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1 Writing a research paper 2 연구 개발의 의미 연구 – 硏 : 갈고 닦는다는 뜻 究 : 궁리한다는 뜻 – 어떤 일에 대하여 깊이 생각하고 사리를 따지어 보는 일 Research –Search again –Scientific investigation.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Writing a research paper 2 연구 개발의 의미 연구 – 硏 : 갈고 닦는다는 뜻 究 : 궁리한다는 뜻 – 어떤 일에 대하여 깊이 생각하고 사리를 따지어 보는 일 Research –Search again –Scientific investigation."— Presentation transcript:

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2 1 Writing a research paper

3 2 연구 개발의 의미 연구 – 硏 : 갈고 닦는다는 뜻 究 : 궁리한다는 뜻 – 어떤 일에 대하여 깊이 생각하고 사리를 따지어 보는 일 Research –Search again –Scientific investigation 개발 – 開 : 새로운 길, 방법을 연다 發 : 꽃을 피운다 – 새로운 것을 고안해 내어 실용화함 ( 교학사 국어사전 ) Development –To bring, grow, or evolve to a more complete, complex, or desirable state (American Heritage Dictionary)

4 3 연구 개발이란 무엇인가 ? “When you steal ideas from many people, it is called research. When you steal ideas from one person, it is called plagiarism.” Research = re-search – 즉 다른 사람이 해 놓은 일을 다시 조사하는 데서 또는 새로운 각도에서 조명하는 데서 연구개발이 시작된다 => 硏究員은 곧 調査員 !!

5 4 R&D 분야의 세계적 추세 Outsourcing Licensing Strategic alliance ( 적과의 동침 ) Grand alliance ( 세계적 표준 전략 ) Contract research M&A Concurrent Engineering vs Sequential Engineering R&D 초기 단계부터 여러 부서 ( 특히 마키팅 부서 ) 가 공동참여

6 5 Matrix Management & Dual Ladder Matrix management – 기본조직과 프로젝트 조직의 2 원화 기본조직 : 수직적 구조 ( 계장, 과장, 부장, 이사 …) 프로젝트 조직 : 수평적 구조 (project manager, project leader, team leader….) Dual ladder –Scientist 나 engineer 가 기본조직을 통하지 않고 연구에만 전념하여도 직급승진과 보수를 많이 받을 수 있는 제도 Research and Engineering Fellow: 미국 연구위원 : 한국의 대기업 연구소에서 채택한 제도

7 6 R&D skill vs. People skill 연구원은 연구를 함으로 과학, 공학적인 지식을 얼만큼 갖고 있느냐 하는 것만 중요하다. 과학 공학적 지식만큼, people skill, leadership skill, speaking and writing skills 도 아주 중요하다. 특히 writing, speaking skill 은 project 에 아주 중요한 역할을 한다.

8 7 How to write a research paper Simon Peyton Jones Microsoft Research, Cambridge

9 8 “The best way to understand something really big, is to reduce it to something meaningful.” Alex Beam, Boston Globe

10 9 Writing papers IdeaWrite paperDo research Crystallises what we don’t understand Opens the way to dialogue with others: reality check, critique, and collaboration

11 10 Do not be intimidated Write a paper, and give a talk, about any idea, no matter how weedy and insignificant it may seem to you FallacyYou need to have a fantastic idea before you can write a paper. (Everyone else seems to.)

12 11 Papers communicate ideas Writing the paper is how you develop the idea in the first place It usually turns out to be more interesting and challenging that it seemed at first

13 12 Your narrative flow Here is a problem It’s an interesting problem It’s an unsolved problem Here is my idea My idea works (details, data) Here’s how my idea compares to other people’s approaches

14 13 Structure (conference paper) Title (1000 readers) Abstract (4 sentences, 100 readers) Introduction (1 page, 100 readers) The problem (1 page, 10 readers) My idea (2 pages, 10 readers) The details (5 pages, 3 readers) Related work (1-2 pages, 10 readers) Conclusions and further work (0.5 pages)

15 14 The abstract I usually write the abstract last Used by program committee members to decide which papers to read Four sentences [Kent Beck] 1.State the problem 2.Say why it’s an interesting problem 3.Say what your solution achieves 4.Say what follows from your solution

16 15 Structure Abstract (4 sentences) Introduction (1 page) The problem (1 page) My idea (2 pages) The details (5 pages) Related work (1-2 pages) Conclusions and further work (0.5 pages)

17 16 The introduction (1 page) 1.Describe the problem 2.State your contributions...and that is all

18 17 Describe the problem Use an example to introduce the problem

19 18 State your contributions Write the list of contributions first The list of contributions drives the entire paper: the paper substantiates the claims you have made Reader thinks “gosh, if they can really deliver this, that’s be exciting; I’d better read on”

20 19 State your contributions Bulleted list of contributions Do not leave the reader to guess what your contributions are!

21 20 Contributions should be refutable NO!YES! We describe the WizWoz system. It is really cool. We give the syntax and semantics of a language that supports concurrent processes (Section 3). Its innovative features are... We study its propertiesWe prove that the type system is sound, and that type checking is decidable (Section 4) We have used WizWoz in practice We have built a GUI toolkit in WizWoz, and used it to implement a text editor (Section 5). The result is half the length of the Java version.

22 21 Structure Abstract (4 sentences) Introduction (1 page) Related work The problem (1 page) My idea (2 pages) The details (5 pages) Related work (1-2 pages) Conclusions and further work (0.5 pages)

23 22 No related work yet! We adopt the notion of transaction from Brown [1], as modified for distributed systems by White [2], using the four-phase interpolation algorithm of Green [3]. Our work differs from White in our advanced revocation protocol, which deals with the case of priority inversion as described by Yellow [4]. The reader knows nothing about the problem yet; so your (carefully trimmed) description of various technical tradeoffs is absolutely incomprehensible

24 23 Structure Abstract (4 sentences) Introduction (1 page) The problem (1 page) My idea (2 pages) The details (5 pages) Related work (1-2 pages) Conclusions and further work (0.5 pages)

25 24 Presenting the idea 3. The idea Consider a bifircuated semi-lattice D, over a hyper-modulated signature S. Suppose p i is an element of D. Then we know for every such p i there is an epi-modulus j, such that p j < p i.  Sounds impressive...but  Sends readers to sleep  In a paper you MUST provide the details, but FIRST convey the idea

26 25 Presenting the idea Explain it as if you were speaking to someone using a whiteboard Conveying the intuition is primary, not secondary Once your reader has the intuition, she can follow the details (but not vice versa) Even if she skips the details, she still takes away something valuable

27 26 Using examples Introduce the problem, and your idea, using EXAMPLES and only then present the general case

28 27 Using examples Example right away

29 28 The details: evidence Your introduction makes claims The body of the paper provides evidence to support each claim Check each claim in the introduction, identify the evidence Evidence can be: analysis and comparison, theorems, measurements, case studies

30 29 Structure Abstract (4 sentences) Introduction (1 page) The problem (1 page) My idea (2 pages) The details (5 pages) Related work (1-2 pages) Conclusions and further work (0.5 pages)

31 30 Related work Giving credit to others does not diminish the credit you get from your paper  Warmly acknowledge people who have helped you  Be generous to the competition. “In his inspiring paper [Foo98] Foogle shows.... We develop his foundation in the following ways...”  Acknowledge weaknesses in your approach

32 31 Structure Abstract (4 sentences) Introduction (1 page) The problem (1 page) My idea (2 pages) The details (5 pages) Related work (1-2 pages) Conclusions and further work (0.5 pages)

33 32 Conclusions and further work Be brief.

34 33 The process Start early. Very early. –Hastily-written papers get rejected. –Papers are like wine: they need time to mature Collaborate

35 34 Getting help Experts are good Non-experts are also very good Each reader can only read your paper for the first time once! So use them carefully Explain carefully what you want (“I got lost here” is much more important than “Jarva is mis-spelt”.)

36 35 Getting expert help A good plan: when you think you are done, send the draft to the competition saying “could you help me ensure that I describe your work fairly?”. Often they will respond with helpful critique (they are interested in the area) They are likely to be your referees anyway, so getting their comments or criticism up front is Jolly Good.

37 36 Listening to your reviewers Treat every review like gold dust Be (truly) grateful for criticism as well as praise This is really, really, really hard But it’s really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really, really important

38 37 Listening to your reviewers Read every criticism as a positive suggestion for something you could explain more clearly DO NOT respond “you stupid person, I meant X”. Fix the paper so that X is apparent even to the stupidest reader. Thank them warmly. They have given up their time for you.

39 38 Basic stuff Submit by the deadline Keep to the length restrictions –Do not narrow the margins –Do not use 6pt font –On occasion, supply supporting evidence (e.g. experimental data, or a written-out proof) in an appendix Always use a spell checker

40 39 Visual structure Give strong visual structure to your paper using –sections and sub-sections –bullets –italics –laid-out code Find out how to draw pictures, and use them

41 40 Visual structure

42 41 Use the active voice NOYES It can be seen that...We can see that... 34 tests were runWe ran 34 tests These properties were thought desirable We wanted to retain these properties It might be thought that this would be a type error You might think this would be a type error The passive voice is “respectable” but it DEADENS your paper. Avoid it at all costs. “We” = you and the reader “We” = the authors “You” = the reader

43 42 Use simple, direct language NOYES The object under study was displaced horizontally The ball moved sideways On an annual basisYearly Endeavour to ascertainFind out It could be considered that the speed of storage reclamation left something to be desired The garbage collector was really slow

44 43 Figures Graphs – not more than two curves on a diagram up to four if well separated – show points only if scatter is important points should be visible – abstractions with respect to text

45 44 Figures Numerical tables are difficult to read –– use a diagram, istogram, pie chart, … –if you need to use a table, no more than 6-8 rows and 3-4 colums

46 45 Dave Patterson's Writing Advice

47 46 Active voice For example, use "Figure X shows..." rather than "... as shown in Figure X." Also, it is much better to mention a Figure that summarizes a lot of information early in a paragraph rather than go into details and mention the figure at the end, as early mention gives the reader a framework to refer to while reading the text.

48 47 Ambiguous use of pronoun Put a noun after "This" to make it clear what you are referring to.

49 48 "While" instead of "and", "but", "although". In general while should be used only in the strict sense of "during the time

50 49 A single numbered subsection Why do you need to number it if there is only one? Either eliminate the single subsection, or change the part that precedes the subsection into a second subsection

51 50 Refering to Chapters, Figures Capitalized when used to refer to a specifuc number. So its Chapter 1, Table 3.1, Figure 1.2.

52 51 Numbers spelled out vs. numerical. The general rule of thumb is to spell out one to ten and use numbers for numbers for 11 and up. For example, " The eight-processor case (model 370) needs only four computers to hold 32 processors. (8*4=32) instead of words (eight*four=32).

53 52 References Frederick Crews and Sandra Schor, "The Borzoi Handbook for Writers (2nd edition)", Alfred A. Knopf Inc., 1989. Linda Flower, "Problem Solving Strategies for Writing (3rd edition)", Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1989. “Advice on Research and Writing” http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/ mleone/web/how-to.html


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