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Page 1: How to Write A Research Paper & Thesis Grad Tips by Saul Greenberg University of Calgary Image from:

How to Write A Research Paper & ThesisGrad Tips by Saul Greenberg

University of Calgary

Image from:

Page 2: How to Write A Research Paper & Thesis Grad Tips by Saul Greenberg University of Calgary Image from:

The Message

• write to communicate and contribute information you feel is important

• papers and theses have typical structures and contents

• a thesis gives more room to develop arguments

• write often (with a mentor), and review papers

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Outline

Motivation

When you should write a paper?

Types of papers

How referees evaluate papers

Paper structure

Thesis structure

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Motivation: Why write?

Science includes the dissemination of knowledge

Purpose of a scientific paper:• to communicate to the community• to contribute to the advancement of knowledge

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Motivation: Why write?

Writing• the product of research• audience

o gives you a potentially wide audience o reaches specialists/peers in your areao but depends on where you publish

• archivalo always availableo snapshot of your research work a given time

• vehicle for clarificationo for developing sound arguments, messages...

The downside• risky!

o months of work can be rejected

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When you should write a paper

You should have something important enough to share with others

• new ideas• new facts or data• intelligent reviews of old facts and ideas

Mature results• research milestone completed• can articulate the research

o clear problem statement, solution, and contribution to discipline

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When you should NOT write a paper

Wrong reasons• want or need publications

o increase publication counto fameo publish or perish

• peer pressure• yet another conference deadline

Bad papers/work will reflect badly on you• should always be proud of your paper

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Types of papers

Breakthrough• solves an open problem that many people have worked on• rare (one per conference, if lucky!)

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Types of papers

BreakthroughGround-breaking

• opens up a field/area that is not well explored• places it on a firm foundation

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Types of papers

BreakthroughGround-breakingInventions

• clever variations/innovations that are appealing in their elegance

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Types of papers

BreakthroughGround-breakingInventionsIncremental progress

• solves open problems that have arisen from recent work• this is the most typical conference/journal paper

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Types of papers

BreakthroughGround-breakingInventionsIncremental progress Survey

• surveys and unifies a specialized subject• contains added value (frameworks, taxonomies)• brings together disparate work

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How Referees Evaluate Papers

Purpose of refereeing• quality control

o eliminate bad papers

• choose best papers from a good seto competition for space

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How Referees Evaluate Papers

Purpose of refereeingReferees

• topic specialistso is/has worked on similar problemo knows literature, other work very wello understands methodologieso considers nuances of your work/contribution

• area specialistso knows general area, and how your special topic fits within ito considers contribution of your work to the general areao evaluates comprehensibility by non-specialist

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Typical Questions on a Referee Form

Briefly summarize the contribution of this paper (2-3 lines)• can they extract a main message from your paper?• “If you can’t, there is probably something wrong with the paper”

–--- CHI FAQ

What is new and significant in the work reported?• New:

o has it been done before?o is it a rehash / republication of old stuff (yours or others)?

• Significanceo in five years time, would the work have an identifiable impact? (rare)

• Would it stimulate further work in this area?o is it a reasonable increment that keeps the research area going (frequent)?o does it have innovations?o is it interesting?o is it timely to the community?

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Questions on the referee form

How does it relate to existing work?• bibliographies, background, important omissions...

How reliable are the methods used?• are they adequate to support the conclusions• is it correct?

o are there any errors (math, loopholes...)

How reasonable are the interpretations?• good arguments• alternative interpretations explored/left out

Can an experienced practitioner in the field duplicate the results from the paper and the references?

• is there sufficient information?

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Questions on referee form

Is the subject relevant to the publication?• domain• depth of treatment• degree of specialization

Describe the quality of the writing• is the message clear?• is the paper easy to follow and understand?• is its style exciting or boring?• good flow of logic/argumentation?• is it well organized?• is it grammatically correct?• is it accessible to the audience of the publication?

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Paper Structure

Title• clearly describes the subject of the paper

o “Recognizing hand-written text”– vs

o “DETENTE: Practical Support for Practical Action”

• can be catchy, but not at the cost of clarityo Bringing Icons to Lifeo User Interface Design in the Trenches: Some Tips on

Shooting from the Hipo Virtual Reality on Five Dollars a Day

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Paper Structure

Abstract• communicates results of paper

• completely self-containedo bibliographies, on-line databases...

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Example Abstract

• Background/setting the scene:o Icons are used increasingly in interfaces because they are compact "universal" pictographic

representations of computer functionality and processing.

• The focus and innovation:o Animated icons can bring to life symbols representing complete applications or functions

within an application, thereby clarifying their meaning, demonstrating their capabilities, and even explaining their method of use.

• The problem:o To test this hypothesis, we carried out an iterative design of a set of animated painting

icons that appear in the HyperCard tool palette.

• The method:o The design discipline restricted the animations to 10 to 20 second sequences of 22x20

pixel bit maps. User testing was carried out on two interfaces - one with the static icons, one with the animated icons.

• The results:o The results showed significant benefit from the animations in clarifying the purpose and

functionality of the icons.

Abstract from: Ronald Baecker, Ian Small, and Richard Mander. 1991. Bringing icons to life. In Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (CHI '91), Scott P. Robertson, Gary M. Olson, and Judith S. Olson (Eds.). ACM, New York, NY, USA, 1-6. 

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Paper Structure

Introductory Section (s)• sets the scene• gives background• motivates• defines general terms/concepts• describes problem and argues for the approach taking• relates to other work• summarizes the structure of the paper

o “The next section details the experimental methodology, which is a 2x2 Anova design. The subsequent section describes the results, the most notable being...”

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Paper Structure

Main body• section organization reflects how your argument unfolds• each section should have a main point• each paragraph should have a main point• look at “exemplars” in your field

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Paper Structure

Summary/Conclusions• Tell them what you’ve told them

o some people only read abstract, intro and conclusions

• Relate back to general area• Introduce future work

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Paper Structure

Figures and Tables• should assist the reader• needs to be large enough to be visible in print

• tables:o summarizes datao collects main points described in text

• figureso system snapshotso conceptual diagramso should be legible, instructive, adequately labeled and titled

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Paper Structure

Figures and Tables• should always refer to both in text

• make the reader look at ito bad:

– “...animated icons contain movies ( Figure 1).”

o better: – “... The several images in Figure 1 illustrates an example of an

animated icon, which represents a printer. Each image is actually a key frame of a “movie” that, when played, would show the user what would happened if the icon were selected. We see a document being moved on top of the printer, and the printer putting out some paper...”should assist the reader

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Paper Structure

Examples and Scenarios• excellent to clarify and to apply your ideas• should be detailed enough to illustrate the concept, but

not to the point of tedium

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Paper Structure

Citations and References• contains only the papers cited in your work

o use the best and most up to date literatureo make sure its relevanto don’t overdo ito avoid self-glorification

• must be correct and complete citation informationo can they find it from your information?o prefer archival works to hard-to-get technical

reports/obscure publications

• should conform to style of publicationo most publications are strict about this

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The Thesis

Format• strictly set by Faculty of Grad Studies

o violations are grounds for rejection by the Facultyo see “Thesis/Dissertation Guidelines” reading

• typesettingo a “supported” LateX thesis style is availableo Microsoft Word style sheets

• do drafts in thesis formato gives feeling for length, typographic structure

• length (MSc)o 100 pages, +/- 10 (MSc)o balance:

– chapters should be of similar length (excepting intro and conclusions)

o appendices:– could be “extra” to length– lesser material

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The Thesis

Examiner’s Report• thesis should usually cover/display

o use of relevant literature and techniqueso good organizationo literary competenceo good logic of inquiry in research and interpretation of resultso sound argumentation leading to conclusionso sophisticationo originalityo contribution to the discipline

• thesis compared to other theses examined

• statement on author’s ability to do independent researcho see “Final Thesis Examination—Examiner’s Report” reading

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The Thesis: Typical Structure

• Abstract: o forms the steps of an argumento each sentence outlines contents of thesis chapter o should reflect the main thesis message o describes:

– problem, motivation, current state of the art, what you did, results, significance, future work

• 1: Introductiono sets the scene, motivates, describes problem, chapter by

chapter outline of thesis

• 2: Related worko current state of the art, synthesis of literature, frameworks for

thinking about the area, o describes parts of the problem that you will and won’t do (focus)

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The Thesis: Typical Structure

Abstract: 1: Introduction

sets the scene, motivates, describes problem, chapter by chapter outline of thesis

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The Thesis: Typical Structure

Abstract: 1: Introduction2: Related work

o current state of the art, synthesis of literature, frameworks for thinking about the area,

o describes parts of the problem that you will and won’t do (focus)

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The Thesis: Typical Structure

Abstract: 1: Introduction2: Related work3, 4: Heart of thesis

o develops logic of inquiry o has clear and sound argumentso interprets specific resultso discusses implications of results back to general area

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The Thesis: Typical Structure

Abstract: 1: Introduction2: Related work3, 4: Heart of thesis5 Conclusions/Further work

o summarize results and illustrate how they contribute to the discipline

o summarize original aspects of the worko discuss future work that you or others could do

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The Thesis: Typical Structure

Abstract: 1: Introduction2: Related work3, 4: Heart of thesis5 Conclusions/Further workReferences

o use standard formats, include all information

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The Thesis: Typical Structure

Abstract: 1: Introduction2: Related work3, 4: Heart of thesis5 Conclusions/Further workReferencesAppendices

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Tips

• read, read, reado understand the norms in your field

• write, write, writeo have your supervisor / peers review your writing

• tell your supervisor you would like to review paperso learn standard forms o how to critique

• write with otherso as co-authoro look carefully at revisions and learn from themo critique other’s writing

Page 38: How to Write A Research Paper & Thesis Grad Tips by Saul Greenberg University of Calgary Image from:

The Message

• write to communicate and contribute information you feel is important

• papers and theses have typical structures and contents

• a thesis gives more room to develop arguments

• write often (with a mentor), and review papers

Page 39: How to Write A Research Paper & Thesis Grad Tips by Saul Greenberg University of Calgary Image from:

Permissions

You are free:• to Share — to copy, distribute and transmit the work• to Remix — to adapt the work

Under the following conditions:Attribution — You must attribute the work in the manner specified by the author (but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of the work) by citing:

“Saul Greenberg , University of Calgary, AB, Canada: Grad Tips , http://saul.cpsc.ucalgary.ca/saul/Noncommercial — You may not use this work for commercial purposes, except to assist one’s own teaching and training within commercial organizations.Share Alike — If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one.

With the understanding that:Not all material have transferable rights — materials from other sources which are included here are cited Waiver — Any of the above conditions can be waived if you get permission from the copyright holder.Public Domain — Where the work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license.Other Rights — In no way are any of the following rights affected by the license:

• Your fair dealing or fair use rights, or other applicable copyright exceptions and limitations;• The author's moral rights;• Rights other persons may have either in the work itself or in how the work is used, such as publicity or privacy rights.

Notice — For any reuse or distribution, you must make clear to others the license terms of this work. The best way to do this is with a link to this web page.