Difference between revisions of "Week 2"

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# goal of the experiment, set up, data sets, workflow.
 
# goal of the experiment, set up, data sets, workflow.
  
Also,
+
Also, to refine your Introduction:
 
# ''Important!'' Wikipedia is not the source of information, but it contains many useful sources.
 
# ''Important!'' Wikipedia is not the source of information, but it contains many useful sources.
 
# ''Note that!'' ArXiv is not a peer-review source of information. Look for the  copies of papers that are published in peer-review scientific journals. If after one or two years after its ArXiv version, the pare did not appear in a peer-review journal, be careful to use it: this paper might be non-verified since it was rejected by the other journals.  
 
# ''Note that!'' ArXiv is not a peer-review source of information. Look for the  copies of papers that are published in peer-review scientific journals. If after one or two years after its ArXiv version, the pare did not appear in a peer-review journal, be careful to use it: this paper might be non-verified since it was rejected by the other journals.  
 
+
# Create the file ''Surname2018Title.bib'' for your project.
# Create a file ''ProjectN.bib'' for the group project, or ''Surname2018Title.bib'' for your personal project.
 
 
# Move from the file ''LinkReview'' useful bibliographic records in the BibTeX format.
 
# Move from the file ''LinkReview'' useful bibliographic records in the BibTeX format.
 
#* Check the correctness of the BibTeX database (styles of authors names, volumes of journals, page numbers).
 
#* Check the correctness of the BibTeX database (styles of authors names, volumes of journals, page numbers).

Revision as of 23:51, 17 February 2021

  • The goal of this week is comprehend the main goal of your project and write about it.

Select your project (Spring 2021)

To select your project:

  1. Look through the list of projects.
  2. Find information about the experts and consultants.
  3. Select your projects in [1].
  4. Wait for confirmation from
  5. Put confirmed topics to the Group table on Machinelearning.ru

A: Abstract

  1. Write a draft of your abstract.
  • The abstract shall not exceed 600 characters. It may contain:
    • wide-range field of the investigated problem,
    • narrow problem to focus on,
    • features and conditions of the problem,
    • [the novelty],
    • application to illustrate with.
  • For joint projects it is important that each team-member writes its own text.

I: Introduction

The introductory part includes research goals and motivations. It reasons the research with fundamental and state-of-the-arts references. It delivers the main message of the work to the reader. This message shows novelty of this work in comparison to recent results.

Write Introduction. The expected size is one page. The expected plan is:

  1. the research goal (and its motivations),
  2. the object of research (introduce main termini),
  3. the problem (what is the challenge),
  4. methodology: literature review and state-of-the-art
  5. the project tasks,
  6. the proposed solution, its novelty and advantages,
  7. the profs and cons of recent works,
  8. goal of the experiment, set up, data sets, workflow.

Also, to refine your Introduction:

  1. Important! Wikipedia is not the source of information, but it contains many useful sources.
  2. Note that! ArXiv is not a peer-review source of information. Look for the copies of papers that are published in peer-review scientific journals. If after one or two years after its ArXiv version, the pare did not appear in a peer-review journal, be careful to use it: this paper might be non-verified since it was rejected by the other journals.
  3. Create the file Surname2018Title.bib for your project.
  4. Move from the file LinkReview useful bibliographic records in the BibTeX format.
    • Check the correctness of the BibTeX database (styles of authors names, volumes of journals, page numbers).
    • Use bibliographic databases to facilitate your work.
    • Use the default style \bibliographystyle{plain} before the bibliography section \bibliography{ProjectN}.

L: Literature

We use the LinkReview draft format to share our evanescent ephemeral ideas and impressions we have during the literature reading.

  1. Collect the list of references including:
    1. state-of-the-art reviews, tutorials,
    2. fundamental solutions to the problem,
    3. the basic algorithm to solve your problem,
    4. alternative algorithms,
    5. [changes in the research directions],
    6. data sets and experiments,
    7. the papers that use these data sets
    8. applications of the results,
    9. names of researchers, who solve this problem,
    10. their students and teams,
    11. those, who refer to their works.
  2. Balance the list of the new and well-known works.
  3. Keep up-to date the list of keywords to search with.
  4. Continuously fill your LinkReview.
  5. Plan Introduction (see the next todo list), namely collect:
    • keywords as the basic termini; those who brigs good search results are useful,
    • what the paper devoted to,
    • the investigated problem,
    • the central idea,
    • literature review,
    • the authors' contribution.

B: Beginner's-talk

Short 45-second introductory talk. Plan of the talk:

  1. The project goal. What is the motivation, the goal to reach?
  2. The main idea. What is the message?
  3. The expected result. What is your delivery, your impact, novelty?

There is no time to show a slide or draw a plot on the blackboard. It is recommended to rehearse the report. Week 3 starts with your talk.


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