Title: Literature Survey, Comprehension
1Literature Survey, Comprehension Review
2Thesis Structure
Chapter 1. Introduction
3Thesis Structure
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Literature Review
4Thesis Structure
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Literature Review
Chapter 3. Design
5Thesis Structure
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Literature Review
Chapter 3. Design
Chapter 4. Development
6Thesis Structure
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Literature Review
Chapter 5. Evaluation
Chapter 3. Design
Chapter 4. Development
7Thesis Structure
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 6. Conclusions and Future Work
Chapter 2. Literature Review
Chapter 5. Evaluation
Chapter 3. Design
Chapter 4. Development
8Chapter N.
- Consider these as logical chapters, that is to
say they might represent a number of physical
chapters or a single section - For example, Chapter 2, the Literature Review
chapter might consist of a chapter on Knowledge
Management, a separate chapter on Knowledge
Elicitation - Or for example, Chapter 5, the Evaluation
Chapter might just exist as a section in the
Conclusions and Future Work chapter.
9Thesis Structure
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 6. Conclusions and Future Work
Chapter 2. Literature Review
Chapter 5. Evaluation
Chapter 3. Design
Chapter 4. Development
10Thesis Structure
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 6. Conclusions and Future Work
Chapter 2. Literature Review
Chapter 5. Evaluation
Chapter 3. Design
Chapter 4. Development
11Introduction to Literature
12Introduction
- Finding out what is happening in your area of
research is a vital step along your journey to
discovery, to find and understand how leading
researchers in your field have tackled similar
problems and the results they obtained,
shortcomings they observed and methodologies they
employed are the goals of the literature review
process.
13 2D Analysis
- The objective of this process is to
systematically analyse the existing research and
classify it in one of two dimensions. - The breadth of the review is concerned with
setting the scene, in terms of describing the
foundational research in this particular domain,
there will be research mentioned from each of the
areas you have included in your spider diagram. - The depth of the research concerns itself with
the particular topic work that your research will
be built upon. There should be approximately the
same number of research papers covered in the
depth and breath of the research review.
14Examples
- Lets look at two examples
- Knowledge Management
- Information Technology
15 2D Analysis
Breadth of Research
Depth of Research
16 2D Analysis
Breadth of Research
17Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
18Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Web 2.0
Knowledge Sharing
Agile Methods
Elicitation
Knowledge Maps
Decision Support
19Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Web 2.0
Knowledge Sharing
Agile Methods
Elicitation
Knowledge Maps
Decision Support
Breadth of Domain
20Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Web 2.0
Knowledge Sharing
Agile Methods
Elicitation
Knowledge Maps
Decision Support
Breadth of Domain
Indicate your awareness of the boarder field, and
you know where your specific topic fits into the
domain
21Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Probst
Nonaka
Ruggles
Bhatt
Davenport
Eppler
Wiig
Prusak
Gurteen
22 2D Analysis
Breadth of Research
Depth of Research
23Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Web 2.0
24Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Probst
Nonaka
Ruggles
Bhatt
Davenport
Eppler
Wiig
Prusak
Gurteen
Web 2.0
25Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Probst
Nonaka
Ruggles
Bhatt
Davenport
Eppler
Wiig
Prusak
Gurteen
OReilly
McAfee
Miller
Web 2.0
Eggers
Knorr
Grossman
26Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Web 2.0
27Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Knowledge Sharing
28Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Knowledge Maps
29Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Elicitation
30Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Agile Methods
31Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Decision Support
32Knowledge Management Example
Knowledge Management
Web 2.0
Knowledge Sharing
Agile Methods
Elicitation
Knowledge Maps
Decision Support
33 2D Analysis
Breadth of Research
34Information Technology Example
Information Technology
35Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Databases
Computer Architecture
Networks
Assistive Technology
Image Synthesis
Agent Development
36Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Databases
Computer Architecture
Networks
Assistive Technology
Image Synthesis
Agent Development
Breadth of Domain
37Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Databases
Computer Architecture
Networks
Assistive Technology
Image Synthesis
Agent Development
Breadth of Domain
Indicate your awareness of the boarder field, and
you know where your specific topic fits into the
domain
38Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Knuth
Wirth
Hoare
Naur
von Neumann
Dijkstra
Turing
Moore
Boehm
39Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Databases
40Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Knuth
Wirth
Hoare
Naur
von Neumann
Dijkstra
Turing
Moore
Boehm
Databases
41Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Knuth
Wirth
Hoare
Naur
von Neumann
Dijkstra
Turing
Moore
Boehm
Date
Codd
Gray
Databases
Boyce
Pipes
Epstein
42Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Databases
43Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Image Synthesis
44Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Networks
45Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Agent Development
46Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Comp Architecture
47Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Assistive Tech
48Information Technology Example
Information Technology
Databases
Comp Architecture
Networks
Assistive Tech
Image Synthesis
Agent Development
49Who are ACM ?
- The Association for Computing Machinery, or ACM,
is a learned society for computing. It was
founded in 1947 as the world's first scientific
and educational computing society. Its membership
is more than 92,000 as of 2009. ACM is organized
into over 170 local chapters and 35 Special
Interest Groups (SIGs), through which it conducts
most of its activities. Many of the SIGs, like
SIGGRAPH, SIGPLAN, SIGCSE and SIGCOMM, sponsor
regular conferences which have become famous as
the dominant venue for presenting new innovations
in certain fields. The groups also publish a
large number of specialized journals, magazines,
and newsletters.
50Who else ?
- Another significant group are IEEE
(Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers) called eye-triple-e is a
professional organization for the advancement of
technology, it also publishes a number journals, - including IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data
Engineering
51Good Sources ?
- Journal Papers
- Conference Papers
- Textbooks
- Other Books
- Company Whitepapers
- Company Websites
- Blogs
- Wikis
Credibility
52Literature Survey, Comprehension Review
In Summary
53Literature Survey (1/2)
- The literature survey is the process of
identifying and acquiring the research papers,
textbooks, web-sites, theses, etc. that you will
require to get a comprehensive overview of the
research that has been done in the area that you
are investigating.
54Literature Survey (2/2)
- A focused survey technique is recommended to
ensure you hit the ground running and using
this technique you are almost immediately in a
position to implement experiments. Recording the
papers you have found and read is also of vital
importance, and techniques and software available
for these tasks are also covered in this section.
55Literature Comprehension(1/2)
- The literature comprehension is the process of
reading and understanding the research found in
the survey process. Part of the comprehension
process may require that experiments described in
the research be replicated or implemented.
56Literature Comprehension(2/2)
- This will normally mean that your supervisor or
other people will need to help. The process of
reading and trying to understand complex research
can sometimes be a discouraging one, but a
systematic approach to tackling this is described
in this section.
57Literature Review (1/3)
- The literature review is the process of
consolidating the various strands of past
research into a single narrative describing the
evolution of the research domain.
58Literature Review (2/3)
- There are checklists provided to assist you in
this task, one that deals with the evaluation of
a research paper, and the other which deals with
questions to reflect upon regarding the overall
structure of the literature review chapter in a
dissertation.
59Literature Review (3/3)
- The underlying (or hidden) theme of the narrative
is to show that there is a gap in the existing
research and how your work will address this
problem.
60Literature Survey, Comprehension Review
In Detail
61Literature Survey
62Literature Survey In detail
- If you know the exact domain of your research
(from the research proposal stage, and further
clarified by the mini-dissertation and
dissertation shell phases) it makes sense to
initially focus your search on papers that relate
(almost) exactly to your own research, rather
than spending a great deal of time reading every
paper under the sun that seems remotely relevant.
63Literature Survey In detail
- The technique is simple, find an up-to-date
thesis that is closely related to your research
question (your supervisor should be able to help
you with this, if not, search the web) and use
this as a launch pad to your research This is a
very useful starting point since it will give you
an immediate overview of your research field.
64Some Considerations When Using A Thesis As A
Starting Point
- Regional Variations Different countries,
different regions and even different universities
have differing standards for their dissertations,
so, whilst the dissertation is a useful starting
point, it can only be considered as such, and is
not a template for your own work. - Correspondence of Research The dissertation
that you are using should have a significant
overlap with your own research, but there are
bound to be differences, therefore, your own
literature review will be very different to the
one you have found, since yours is aimed at
highlighting the gap that you wish to address. - Quality of Research The quality of the
dissertation is something you will need to
consider, how comprehensive is this persons work
? Have they missed any important papers or major
blocks of research ?
65Searching the Web
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75acronyms
single-concept principle
pseudo-synonyms, or false synonyms
antonyms
hyponyms
neologisms
phraseologism
PROBLEMS WITH USING A SEARCH ENGINE AS THE SOLE
SOURCE OF INFORMATION
quasi-synonyms, or near-synonyms
hypernyms
Cross- references
collocation
monosemy
synonyms
tautonyms
polysemy
abbreviations
76Finding Research online
- Effective Searching
- Let us consider searching for information
relating to 'Project-Based Learning' - The Hyphen
- The first thing to note is the hyphen between the
words 'Project' and 'Based', will every web-page
relating to this subject have the hyphen in it,
or will some just leave it out. If you just leave
it out the search engines will find the phrase
with or without the hyphen.
77Finding Research online
- So the first search to try is
- "Project Based Learning"
- if this returns 10,000 links then try
- "Project Based Learning" "PhD Thesis"
- "Project Based Learning" "Masters Thesis
- Project Based Learning Masters Thesis
Declaration - this may return PhD or Masters thesis on the
subject you require information on.
78Finding Research online
- To find other 'good' pages relating to your
subject matter, try - "Project Based Learning Link"
- for "PBL Links" or "PBL Link Page"
- "Project Based Learning Portal"
- for "PBL Portal" or "PBL Portal Page"
- "Project Based Learning Webring"
- for "PBL Webring" or "PBL Webrings"
- "Project Based Learning FAQ"
- for "PBL FAQ"or "PBL FAQs" or "PBL FAQL"or "PBL
FAQLs"
79Finding Research online
- If you are looking for papers relating to
"Project Based Learning", try - "Project Based Learning" Bibliography
- "Project Based Learning" Literature Review
- "Project Based Learning" Literature Survey
- "Project Based Learning" Overview
- "Project Based Learning" A Roadmap
- Unlike the previous section where we were looking
for 'good' pages and put the entire phrase in
double quotes, in this section we are only
putting the subject matter we are investigating
in quotes and the rest of the terms are free
text, in this way we can find pages which may not
be titled, for example, "Project Based Learning
Bibliography", but may be a bibliography which
contain references to Project Based Learning.
80Finding Research online
- If you are looking for a more specific topic, for
example, "The Impact of the Web on Project Based
Learning", try - "Impact of the Web on Project Based Learning"
(unlikely) - "Project Based Learning" overview web
- "Project Based Learning" survey web
- "Project Based Learning" review web
- "Project Based Learning" assessment web
81Finding Research online
- Also consider web-sites which will be using the
acronym for "Project Based Learning" - so try
- "PBL"
- "P.B.L."
- Consider the acronym for "Virtual Learning
Environments", it could be "VLE"or "VLEs"or
"V.L.E."or "V.L.E.s"or "V.L.Es", so try - "VLE"
- "V.L.E"
82Example Synonym
- Community of practice
- Network of practice
- Virtual community
- Virtual Ethnography
- Virtual team
- Community-driven knowledge management
83Literature Comprehension
84Literature Comprehension
- Active Reading
- It is very important to read new research in an
active manner, you shouldnt just skim read the
material, but understand what you are reading, as
you are reading it. It may be necessary to
re-read a sentence, one phrase at a time, or one
word at a time until the meaning is evident. It
may be the case that you will have to consult
some reference source to confirm the meaning of
terminology, this being the case, it is only
logical to keep reference material close to hand
(textbooks, the internet, dictionaries, etc.)
85Literature Comprehension
- A typical research paper (from a conference or
journal) consists of the following parts - Title,
- Abstract,
- Introduction,
- Methodology,
- Results and
- Bibliography.
86Literature Comprehension
- When you encounter new terminology in the course
of reading papers (which you invariably will), it
is important that you note it down, and find out
what it means. You can do this by looking it up
on the web or in a textbook, if it is an acronym,
synonym or a related term to your research topic,
BUILD A LEXICON. This is a very important step,
since any new term could be central to your
research, it may describe a mathematical
technique or it could be a synonym for the
research domain itself, whatever the case.
87Literature Comprehension
- At the beginning of the research process you will
be deluged with new terminology, the important
thing is to hang in there, dont get overwhelmed
by it all, the more papers you read, the less new
terms you will be encountering, the more of an
expert you will become. As you are learning more
about the papers it is very important that you
update the records you are keeping about this
particular paper, in particular, the research
topic or keywords sections.
88Papers
- Title
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Methodology
- Results
- Bibliography
89Literature Review
90Literature Review
- The review itself is the final piece of the
puzzle, it is a matter of tying together all the
previous research that you have found and
reviewed, and producing an artifact that is not
just all those reviews put together, but a
coherent and cohesive narrative of the research
to date, and a narrative that points to a gap
in the research that your work intends to fill.
It also contextualises the work in the broader
research scope.
91Literature Review
- The first step in this process is to consider
each article that you have reviewed, is it
significant enough to go into the review ? How do
you evaluate that ? The answer is simple does
it help build towards the gap in the research
you are identifying ? or to put it another way,
could you take this article out and it wouldnt
make any difference ? The articles should group
together into research trends so you should list
the articles by this grouping and see which ones
are important.
92Literature Review
- Remember that writing is not necessarily a linear
process, write what sections you know about, when
you know about them. As with all of the writing
that you will be doing for you dissertation,
there will be many drafts of the literature
review chapter, so it is best to overwrite it
first and then you can cut down, therefore you
should include many of the questions for each
article in the first draft of your work and chip
away at it a piece at a time.
93Literature Review
- The research should be seen as the zenith of the
cumulative process of the scientific research
that has already been done. Then the process
becomes a matter of making these disparate
stories into one single narrative, with one theme
there is something missing in the research to
date that you are going to address.
94Literature Review
- The structure of the literature review will be
the same as that of any document, it has a - beginning,
- middle and
- end.
95Literature Review
- The beginning or introduction will introduce the
main research topics and the end or conclusion
will be that there has been a great deal of work
done in this area, but there is a gap in the work
that your research will address.
96Literature Review
- The middle part of the literature review, can be
presented in a number of way, depending on your
personal preferences, the main research trends
must be discussed, key researchers must be
identified, and the work must spiral from its
research beginnings towards the research gap that
you are going to fill. This is the hurricane that
we saw at the start of the chapter, the general
research topics you discuss must lead logically
to the specific research that you are
undertaking.
97Literature Review
- It may be the case that the trends in the
research in your domain fall into two opposing
camps, the for-and-against type paradigm, This
being the case, whichever side your work is on,
make sure that you present the merits of each
side, this gives your readers a balanced view of
the domain, and gives them the impression of a
researcher who can take a sophisticated
perspective on matters.
98Literature Review
99Literature Review
Research Question
Experiment
Results
For each paper consider the relationship between
the Research Question, the Experiment, and the
Results.