conference for some independent research I did with a doctor, for a poster presentation. My colleagues who I did another research project with submitted that project to the same conference and it was accepted.

Do I put both poster presentations on the resume, since I'm an author of both and will be at the conference, or only the poster I will actually be standing next to during the conference? Thanks 🙂
 
I was recently accepted to a conference for some independent research I did with a doctor, for a poster presentation. My colleagues who I did another research project with submitted that project to the same conference and it was accepted.

Do I put both poster presentations on the resume, since I'm an author of both and will be at the conference, or only the poster I will actually be standing next to during the conference? Thanks 🙂

Both.
 
Both count. It's the same as having two papers, one after the other, in a journal. I've had colleagues who submit 5-10 posters to a single conference!

I was recently accepted to a conference for some independent research I did with a doctor, for a poster presentation. My colleagues who I did another research project with submitted that project to the same conference and it was accepted.

Do I put both poster presentations on the resume, since I'm an author of both and will be at the conference, or only the poster I will actually be standing next to during the conference? Thanks 🙂
 
For ERAS purposes, only the one you're standing next to should be listed as a poster; the other one goes to research experiences.
 
For ERAS purposes, only the one you're standing next to should be listed as a poster; the other one goes to research experiences.
really???
 
No, ignore that guy.

Posters are posters. Presentations are presentations. Even if you weren't the guy up there doing the presentation, you still list it as a presentation on your ERAS/CV.

Damn, I personally agree with you but this is so controversial on SDN it's not even funny. I've seen so many posts about this topic it's like split 50/50 on here between people saying write it as a presentation or only put presentation if you gave the presentation, otherwise list as on abstract.
 
Damn, I personally agree with you but this is so controversial on SDN it's not even funny. I've seen so many posts about this topic it's like split 50/50 on here between people saying write it as a presentation or only put presentation if you gave the presentation, otherwise list as on abstract.

There is no controversy. Even if you didn't present it, it still goes under posters. It's your choice who you listen to but I'd go with the people who have gone through eras successfully, not some random med student
 
There is no controversy. Even if you didn't present it, it still goes under posters. It's your choice who you listen to but I'd go with the people who have gone through eras successfully, not some random med student

Lol, I've been on here a long time, the people I was talking about are not med students, they are faculty at academic institutions that firmly believe that if you didn't present, you don't get to put presentation. I'll def still be putting presentation though for things I personally don't present, just wanted to present both viewpoints.
 
Feel free to link it so we can see what you're talking about. None of the places that interviewed me seemed to have a problem with it
 
Hmm I'm glad this has sparked a discussion, because there are other controversies I feel arise from this. What about poster presentations that I was not present at, but am an author for? This is different from my original question, I know, but this has also recently come up for me. @Psai ?
 
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