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Literature Review. What is it? An account of what has been written about your chosen subject by acknowledged experts in the field It will eventually form.

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Presentation on theme: "Literature Review. What is it? An account of what has been written about your chosen subject by acknowledged experts in the field It will eventually form."— Presentation transcript:

1 Literature Review

2 What is it? An account of what has been written about your chosen subject by acknowledged experts in the field It will eventually form part of your final submitted report (April) but will first feed into your poster to be presented on Wednesday 11 th December It will probably be about 3,000 – 5,000 words long + references (but will be heavily abridged in the poster) Tackling it early will pay off later!

3 What does it look like? It consists of two parts: 1. The main body which is a discourse. Read papers and theses to get the style. (In particular, look at ‘survey’ papers) 2. The list of references, written using the IEEE method

4 What is it for? It demonstrates your skills: The ability to seek out relevant information The ability to critically analyse work that may sometimes be conflicting The ability to summarise your findings The ability to write all this down in a readable form It shows that you have a good understanding of current work in your chosen subject area It serves as an introduction to the rest of your work and puts it into context

5 Where do I get the information? Remember, the information should come from acknowledged experts so good sources are: Peer reviewed journals – particularly ACM and IEEE Books that are referenced a lot Peer-reviewed Conference proceedings RFCs PhD theses

6 Where do I get the information from? Careful……. There may be good information here but be careful: Commercial whitepapers Commercial websites Publications from trade organizations Conferences and journals that are not peer- reviewed…….why not? (Remember to be a CAT!)

7 Where do I get the information? Be Very Careful! You will not usually reference these but they may sometimes give you a link to good information: Magazine articles Wikipedias – (use as a starting point to find valid refs.) Personal websites Check how old the information is. All books and journals and conference proceedings more than about 3 years old are probably only useful as historical background.

8 How do I Access the Sources Glyndwr library (Athens, etc.) Other libraries Internet Search engines Google scholar CiteSeer DBLP


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