===== Find a Template Paper ===== Now that you have selected a topic for your paper, find a paper that can serve as a template for your paper. It need not be on the same topic, but it helps to have it from the same field and a roughly similar structure, as explained below. As a template, it will give you guidance on structure and organization. You will refer to this quite a bit, so choose a paper on a topic you like. STRUCTURE: The structure of a paper is determined (primarily) by its **goal** and its **audience**, for instance to (1) convey novel results to a group of peers (as most scientific papers do), (2) convey the thesis work of a student to a university, (3) summarize the research done over a period of time on a particular subject, or (4) introduce the general public to a particular scientific topic. For this course we are following #1. You can look for papers by using e.g.: * [[https://scholar.google.com|Google Scholar]] * [[http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/index|Citeseer]] * Your local library; see: [[http://jerz.setonhill.edu/writing/academic1/academic-journals-finding-them-online-with-ebscohost/|Google Will Not Show You What Your Instructor Wants You To Find]]