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Term Definition 3-D graphics A statistical presentation technique that adds interest to obscure data and permits you to compare three or more variables from the sample in one chart; types: column, ribbon, wire frame, and surface line. Area charts A statistical presentation technique used for time series and frequency distributions over time; a.k.a. stratum or surface charts. Bar charts A statistical presentation technique that represents frequency data as horizontal or vertical bars; vertical bars are most often used for time series and quantitative classifications (histograms, stacked bar, and multiple variable charts are specialized bar charts). Executive summary (final report) This document is written as the last element of a research report and is either a concise summary of the major findings, conclusions and recommendations or can be a report-in-miniature covering all aspects in abbreviated form. Extemporaneous presentation An oral presentation technique made from minimal notes or an outline, with a more conversational style. Letter of transmittal An element of the final report, this letter refers to the authorization for the project and any specific instructions or limitations placed on the study and states the purpose and scope of the study; not necessary for internal projects. Line graphs A statistical presentation technique used for time series and frequency distributions over time. Management report A report written for the non-technically oriented manager or client. Pace A measure of comprehensibility, the rate at which the printed page presents information to the reader; it should be slower when the material is complex, faster when the material is straightforward. Pictographs (geographics) A statistical presentation technique that uses pictorial symbols to represent frequency data rather than a bar in a bar-type chart; the symbol has an association with the subject of the statistical presentation and one symbol represents a specific count of that variable. Pie charts A statistical presentation technique that uses sections of a circle (slices of a pie) to represent 100 % of a frequency distribution of the subject being graphed; not appropriate for changes over time. Readability indexes Indexes that measure the difficulty level of written material; e.g. Flesch Reading Ease Score, Flesch Kincaid Grade Level, Gunning's Fog Index; most word-processing programs calculate one or several of the indexes. Sentence outline One of two types of outlines normally used in the pre-writing phase of report development, uses complete sentences rather than key words or phrases to draft each report section. Technical report A report written for an audience of researchers. Topic outline One of two types of outlines normally used in the pre-writing phase of report development, uses key words or phrases rather than complete sentences to draft each report section. Visual aids Presentation tools used to facilitate understanding of content (e.g. chalkboards, whiteboards, handouts, flip charts, overhead transparencies, slides, computer-drawn visuals, computer animation).