1 / 60

Scientific Communication CITS7200

Learn about the principles of composition in scientific communication, including haiku poetry and paragraph structure. Also, discover techniques for using active voice, concrete language, and omitting needless words.

jakes
Download Presentation

Scientific Communication CITS7200

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scientific Communication CITS7200 Lecture 4 Composition

  2. Composition = Organisation + Simplification

  3. Choose a suitable design • Haiku poem • 3 lines • 17 syllables as 5+7+5A syllable is “a single uninterrupted sound”

  4. Ame no hi ya! Miyako ni toki Momo no yada. (Buson) The day is rainy. Far from the capital is My peach-blossom home.

  5. How beautifully That kite soars up to the sky From the beggar’s hut. (Issa)

  6. No sky and no earth At all. Only the snowflakes Fall incessantly. (Hashin)

  7. Windows Haiku First snow, then silence. This thousand dollar screen dies So beautifully.

  8. Server’s poor response Not quick enough for browser. Timed out, plum blossom.

  9. The code was willing. It considered your request But the chips were weak.

  10. The web site you seek Cannot be located but Endless others exist.

  11. Stay the patient course Of little worth is your ire. The network is down.

  12. Yesterday it worked. Today it is not working. Windows is like that.

  13. Sonnet – 14 lines, iambic pentameter10 syllables each line, ababcdcdefefgg Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?    Thou art more lovely and more temperate: Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,    And summer's lease hath all too short a date: Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,    And often is his gold complexion dimm'd; And every fair from fair sometime declines,    By chance, or nature's changing course, untrimm'd; But thy eternal summer shall not fade,    Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest; Nor shall Death brag thou wander'st in his shade,    When in eternal lines to time thou growest; So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,    So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.

  14. Classical detective novel • Mysterious death • Small, closed circle of suspects • Each suspect has motive and opportunity • Detective central character • Murder uncovered by logic

  15. Make the paragraph the unit of composition • Paragraph=unit of thought, not length • Homogeneous in subject matter • Can be any length, but usually fewer than thirty lines • Use paragraph position and size to highlight importance of ideas

  16. Rank ideas • Put important ideas first • Begin each paragraph with a sentence that suggests the topic, or with a transition from the previous paragraph.

  17. Don’t rely on the content of the previous paragraph for sense. In order to achieve convergence it was initialised to … In order to achieve convergence the learning algorithm was initialised to …

  18. Use the active voice • active voice makes for forcible writing • passive voice distances the writer from the action • active voice makes the writing more direct and emphatic

  19. There is a plethora of algorithms for sorting. • Sorting algorithms abound.

  20. Finally, the complexity of this algorithm can be seen. • We now see the complexity of this algorithm.

  21. Put statements in positive form • He did not think that studying Scientific Communication was a sensible way to use one's time. • He thought the study of Scientific Communication a waste of time.

  22. not honest = dishonest • not important = trifling • did not pay any attention to = ignored • did not have much confidence in = distrusted

  23. Words such as would, should, could, may, might and can suggest doubt. • Use them only for situations of real uncertainty.

  24. Use concrete language • Prefer the specific to the general • Definite to the vague • Concrete to the abstract

  25. A period of unfavourable weather set in. It rained every day for a week.

  26. In proportion as the manners, customs, and amusements of a nation are cruel and barbarous, the regulations of its penal code will be severe. • In proportion as men delight in battles, bullfights, and the combat of gladiators, will they punish by hanging, burning, and the rack.

  27. Omit needless words • Good writing is concise • Ideal sentence 15-18 words • Every word should count

  28. the question as to whether = whether there is no doubt but that = doubtless he is a man who = he this is a subject that = this subject the reason why is that = because owing to the fact that = since in spite of the fact that = though

  29. Waffle (A but B but A but B) We would like to have more information about the high-frequency data, but our model can account for all the information in our simulations. Observations in nature are, however, all too few. But the fact remains that much can be learnt by simulation. Acquisition of real data would necessarily mean that we would have to correct our initial model. In the meantime, the work on improving the simulation will continue.

  30. Avoid a succession of loose sentences Refers to sentences of two clauses, the second introduced by a conjunction or relative

  31. The image is first thresholded, and then the binary version is extracted for further processing. The Laplacian pyramid is calculated, and the Gaussian pyramid is also computed for later use. The two pyramid structures are stored in an image structure of type image array, while the image itself uses the normal image structure. Wavelet transformation theory can be used to do scale analysis, but Fourier theory is usually adequate for most applications.

  32. The image is first thresholded, and then the binary version is extracted for further processing. Both the Laplacian pyramid and the Gaussian pyramid are computed for later use; they are stored in an image structure of type image array, while the image itself uses the normal image structure. Although Fourier analysis is adequate for most purposes, recent research indicates that the wavelet transform gives much better results for scale analyses.

  33. Express coordinate ideas in similar form • Parallel construction • Expressions that are similar in content and function should have the same outward structure

  34. In SIMD, the same instructions are applied simultaneously to multiple data sets, whereas in MIMD different data sets are processed with different instructions.

  35. In SIMD, multiple data sets are processed simultaneously by the same instructions, whereas in MIMD multiple data sets are processed simultaneously by different instructions.

  36. With lots of ideas, use a table

  37. Write parallel chapter titles and headings Chapter 1: The Problem Chapter 2: Solving the Problem Chapter 3: A First Solution of the Problem Chapter 4: Second Problem Solution Chapter 5: Why Solve the Problem?

  38. Chapter 1: Problem Chapter 2: Method of Solution Chapter 3: First Solution Chapter 4: Second Solution Chapter 5: Rationale for Solutions Chapter 6: History of Solutions

  39. Section 1 Design Section 1.1 Initial Meeting Section 1.2 Project Objectives Section 1.3 Time Line Section 2 Prototype Section 2.1 Why Should You Build It? Section 2.2 How Can You Build It?

  40. Use parallel entries in lists Hans built the kitchen cabinets using several wood-working techniques: • Wood carving • Sawing of wood • Planing the wood • The drill • Sanded it smooth

  41. Lyn carves wooden masks in eight steps: • Select a block of hardwood • Create a form • Attach the block to the form • Rough out the facial structures • Carve the details • Scrape the wood smooth • Saturate the wood with thin shellac • Sand and oil the wood

  42. Keep related words together • We notice a large loop in the algorithm that is right in the centre. • We notice a large loop right in the centre of the algorithm.

  43. New York's first commercial human-sperm bank opened Friday with semen samples from 18 men frozen in a stainless steel tank.

  44. In summaries, keep to one tense • Use the present tense in summarizing • Never change tense within the same paragraph • Can use past tense in lit review

  45. Place the emphasis at the end • The simplest neural network, the perceptron, was introduced by Rosenblatt (1962). • Rosenblatt (1962) introduced the simplest neural network, the perceptron.

  46. Use italics for emphasis with care. Steve cried, “You are disappointed that we can’t go to the beach today? How do you think I feel?”

  47. The insertion that unbalanced the tree structure occurred in the left subtree of the left child of the pivot node.

  48. Never use bold or underline for emphasis • Never use bold and italic

  49. Use italics for definition Space mating is the term used to describe certain of the research programs on docking in space.

  50. Use italics to indicate you are speaking about the word itself Des once informed an overly inquisitive interviewer that the difference between flute and lute was eff off.

More Related