Annual Events
MedScholars Orientation (September 30, 2009)
Medical Student Research Symposium (May, 2010)
Western Student Medical Research Forum (1/27/10-1/30/10)
MedScholars Orientation
Do you have questions about:
- conducting a Medical Scholars project?
- conducting a Medical Scholars project that involves travel?
- ...anything else related to student research?
First-year students (all medical students are welcome) in the School of Medicine are encouraged to attend the MedScholars Orientation offered each Autumn quarter.
E-mail specific questions to Dr. Baker (Director of the Scholarly Concentrations), Mara Violanti (Scholarly Concentrations Program Administrator), or Chris Cueva (MedScholars Program Coordinator) regarding what you would like answered regarding how to map out your personal curriculum plan or on how to get started in research within or outside of Stanford. You can also review our list of frequently asked questions about research.
Medical Student Research Symposium
26th Annual Medical Student Research Symposium Booklet
25th Annual Medical Student Research Symposium Booklet
24th Annual Medical Student Research Symposium Booklet
The 27th Annual Stanford Medical Student Research Symposium will be held:
May, 2010 |
This Symposium is less structured and formal than other research conferences in order to encourage as many medical students as possible to communicate the research part of their educational program that is often not shared with their peers.
Research can be in progress or finished; must have a Stanford faculty advisor; and may be a part of an outside fellowship (e.g. Howard Hughes, Sarnoff, etc), internal fellowship (Medical Scholars), research assistantship, MD/PhD program, or Directed Research.
Research presented at this Symposium can be presented and published elsewhere.
Medical Student Research Symposium - Application Deadline
MONDAY, APRIL 5, 2010 at 5pm
Interested students will submit their Abstract via an e-mail to Mara Violanti (marav@stanford.edu) more info will be e-mailed. Please attach the cover sheet to help the committee plan best categorize your poster.
2009 Symposium Committee
- Scholarly Concentrations:
Loren Baker, Director of the Scholarly Concentration Program
Patricia C. Cross, Assoc. Dean for Med Student Research & Scholarship Advising
Mara Violanti, Scholarly Concentrations Program Administrator
Chris Cueva, Medical Scholars Program Coordinator - Medical Students: Alana Frost, Matthew Goldstein, Gene Ma, Sarah Nelson, Wendy Pang, Sarah Pickard, Judy Yeh
Medical Student Research Abstract Preparation
- Title – List in BOLD CAPS.
- Authors – List the first name, middle initial, and last name of all authors. List your name in bold and indicate the Stanford faculty advisor with whom you conducted research by underlining his/her name.
- Departments – List all Departments represented
- Arrangement – Use three paragraphs. In general, the paragraph content should be:
First paragraph: general statement of the research topic, including two-to-three sentence background, objective, and approach (the methods can be in the second paragraph also)
Second paragraph: research findings to date
Third paragraph: conclusion, implications, further studies - Graphics – Do not use charts, diagrams or tables unless essential.
- Greek letters – Use symbols (α) to designate or spell out (alpha).
- References – In general try to avoid citing references in your abstract.
- Abbreviations/acronyms – It is necessary to define all initially except those commonly used such as DNA, cAMP.
- Length – Stay under 300 words and/or one page (using 12pt Aria font).
- Funding – Acknowledge funding source in separate final sentence in italics (e.g., Funding provided by the Stanford Medical Scholars Fellowship Program).
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THE ROLE OF DENSE-CORE VESICLES IN SYNAPSE FORMATION Funding provided by the Stanford Medical Scholars Fellowship Program. |
Medical Student Research Symposium Presentations
To be eligible for the cash prizes, all Symposium participants must present a poster representing their research (3-6pm).
In addition, some participants may be asked to make oral presentations of their projects at Grand Rounds.
Medical Student Research Poster Preparation
- Space is limited in the Hospital Atrium – poster sizes are to be NO LARGER than
4 ft wide (height is ideally 4-4 1/2 ft tall).
- Limit the informationyou present to that which is absolutely essential. People will often take only a minute or two to scan your poster. If you can capture their interest in this interval, they may stay longer, and you can explain any details they may have questions about.
- Use Very LARGE Type!!! 16-point type may seem large on your computer screen, but it will appear microscopic on a poster. People will often have to view your poster under less-than-ideal conditions. If several people are trying to look at it at once, they will have to read it from three to four feet away.
- Text is the enemy! People will generally not read long blocks of text on a poster. Replace text with diagrams wherever possible.
- All posters should include the following information:
- Introduction or Abstract. It is not necessary to have both an introduction and an abstract, as you would in a paper. One very concise summary of your project is sufficient. This summary should cover the same ground that the whole poster covers, only much more concisely. The summary should include:
- Why you did the study. This could be a single sentence, but you need to provide context for your work.
- Experimental Design. This should be brief - a sentence or two will often suffice.
- Results.
- Conclusions.
- Researchers involved.
- Experimental Design. A poster is not the place to explain that you added Pen-Strep and glutamine to all your culture media. Experiments or studies should be described in broad strokes. People sometimes think that using technical language will give their poster an authoritative tone, when really it may be a turn-off. Keep it simple. Replace text with diagrams if you can.
- Results. Pay attention to making tables, charts, and diagrams very simple. Again, everything must be readable at a distance.
- Conclusions. You can reasonably expect people to remember only two to five things about your work (five is pushing it!). Pick only the most important things you want to communicate and summarize your results concisely.
Lastly, keep in mind that from 3pm-6pm you will be at your poster presenting it orally, using the poster as a prop. The poster does not have to contain every detail of your work. You will be there to tie it all together. It helps to practice what you will say.
Printable Tips (from above):
Essential Tips on Writing an Abstract (PDF)
Essential Tips on Poster Presentations (PDF)
Western Student Medical Research Forum
Students are encouraged to submit abstracts for the annual Western Student Medical Research forum held in conjunction with:
Western Section, American Federation for Clinical Research (WS, AFCR)
Western Society for Pediatric Research (WSPR)
Western Association of Physicians (WaP)
Western Society for Clinical Investigation (WSCI)
Western Region, Society for Investigative Dermatology (WS, SID)
Featuring student awards:
WS, AFCR Edwin E. Osgood Student Research Award
WSPR Lowell Glasogw Student Pediatric Research Award
WSCI Student Subspecialty Awards (for all subspecialties)
WSMRC, Lea D. Bertakis, Dionesia P. Bertakis, & Clifford Lardinois Awards
Abstract publication in The Journal of Investigative Medicine
AFCR Membership Awards
The Forum is open to all students in the health professions.
For information and Abstract Forms, please visit the website: http://www.wsmrf.orgForum supported by a grant from the American Medical Association-Education and Research Foundation.

