rem4:related_work_references
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rem4:related_work_references [2012/02/23 07:09] – ZHmWVnadLEmiEawRB 115.249.252.235 | rem4:related_work_references [2024/04/29 13:33] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1 | ||
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- | I think other wiesbte owners | + | ====Related Work and References==== |
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+ | ===Typical Structure of a Scientific Paper=== | ||
+ | | Abstract | This section is key - it's a mini-summary of your paper, intended to allow others to decide whether your work is relevant to their work (and whether they should | ||
+ | | Introduction | Overall context of the work, short summary of related work and a presentation of the motivation for the work - the problems that are to be addressed. Last paragraph: Explain the structure of the paper. | ||
+ | | Motivation | Explicit presentation of the motivation (or fold this in with the Introduction, | ||
+ | | Related work / Literature review | ||
+ | | Contributions | Your idea, your work. This is the topic of the paper. Describe it as clearly as you can. | | ||
+ | | Evaluation | How do you make sure your idea is a good one? How do you convince others that it's a good idea? | | ||
+ | | Results | Present the results so that they support the claims made throughout - and support the idea that your idea (the topic of the paper) is worth publication. | | ||
+ | | Discussion | Optional section - sometimes things that did not fit into the paper but may be of some interest | ||
+ | | Conclusion | This is the conclusion you draw from the work, as presented in the paper. Based on what has been said in this paper, what conclusions can you draw? This is often a semi-summary of the paper. | | ||
+ | | References | A structured list of publications that relate to the work described in the paper. | | ||
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+ | ===Remember the Audience=== | ||
+ | | Ask before you start your research | ||
+ | | Ask before you start writing your paper | Select the journal / conference first. \\ Do a background search on papers recently published there, to verify that your background section and description of work fits into their context (less important for journals). | ||
+ | | Ask again when you do your background research | ||
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+ | ===Related Work Section Format=== | ||
+ | | Pick your style - be consistent ! | | | ||
+ | | The fewer words the better | ||
+ | | Pointed paragraphs | ||
+ | | Structure: Prior work achievements and shortcomings | ||
+ | | Support your main argument | ||
+ | | Use topic to steer inclusion of related work | The major topic of your paper will tell you what you need to review. Use your title and abstract to figure out what work to review. | ||
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+ | ===The Potatostamp Method™=== | ||
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+ | | What is it? | A handy method to help you write a nice Related Work section | ||
+ | | Step 1 | Group the paper you have identified as related work into groups, where each group represents (a) a particular way of solving the problem at hand and (b) all the solution have particular shortcomings. | ||
+ | | Step 2 | (C) Write 2-3 sentences about what the researchers in the first group did; (d) write 1-2 sentences about the shortcomings of the work in this roup, wrt your own work (that is, write the shortcomings in a way that the reader sees why your own contribution is a direct response to these shortcomings | ||
+ | | Step 3 | Go back to Step 1. Repeat as often as needed (a reasonably-sized Related Works section contains at least 3 groups of related work papers). | ||
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+ | ===Finding Related Work=== | ||
+ | | When have I searched enough? | ||
+ | | Cited work: Is there a maximum? | ||
+ | | Cited work: Is there a minimum? | ||
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+ | ===Structure of the References Section=== | ||
+ | | Name-Year system | ||
+ | | Citation-sequence system | ||
+ | | Kyed | [PULL99] Pullman, J. (1999). The Effects of Toasters on Human Health. J. of Toasterology, | ||
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+ | ===Structure of a Reference=== | ||
+ | | APA Style (Amer. Psychological Assoc.) | ||
+ | | Other styles | ||
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+ | EOF |
/var/www/cadia.ru.is/wiki/data/attic/rem4/related_work_references.1329980957.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/04/29 13:33 (external edit)