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Title: PhD Process: Part II Personal, Communication and Environmental Aspects


1
PhD Process Part IIPersonal, Communication
and Environmental Aspects
  • Jayant Haritsa
  • Computer Science Automation
  • Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore

2
The PhD Process
REAL WORLD
Part II
RESEARCHCOMMUNITY
INSTITUTION
ADVISOR
Part I
THESIS
3
PERSONAL ASPECTS
4
Motivation for PhD
  • VTU requirement for promotion
  • Cultural capital (add the Dr prefix)
  • Masochistic mindset (long pain period)
  • Enjoy discovery / writing / talking

5
Work Ethic
  • INDEPENDENT research
  • It is YOUR thesis, not the Advisors!
  • The advisor is not a NANNY!
  • CANNOT do PhD as side business
  • Focus on ONE problem at a time
  • 2 0.5 ltlt 1 1
  • WELCOME criticism of your work

6
Survival Pre-requisites 1
  • Ability to look at life in a perverse (creative)
    way
  • (Mark Twain) Age is an issue of mind over
    matter. If you don't mind,
    it doesn't matter !
  • Patience and mental strength to negotiate the
    troughs (inevitable for every PhD)
  • Trust your gut feelings in spite of negative
    results
  • Luck favors the prepared mind (Pasteur/Hamming)
  • Good sense of humour you will definitely need
    it!
  • Ability to smile (through gritted teeth) at
    advisor

7
Survival Pre-requisites 2
  • Industry experience NO!
  • "Real problems" only imply short-term
    applicability
  • May even be counter-productive since immediate
    reaction is to start programming, rather than
    conceptual thinking
  • PhD registration ? Research Scholar
  • PhD is training to do research AND actually
    doing research

X
8
VTU Faculty Specifics
  • Difficult to devote time due to academic and
    familial responsibilities
  • Make sure to set aside a fixed daily time slot
    for research and make this sacrosanct
  • Course students can participate in the research
    work under your direction and thereby accelerate
    the progress

9
Good PhD Thesis
  • Relevant to society NO!
  • Relevant to industry NO!
  • Right question Did I have fun thinking about
    the problem and did I devise elegant solutions
    that I am proud to show my mother (and she didn't
    find any mistakes in the proofs)?
  • Doing a PhD is hard enough without the burden of
    additional expectations ...
  • All good dissertations find their way into the
    real-world sooner or later

10
ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS
11
BAD ADVISOR CHOICE
  • Knows less about the topic than you do(even at
    the beginning)
  • Not visible in the research community
  • Says Yes to a student without assessment
  • Popular with students due to low expectations,
    not subject mastery
  • Most notable achievement in last five years has
    been getting his PF transferred

12
GOOD ADVISOR CHOICE 1
  • Junior Young Turk
  • Great enthusiasm and involvement
  • Current with research topics
  • Remembers PhD tribulations
  • Expects the world from you
  • Micro-management of your work

13
GOOD ADVISOR CHOICE 2
  • Senior Big Shot
  • Broad perspective of research area
  • Can advertise your work well
  • Provides academic freedom to explore
  • Perenially rushed for time
  • Will not write your thesis

14
BAD CHOICE of FRIENDS
  • ondu idly-vada / by-two coffee dost
  • Unless your thesis topic is Topological sorting
    arrangements of circles and donuts
  • Indian philosophy buff
  • Indian philosophy is an intellectual mechanism
    for providing extremely sophisticated reasons as
    to why work cannot be done
  • Lazy genius
  • Will drag you into the mud with him

15
GOOD CHOICE of FRIENDS
  • Technically competent and ambitious
  • a healthy spirit of both cooperation and
    competition
  • Willing to call a spade a spade and criticize
    you to your face
  • Brings out the best research in you

16
RESEARCH COMMUNITY
  • Take every opportunity to meet with the movers
    and shakers in the field
  • attend local international conferences such as
    COMAD, HiPC, FSTTCS, IndoCrypt,
  • attend summer schools (Yahoo, Microsoft, )
  • apply for six-month internships in research labs
    after you are about half-way through your thesis
  • send technical reports for comments outside
  • for funding, approach academies (INAE/IASc /NASc
    /INSA) and DST/CSIR/KSCST/VTU

17
REAL WORLD
  • Family
  • starts calling you a visiting professor
  • question your sanity with cold-blooded regularity
  • Well-wishers
  • take great delight in asking you Is the thesis
    done yet? Can we call you Doctor now?Do all
    PhDs take this long?

18
COMMUNICATIONASPECTS
19
WRITING and PRESENTATION IMPERATIVES
  • It is your duty as a scientist to share your
    discoveries with others
  • Your work is understood only from what you
    present / publish
  • You are evaluated only based on what you write in
    your reports, etc.

20
Acquiring Writing Skills 1
  • http//dsl.serc.iisc.ernet.in/haritsa/geninfo/tec
    hwrite.ppt (by Vikram Pudi)
  • Essential for both publications and thesis
  • Spelling Automated Spellcheckers
  • Style Elements of Style by Strunk White
  • Clarity, elegance and flow
  • Technical precision is paramount
  • e.g. rampant misuse of optimal and ideal
  • Avoid ornate language this is not a literary
    exercise
  • e.g. The linked list appeared like a chain of
    jasmine flowers

21
Acquiring Writing Skills 2
  • Organization
  • Modular (like programming)
  • Linear narrative (no item songs ?)
  • Minimize redundancy
  • Choose good titles/acronyms (like variable names)
  • Time Will Tell Leveraging Temporal Expressions
    in IR
  • Real-time commit protocol called PROMPT (Permits
    Reading Of Modified Prepared-data for Timeliness)
  • Read and revise word-by-word!
  • 10 page paper usually takes a month to write
    satisfactorily

22
Acquiring Presentation Skills
  • Slides should be in large font / visible colors
  • Ideas should be conveyed through pictures /
    animation as far as possible
  • Focus on conveying the main idea, and not every
    single detail
  • Rehearse the entire talk a few times
  • Memorize the inter-slide transitions
  • Carry out dry-runs with your peer group

23
PUBLICATIONS
  • ESSENTIAL to publish at least TWO papers before
    submitting thesis
  • Progress milestones ? confidence buildup
  • Honest feedback from anonymous experts
  • Early warning of potential disaster situations
  • Ideas for future work
  • Thesis gets written/revised at a steady pace,
    not delayed to the end, when it can prove to be
    an overwhelming task
  • Makes the resume speak for itself

24
PUBLICATION FORA
  • Unique feature of CS The top conferences and
    journals are viewed as equivalent fora.
  • Evaluating Computer Scientists and Engineers for
    Promotion and Tenure
  • David Patterson (Univ. of California, Berkeley)
  • Lawrence Snyder (Univ. of Washington, Seattle)
  • Jeffrey Ullman (Stanford University)
  • In those dimensions that count most,
    conferences are superior. Conference
    publication is both rigorous and
    prestigious.

25
CS Conference/Journal Quality
  • Most reliable, comprehensive and recent are the
    rankings by Australasian CORE
  • 1500 conferences and 2000 journals
  • Ranks them into A, A, B, C categories
  • Website http//www.core.edu.au/
  • Goal should be to publish in A and A categories
  • ICDE database conference (A) 15 accepts

26
Further Reading
  • How to Get a PhD A Handbook for Students and
    Their Supervisors
  • E. Phillips and D.S. Pugh, OUP
  • Getting a Phd An Action Plan to Help You Manage
    Your Research, Your Supervisor and Your Project
  • John Finn (Routledge Study Guides)
  • Authoring a PhD How to Plan, Draft, Write and
    Finish a Doctoral Thesis or Dissertation
  • Patrick Dunleavy (Palgrave Study Guides)
  • http//www.phdcomics.com/

27
Take Away
28
QUESTIONS ?

29
(No Transcript)
30
END
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