1 / 21

How to find, read, write about and reference research papers?

How to find, read, write about and reference research papers?. Find papers. Where to look? Conferences Journals Online: people, labs References in papers read Conference organizers , journal editors E.g. Pervasive committees Conference website links, e.g.:

tulia
Download Presentation

How to find, read, write about and reference research papers?

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. How to find, read, write about and reference research papers?

  2. Find papers • Where to look? • Conferences • Journals • Online: people, labs • References in papers read • Conference organizers, journal editors • E.g. Pervasive committees • Conference website links, e.g.: • Links to previous conferences: Ubicomp • Proceedings online: Automotive UI • Your advisor’s and collaborators’ suggestions

  3. Find papers • IEEE Xplore • ACM Digital Library • Others on UNH Library website (print & electronic) • People’s websites (my list)

  4. Find papers • Where not to look (with few exceptions)? • Sales brochures • Company white papers • Online tutorials • News • Blogs

  5. Find papers • So, what are some of those exceptions? • Company white paper: • You trust the company • White paper free of advertisement • News story, blog post: initial lead, not final reference: • My post on ETRA 2010 paper • Albrecht Schmidt post on energy harvesting • Videos that make you think:

  6. Videos that make you think

  7. Next: • http://johnnylee.net/

  8. Read • Take notes: • On paper (print out paper?) • In electronic form (e.g. Word document) – eventually you’ll need this! • Reference Manager?

  9. Read: how many? • Signs that you have a good overview: • See references to papers you’ve read • You expect, and find, a reference in a sentence/section • Recurring references over multiple papers • References cover decades • References up to date (including very recent conference papers)

  10. Write about • What matters? • What has been done? • Similarities • Dissimilarities

  11. Write about • What has been done? • “I’m not working on something that’s already been done.” • “I am building on other’s work.”

  12. Write about • Similarities, e.g.: • “At least parts of my work fit into what we all accept as be correct.” • Approach • Results

  13. Write about • Dissimilarities, e.g.: • “I have a contribution to make.” • Results • Explanations

  14. Reference • What matters? • Author(s): • Helps identify relationships between papers • Helps evaluate quality (e.g. use h-score) • Title: • Topic relevance • Publication: • Helps evaluate quality (e.g. use h-score, impact factor) • Year • Relevance • Coverage

  15. Reference • Format: • Strictly prescribed by publication • Often downloadable from database (e.g. IEEE) • Reference Manager, MS Word 2007

  16. Reference • Website: • Eaton, K. Navigon’s 8100T GPS Has 3D Terrain-View Maps. http://gizmodo.com/5081866/navigons-8100t-gps-has-3d-terrain+view-maps. Nov. 10, 2008. Retrieved 5/30/2009.

  17. Reference • Technical report: • Kun, A.L., Paek, T., Medenica, Z., Oppelaar, J.E., Palinko, O. The Effects of In-Car Navigation Aids on Driving Performance and Visual Attention. Technical Report ECE.P54.2009.3, Electrical and Computer Engineering Department, University of New Hampshire, 2009.

  18. Reference • Conference paper • Porathe, T., Prison, J. Design of Human-Map System Interaction. CHI, 2008.

  19. Reference • Journal paper: • Strayer, D. and Johnston, W. Driven to Distraction: Dual-Task Studies of Simulated Driving and Conversing on a Cellular Telephone. Psych. Science, 12(5), 462-466, 2002.

  20. Reference • Book: • Tavel, P. 2007 Modeling and Simulation Design. AK Peters Ltd.

  21. Hirsch’s h-score http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:H-index-en.svg

More Related