Difference between revisions of "Week 5"
From Research management course
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== O*: One-slide talk == | == O*: One-slide talk == | ||
Make one-slide presentation to introduce the main principle of your work. | Make one-slide presentation to introduce the main principle of your work. | ||
− | # Use the slide template [ | + | # Use the slide template [http://www.machinelearning.ru/wiki/images/d/d4/Surname2021PresentationSample.zip ZIP], [http://www.machinelearning.ru/wiki/images/0/0f/Surname2021PresentationSample.pdf PDF], [http://www.machinelearning.ru/wiki/images/d/d0/Surname2021PresentationSample_ru.pdf PDF Ru]. |
# Set the third slide with | # Set the third slide with | ||
## a plot or a diagramm, | ## a plot or a diagramm, |
Revision as of 17:48, 11 March 2021
Goal of the week: Visualise the principle.
Contents
C: Code of the computational experiment
Organize your code so that the computational experiment runs every time with results stored.
- Set the only main file to run the experiment.
- Decompose the project code, write functions and modules.
- Gather the experiment parameters in a special-purpose section.
- A text description of the experiment flow helps.
- Set a procedure of historical version points to return to the previous experiment.
- Commit schedule helps.
- Write named plots to a designated folder.
- Write your results to a .tex-file and compile.
- If your experiment run takes long time, just cut the data set.
- Do not use big or sophisticated data. Put your efforts to illustrate your main message.
V: Visualize project
Set the list of plots that will be included in your paper and presentation.
- Make a plot of the source data.
- Goal: put notations to the plot.
- List plots to illustrate with.
- Make a plot to show the main message.
O*: One-slide talk
Make one-slide presentation to introduce the main principle of your work.
- Use the slide template ZIP, PDF, PDF Ru.
- Set the third slide with
- a plot or a diagramm,
- main keywords or message,
- basic notations, and
- essential terms.
- Prepare a talk up to one minute (1'20" max) long.
- See examples in the lecture slides.