Difference between revisions of "Week 5"

From Research management course
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 23: Line 23:
 
== 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 [link here].
+
# 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.

C: Code of the computational experiment

Organize your code so that the computational experiment runs every time with results stored.

  1. Set the only main file to run the experiment.
  2. Decompose the project code, write functions and modules.
  3. Gather the experiment parameters in a special-purpose section.
    • A text description of the experiment flow helps.
  4. Set a procedure of historical version points to return to the previous experiment.
    • Commit schedule helps.
  5. 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.

  1. Make a plot of the source data.
    • Goal: put notations to the plot.
  2. List plots to illustrate with.
  3. Make a plot to show the main message.

O*: One-slide talk

Make one-slide presentation to introduce the main principle of your work.

  1. Use the slide template ZIP, PDF, PDF Ru.
  2. Set the third slide with
    1. a plot or a diagramm,
    2. main keywords or message,
    3. basic notations, and
    4. essential terms.
  3. Prepare a talk up to one minute (1'20" max) long.
  4. See examples in the lecture slides.

Resources