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Project Presentation Points

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Shreya Kadale
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views2 pages

Project Presentation Points

Uploaded by

Shreya Kadale
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Structure of the presentation

1. Title Slide

●​ Title: Concise and descriptive title of your project.


●​ Name: Your name and roll number.
●​ Guide : Name(s) of your project supervisor(s).
●​ Institution: Your department, college, and university.

2. Abstract

●​ Provide overview of project, purpose, methodology, key findings, and


conclusions.

3. Introduction

●​ Background: Introduce the broad context and background of your research area.
●​ Problem Statement: Clearly define the specific problem or research gap that your
project addresses.
●​ Motivation: Explain why problem is important and real-world significance of work.

4. Literature Review

●​ Summarize existing research and highlight how your project builds upon or
differs from previous work.
●​ Present a comparison of key works in a table to show how your work fits into the
existing landscape.
5. Methodology

●​ Explain approach you took to conduct your research and develop your solution.
●​ Research Approach: Describe the overall strategy (e.g., experimental, design,
implementation).
●​ Tools and Technologies: List the software, frameworks, and languages you used.
●​ System Architecture: Use flowcharts and diagrams to illustrate the design and
components of your system.
●​ Algorithms: If applicable, explain the specific algorithms you used.

6. Results and Analysis

●​ Present your findings clearly, using visuals to make your data easy to understand.
●​ Visual Aids: Incorporate graphs, charts, tables, and screenshots of your
application's output to demonstrate key functions.
●​ Interpretation: Explain what results address research questions.
●​ Discussion: Compare your results with the existing literature and discuss their
implications.

7. Contribution to the Field

●​ Highlight the new knowledge or practical value your project provides.


●​ Innovation: Explain what makes your project unique or how it improves on
existing solutions.
●​ Impact: Discuss the potential real-world impact of your work.

8. Conclusion and Future Work

9. References and Acknowledgements

●​ References: List all the research papers, books, and online resources you used.

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