MPCR Poster Preview — Your Poster Title Goes Here | View Project
Your Poster Title Goes Here
First Author1, Second Author1, Faculty Advisor1
Advisor: Advisor Name, Ph.D.
Machine Perception and Cognitive Robotics Laboratory — Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, FL
MPCR Lab
Introduction

Describe the problem you are investigating and why it matters.

Key Question: What is the central research question?

Motivation: Why is this important? What gap does it fill?

Tips

  • Keep it concise — 3-4 short paragraphs
  • State your hypothesis or research goal clearly
  • Use bold text for emphasis
Background

Summarize the relevant prior work and context.

Prior Approaches: What has been tried before?

Limitations: What gaps remain in existing work?

Our Contribution: How does your work differ?

Tips

  • Cite key references (use numbers like [1], [2])
  • Explain technical terms your audience may not know
Methods

Describe your approach, experimental setup, or algorithm.

Data

  • What data did you use? How was it collected?
  • How large is the dataset?

Approach

  1. Step one of your method
  2. Step two of your method
  3. Step three of your method

Tips

  • Use numbered lists for sequential steps
  • Include equations if relevant
  • Describe your evaluation metrics
Results

Present your findings with data.

Key Findings

  • Finding 1: describe with numbers
  • Finding 2: describe with numbers
  • Finding 3: describe with numbers
Metric Baseline Your Method Improvement
Accuracy 0.85 0.92 +8.2%
Speed 100ms 35ms 2.9x faster
Size 450MB 52MB 8.7x smaller

Tips

  • Use tables for quantitative comparisons
  • Highlight your best results in bold
  • Include error bars or confidence intervals
Conclusion

Summarize what you found and why it matters.

Summary

  • Main finding 1
  • Main finding 2
  • Main finding 3

Future Work

  • What would you do next?
  • What questions remain open?
References
  1. Author A, Author B. “Paper Title.” Journal Name, Year.
  2. Author C, Author D. “Another Paper.” Conference Name, Year.
  3. Author E. “Book Title.” Publisher, Year.
Acknowledgments: Replace this with your acknowledgments. Include funding sources, computing resources, and anyone who helped with the research.