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Presenting Your Research: Papers, Presentations, and People Marie desJardins (mariedj_at_cs.umbc.edu) CMSC 691B April 24, 2006 Thanks to Rob Holte for permission to use ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Presenting Your Research: Papers, Presentations, and People


1
Presenting Your ResearchPapers, Presentations,
and People
  • Marie desJardins
  • (mariedj_at_cs.umbc.edu)
  • CMSC 691B
  • April 24, 2006

Thanks to Rob Holte for permission to use some
slides
2
Research Isnt Just Research
  • Who cares what you do, if you never tell them?
  • Youll need to present your ideas in various
    forms and venues
  • PEOPLE Networking with colleagues at your
    institution and elsewhere
  • PAPERS Writing and submitting papers to
    workshops, conferences, and journals
  • PRESENTATIONS Giving talks at workshops,
    conferences, and other institutions
  • (You should also put together a website that
    highlights your interests and research
    activities)
  • oh, and these things also provide useful
    experience for job interviews, not to mention
    valuable job skills

3
People
4
Networking
  • Meet people! It helps to have an objective
  • Find out what research theyre currently working
    on
  • Tell them what youre currently working on
  • Find an area of common interest
  • Learn what their visions/future directions are
  • Suggest a new direction for research or topic for
    a class
  • Whats in this interaction for you?
  • Whats in it for them?
  • If you know two friends, and they know two
    friends, and they know two friends Pretty soon
    you know everybody!

5
Be Prepared
  • You need to be prepared to summarize your
    research
  • For a thesis topic, you should have a 1-minute,
    5-minute, and 15-minute presentation already
    thought through
  • The same goes for other projects youve been
    working on
  • Be able to distinguish between your original
    contributions, your advisors contributions, and
    ideas drawn from previous research
  • Practice with other students!

6
Publishing
7
Writing and Submitting Papers
  • For a masters thesis, you should aim to have at
    least one good conference paper by the time you
    graduate
  • For a doctoral dissertation, you should aim for a
    couple of good conference papers and a journal
    paper
  • Writing these papers is great practice for the
    thesis itself (and you can reuse the material!)
  • Where to submit?
  • Look at publication lists of people doing
    research related to yours, and see where they
    publish
  • Publish at the conferences that have the most
    interesting papers

8
Paper Writing Strategies
  • First, decide where you plan to submit the paper
  • You may not finish in time, but having a deadline
    is always helpful
  • Two to four months away is a good planning
    horizon
  • Next, decide what you will say
  • What are the key ideas? Have you developed them
    yet?
  • What are the key results? Have you designed and
    run the experiments yet? Have you analyzed the
    data?
  • What is the key related work? Have you read the
    relevant background material? Can you give a
    good summary of it?
  • Now get started on the work you need to do to
    fill in the missing holes!
  • Write early and often You can (and should) write
    in parallel with finishing the work!

9
Paper Writing Design
  • Abstract summarizes the research contributions,
    not the paper (i.e., it shouldnt be an outline
    of the paper)
  • Introduction/motivation what youve done and
    why the reader should care, plus an outline of
    the paper
  • Technical sections one or more sections
    summarizing the research ideas youve developed
  • Experiments/results/analysis one or more
    sections presenting experimental results and/or
    supporting proofs
  • Future work summary of where youre headed next
    and open questions still to be answered
  • Related work sometimes comes after
    introduction, sometimes before conclusions
    (depends to some extent on whether youre
    building on previous research, or dismissing it
    as irrelevant)
  • Conclusions reminder of what youve said and
    why its important

10
Paper Writing Tactics
  • Top-down design (outline) is very helpful
  • Bulleted lists can help you get past writers
    block
  • Unless youre a really talented/experienced
    writer, you should use these tools before you
    start writing prose
  • Neatness counts! Check spelling, grammar,
    consistency of fonts and notation before showing
    it to anyone for review
  • If theyre concentrating on your typos, they
    might miss whats interesting about the content.
    (More about the reviewers perspective
    later...)
  • Leave time for reviews!
  • Fellow students, collaborators, advisors,
  • A paper is only done when its submitted... and
    usually not even then.

11
Authorship
  • Who should be an author?
  • Anyone who contributed significantly to the
    conceptual development or writing of the paper
  • Not necessarily people who provided feedback,
    implemented code, or ran experiments
  • What order should the authors be listed in?
  • If some authors contributed more of the
    conceptual development and/or did most/all of
    the writing, they should be listed first
  • If the contribution was equal or the authors
    worked as a team, the authors should be listed in
    alphabetical order
  • Sometimes the note The authors are listed in
    alphabetical order is explicitly included

12
The Review Process
13
Conference Reviewing
  • Program committees
  • Selection process
  • Senior vs. area chair vs. regular members
  • Paper assignments
  • Keyword-based
  • Self-selection
  • All for one and one for all
  • Decisions
  • Reaching a consensus
  • Final decisions
  • Conditional accepts (rare)
  • Acceptance rates (20 in good
    conferences/journals)

14
Journal Reviewing
  • Executive editor ? Area editor ? Board members or
    reviewers
  • Longer decision cycle
  • Typically higher quality, longer, and deeper
    reviews
  • Decision options
  • Accept as is
  • Accept with minor changes
  • Accept with major changes (subject to re-review)
  • Reject with encouragement to resubmit
  • Reject out of hand

15
Where to Publish
  • Workshops vs. conferences vs. journals
  • Length of decision cycle
  • Quantity vs. quality
  • Aim high! (or at least appropriately)
  • Acceptance rate vs. time to prepare/publish

16
Purpose of a Review
  • Evaluate the papers scientific merit
  • Check the validity of the papers claims and
    evidence
  • Judge the papers relevance and significance
  • Provide constructive feedback to the author

17
Typical Conference Review Form
  • 1. How RELEVANT is this paper?
  • 2. How SIGNIFICANT is this paper?
  • 3. How ORIGINAL is this paper?
  • 4. Is this paper technically SOUND?
  • 5. How well is this paper PRESENTED?
  • Additional comments for the author(s)

18
Knowing Your AudienceA Reviewers Perspective
  • First, I read the title is it in my area?
    (self-selection)
  • Next, I read the abstract is it interesting?
    (self-selection)
  • Next, I skim the introduction and form my
    opinion about the paper
  • Next, I read the rest of the paper looking for
    evidence to support my view
  • ? By the time I get to Section 2, I already have
    a very strong opinion about whether to accept or
    reject.
  • Your job is to give me the evidence I need in the
    title and abstract to select your paper for
    review, and in the introduction to result in the
    right opinion!

19
Good Reviews Are...
  • Polite
  • Fair
  • Concise
  • Clear
  • Constructive
  • Specific
  • Well-documented
  • Represent the scientific community
  • ... but you get what you get!
  • Bad, unfair review that missed the point? Fix
    your paper anyway!

20
Ethical Issues
  • Multiple submissions
  • Journal versions of conference papers
  • Authors and author order
  • Listing papers in your CV

21
Rejected!! ? Now What?
  • Fix the paper!
  • Read the reviews, rail and complain, berate the
    reviewer
  • Calm down
  • Read them again with an open mind
  • Do more experiments, revise the paper,
  • Go back to the reviews again have you addressed
    all the points?
  • Have people read the revision critically
  • Do more experiments, revise the paper,
  • Repeat until the next deadline ?

22
Presentations
23
Know How Long You Have
  • How long is the talk? Are questions included?
  • A good heuristic is 2-3 minutes per slide
  • If you have too many slides, youll skip some
    orworserush desperately to finish. Avoid this
    temptation!!
  • Almost by definition, you never have time to say
    everything about your topic, so dont worry about
    skipping some things!
  • Unless youre very experienced giving talks, you
    should practice your timing
  • A couple of times on your own to get the general
    flow
  • At least one dry run to work out the kinks
  • A run-through on your own the night before the
    talk

24
Know Your Audience
  • Dont waste time on basics if youre talking to
    an audience in your field
  • Even for these people, you need to be sure youre
    explaining each new concept clearly
  • On the other hand, youll lose people in a
    general audience if you dont give the necessary
    background
  • In any case, the most important thing is to
    emphasize what youve done and why they should
    care!

25
Know What You Want to Say
  • Just giving a project summary is not interesting
    to most people
  • You should give enough detail to get your
    interesting ideas across (and to show that youve
    actually solved, but not enough to lose your
    audience
  • They want to hear what you did that was cool and
    why they should care
  • Preferably, theyll hear the above two points at
    the beginning of the talk, over the course of the
    talk, and at the end of the talk
  • If theyre intrigued, theyll ask questions or
    read your paper
  • Whatever you do, dont just read your slides!

26
Preparing slides
  • Dont just read your slides!
  • Use the minimum amount of text necessary
  • Use examples
  • Use a readable, simple, yet elegant format
  • Use color to emphasize important points, but
    avoid the excessive use of color
  • Hiding bullets like this is annoying (but
    sometimes effective), but
  • Dont fidget, and
  • Dont just read your slides!

Abuse
of
animation
is
a
cardinal
sin!
27
How to Give a Bad TalkAdvice from Dave
Patterson, summarized by Mark Hill
  1. Thou shalt not be neat
  2. Thou shalt not waste space
  3. Thou shalt not covet brevity
  4. Thou shalt cover thy naked slides
  5. Thou shalt not write large
  6. Thou shalt not use color
  7. Thou shalt not illustrate
  8. Thou shalt not make eye contact
  9. Thou shalt not skip slides in a long talk
  10. Thou shalt not practice

28
Some Useful Resources
Any Questions?
  • Some useful resources
  • Writing
  • Lynn DuPre, Bugs in Writing
  • Strunk White, Elements of Style
  • Giving talks
  • Mark Hill, Oral presentation advice
  • Patrick Winston, Some lecturing heuristics
  • Simon L. Peyton Jones et al., How to give a good
    research talk
  • Dave Patterson, How to have a bad career in
    research/academia
  • These slides
  • http//www.cs.umbc.edu/mariedj/talks/presenting-r
    esearch-dc-jul05.ppt
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