Author
Listed:
- Samuel T Moulton
- Selen Türkay
- Stephen M Kosslyn
Abstract
Despite the prevalence of PowerPoint in professional and educational presentations, surprisingly little is known about how effective such presentations are. All else being equal, are PowerPoint presentations better than purely oral presentations or those that use alternative software tools? To address this question we recreated a real-world business scenario in which individuals presented to a corporate board. Participants (playing the role of the presenter) were randomly assigned to create PowerPoint, Prezi, or oral presentations, and then actually delivered the presentation live to other participants (playing the role of corporate executives). Across two experiments and on a variety of dimensions, participants evaluated PowerPoint presentations comparably to oral presentations, but evaluated Prezi presentations more favorably than both PowerPoint and oral presentations. There was some evidence that participants who viewed different types of presentations came to different conclusions about the business scenario, but no evidence that they remembered or comprehended the scenario differently. We conclude that the observed effects of presentation format are not merely the result of novelty, bias, experimenter-, or software-specific characteristics, but instead reveal a communication preference for using the panning-and-zooming animations that characterize Prezi presentations.
Suggested Citation
Samuel T Moulton & Selen Türkay & Stephen M Kosslyn, 2017.
"Does a presentation’s medium affect its message? PowerPoint, Prezi, and oral presentations,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(7), pages 1-39, July.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0178774
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178774
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