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Welcome to USC CSCI597

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Title: Welcome to USC CSCI597


1
Welcome to USC CSCI597!
  • This course provides a series of expository
    lectures to introduce Ph.D. students to the
    breadth of research topics in CS (and, to some
    extent, beyond). The idea is to cycle through the
    subareas of USC research in CS each semester.
  • First-year Ph.D. Students are required to enroll
    for 1 unit of CSCI 597 for the first 2 semesters
    of the Ph.D. Program. (Applicable only to
    students enrolling in Summer of 2000 or later.)

2
Welcome to USC CSCI597!
  • Lectures M 1200-1250pm, OHE-122
  • Office Hours M 2-4, HNB-30A
  • Grading Must attend all lectures and complete
    all assignments with satisfactory results.
  • Enrollment First-year Ph.D. Students are
    required to enroll for 1 unit of CSCI 597 for the
    first 2 semesters of the Ph.D. Program.
  • Web site http//iLab.usc.edu/classes/2007cs597f/

3
More on grading / assignments
  • In the first or last 5 minutes of each lecture
    short 5-minute quiz about the contents of the
    previous lecture.
  • Paper will be provided, but bring a pen or
    pencil.
  • Questions will be easy, but
  • You must be present, and
  • On time!
  • Quizzes will be collected immediately at the end
    of the 5-minute period.
  • There will be no opportunity for submitting late
    quizzes.

4
More on grading / assignments
  • Each quiz graded on a scale
  • From 0 (not turned in, no answer, all wrong
    answers, )
  • To 5 (all correct answers)
  • To pass you will need to get a cumulative grade
    of 3n or more, where n is the number of
    assignments handed out during the semester.

5
Our focus in this class
  • We focus on USC-CS research
  • Speakers will be from the department, including
    ISI and ICT
  • This class complements but does not replace
    normal seminars

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Ph.D. Research
  • How to read papers?
  • How to keep up-to-date with research?
  • How to determine novelty of an idea?
  • How to write papers?

8
How to read papers
  • Be focused
  • Use google and books extensively
  • Start with reviews and book chapters, then go on
    with topical research as you are already more
    familiar with the field
  • Be critical learn to identify weak papers
  • Read as much as you can. You want to become the
    world expert in your research domain.

9
How to keep up-to-date with research
  • Check online journals regularly
  • Check online search engines regularly
  • Go to conferences
  • Go to USC/UCLA/Caltech/other research seminars
  • Talk with people identify key researchers in
    your topic, then meet with them when they come
    over to USC for a talk
  • Check conference web sites
  • Check lab web sites

10
Medline / PubMed
  • http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/
  • Created by NIH
  • Moderated (selected journals, some degree of
    human checking)
  • Mostly for the biological sciences
  • Increasingly, provides links to PDF versions of
    papers in a growing subset of the journals covered

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Getting the bibliography record
  • Try the tools we have developed at
  • http//iLab.usc.edu/bibTOhtml/
  • Example
  • medkey visual attention
  • lists papers matching the keywords
  • medref visual attention gtgt mybib.bib
  • grabs the medline records, convert to bibtex,
  • add to end of local bibliography file

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16
ISI Web of Knowledge
  • http//isiknowledge.com
  • Wide array of journals and conference
    proceedings, broad science and engineering
    coverage
  • Moderated (selected publications, some human
    intervention)
  • Commercial product, USC has a campuswide
    subscription (based on matching IP address to the
    128.125.x.x)
  • Search not only for papers by keywords, authors,
    etc. but also for papers that cite a given paper,
    or for papers that cite the work of a given
    author.

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21
ResearchIndex
  • http//researchindex.org
  • Created by NEC research
  • Autonomous, unmoderated, web crawler looking for
    PDFs
  • Mostly about computer science and related (e.g.,
    robotics, etc.)
  • Wide coverage, but only of those papers that are
    online somewhere
  • Will return a variety of documents published in a
    variety of places or not published at all
    always double-check that the document you are
    interested in has some backing (e.g., is a
    preprint version of a paper published in a
    well-known journal)

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USC Library online resources
  • http//www.usc.edu/libraries/eresources/
  • Listing and links to all journals for which USC
    has an online subscription (click on eJournals)

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Google scholar
  • New kid on the block
  • Returns papers and links to other papers that
    cite them
  • Links to other databases
  • Links to the USC library system

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31
How to determine the novelty of an idea
  • Be an expert in the field
  • Check with your advisor and other researchers
  • Check at conferences
  • Send it to a conference and gather reviews
    reactions

32
Your Ph.D. at USC
  • The goal of a Ph.D.
  • What it takes to achieve a great Ph.D.
  • Courses
  • Advisor

33
The goal of a Ph.D.
  • Make a significant impact onto a specific
    research issue, such that
  • nobody working on this issue can afford to ignore
    your work.
  • Several components
  • Need to become an expert in the field
  • Develop novel ideas
  • Implement them
  • Thoroughly test and validate them
  • Make your results known through conferences,
    informal meetings, and journal publications

34
The Questions Posed to You
  • What do you want to get out of the PhD?
  • a meal-ticket
  • stepping-stone to industry
  • a milestone in an intellectual quest
  • something else?
  • To what extent do you expect your thesis topic to
    result
  • from your motivation or
  • your supervisor's direction?
  • How do you get information to inform yourself
  • in your research area
  • in computer science generally
  • in broader intellectual topics
  • in the arts and current events?
  • What are you doing to educate yourself as as a
    citizen of the world, not just as a computer
    scientist?

35
How to achieve this
  • Your Ph.D. is a race get started as soon as
    possible!

36
How to achieve this
  • Your Ph.D. is a race get started as soon as
    possible!
  • Your Ph.D. will require work of an intensity that
    you have never before encountered need to be
    strong, dedicated and focused

37
How to achieve this
  • Your Ph.D. is a race get started as soon as
    possible!
  • Your Ph.D. will require work of an intensity that
    you have never before encountered need to be
    strong, dedicated and focused
  • Your Ph.D. will be full of ambushes, deceptions
    and problems learn to deal with them
    efficiently

38
How to achieve this
  • Your Ph.D. is a race get started as soon as
    possible!
  • Your Ph.D. will require work of an intensity that
    you have never before encountered need to be
    strong, dedicated and focused
  • Your Ph.D. will be full of ambushes, deceptions
    and problems learn to deal with them
    efficiently
  • Your Ph.D. will not necessarily succeed be very
    careful to keep it under control

39
How to achieve this
  • Your Ph.D. is a race get started as soon as
    possible!
  • Your Ph.D. will require work of an intensity that
    you have never before encountered need to be
    strong, dedicated and focused
  • Your Ph.D. will be full of ambushes, deceptions
    and problems learn to deal with them
    efficiently
  • Your Ph.D. will not necessarily succeed be very
    careful to keep it under control
  • Your Ph.D. is your most important, largest-scale
    achievement not anybody elses. Hence, you must
    take control and be in charge!

40
Courses
  • It is important to study hard and do very well on
    courses

41
Courses
  • It is important to study hard and do very well on
    courses
  • But dont overdo it! Your Ph.D. is not about
    taking courses.

42
Courses
  • It is important to study hard and do very well on
    courses
  • But dont overdo it! Your Ph.D. is not about
    taking courses.
  • During my Ph.D. I adopted the fire-and-forget
    strategy
  • Learn as much as possible
  • Exploit the university and its resources to the
    maximum
  • Spend a minimum amount of time on the homeworks
    be focused, efficient, do not drag it along
    forever, do not polish it

43
Screening
  • 1. Course work
  • Core courses
  • Research courses
  • Intellectual development
  • Find the balance as you hit that 3.5 GPA
  • Study what you need for your Ph.D.
  • 2. Find a potential advisor and convince him/her
    that you canmake real progress in their research
    area.
  • NOTE Several of the following slides contributed
    by Prof Michael Arbib.

44
Breadth and Depth
At the time of screening, you may only know your
general research area e.g., networking or
intelligent agents. You must chart the
territory for a definite subarea -- what are
the key issues, the best books, journals and
conferences, who are the top researchers? then
you must define your own more focused subarea in
which you will be the worlds leading
expert. Choosing a sufficiently focused area and
defining a 3-year (more or less) research
project can be time consuming and
frustrating! The right advisor should know more
about the overall territory than you do so that
s/he can be your guide. But to be a successful
student, you should eventually know morethan
your adviser about your narrow subarea!!
45
Quals
  • 1. Form a 5-person Quals committee Usually 4
    from the department and one Outside Member who
    represents the Graduate School.
  • 2. Write a Quals Document
  • Review the relevant literature
  • Define the open problems you will work on
  • Report on a completed piece of the research
    (similar to a conference paper or half a
    chapter).
  • Present a preliminary outline for your Ph.D.
    thesis with a tentative timeline
  • 3. Defend your Proposal orally in front of the
    committee
  • The aim is not to convince the committee you
    should pass but to maximize their feedback to
    focus and refine your work on your dissertation.
  • 4. Form a Ph.D. committee Usually 3 to 5 members
    of your Quals committee -- but you must include
    the Outside Member.

46
Between Quals and Thesis Completion
  • The thesis might take as little as one year or as
    many as four -- when doing original research you
    cannot predict what will happen
  • Your predictions in the quals timeline may be
    just right, but
  • Some problems may turn out to be much harder
    than predicted, while
  • Others may get solved by someone else while you
    are still working on them.
  • Thus the Quals Document is a general guideline,
    but may undergo constant reshaping in response
    both to your own discoveries and developments in
    the literature.
  • As your work progresses see your advisor
    frequently and other committee members more or
    less occasionally to report your progress and get
    helpful feedback.

47
Skills You May Acquire Along the Way
  • Presenting papers at conferences
  • Preparing articles for journal publication
  • Writing a patent
  • Helping your advisor prepare a research proposal

48
Thesis
  • The thesis is a sandwich
  • Introduction and Literature Review
  • 2 to 4 Research Chapters each similar in Scope
    to a Publication
  • Prospects for Future Research
  • Key advice
  • Scope out the hot places to publish in your
    subarea.
  • Then maintain 2 versions of the meat chapters
    as you write them one for the thesis and one for
    publication.
  • In general your advisor will let you proceed to
    the Defense only when s/he feels that you have a
    critical mass of original research

49
Defense
  • 1. Two weeks before the defense, submit a
    complete draft of the thesis to your committee
  • 2. The defense will usually have 2 parts
  • A 1-hour public lecture on the main points of
    your thesis
  • followed by a closed door session in which you
    will be closely questioned by the committee about
    any and all aspects of the thesis.
  • 3. In general, you will require a few weeks work
    to polish the thesis in a way that addresses the
    questions raised by your defense.
  • 4. Both in preparing for the exam and in
    submitting the thesis, you will be responsible to
    complete all Grad School paperwork and follow all
    the guidelines.
  • 5. Get a robe and mortar board and go to
    Commencement for proud photographs with your
    family, Dr. X!!

50
Finding an Advisor
  • Two different strategies
  • - Go where you can learn the most about what
    interests you most
  • - Go where the money is

51
Your advisor
  • Can help you with any issue dont be shy to
    ask!
  • Generally speaking, is understanding dont
    hesitate to criticize or complain (nicely)
  • Is knowledgeable please do listen and implement
    his/her advice
  • Is interested only in motivated, hard-working
    students unless you are one of these, you will
    not get much attention from her/him

52
Your advisor
  • is extra-busy!
  • - many deadlines every day
  • - many ongoing projects
  • - teaching takes a lot of time
  • - need to write proposals, papers, reports,
    organize committees, organize conferences,
    organize the lab, attend P.I. meetings, manage
    the lab, render various services to the
    university, do research, disseminate research
    via papers and many talks, help students write
    papers, help other students (not only from their
    own lab), lobby government agencies, babysit
    high- profile visitors, talk to the press, review
    papers, review proposals, review conference
    abstracts, etc

53
What Advisors Want
  • All advisors want to advance their careers, and
    thus hope that your thesis will yield conference
    papers and journal publications that will help
    their reputation and help them get their grants
    renewed.
  • Three styles
  • Directed The advisor has already specified
    step-by-step what an RA has to do on one of
    their grants and if you followthese steps you
    will get a Ph.D.
  • Laissez-faire Come and see me at quals and
    defense time.
  • Negotiator Convince the advisor that you have
    your own goals but then negotiate a thesis topic
    that advances your goals but also allows you to
    learn from what the advisor and his/her group are
    doing and contribute to the groups progress.

54
Interacting with your advisor
  • Cut on non-work-related stuff
  • When meeting, be sure to provide short reminder
    of context your have one Ph.D. project but your
    advisor is working on 10 just like yours in
    parallel
  • When meeting, be prepared your advisor has no
    time to waste
  • If your advisor seems too busy thats probably
    because your progress has not generated enough
    excitement yet. Work harder, implement what s/he
    suggested, go beyond that, show lots of results,
    demonstrate that you are dedicating your life
    to your project.

55
Interacting with your advisor
  • If possible, setup a weekly one-on-one meeting
    time.
  • Take notes during the meeting
  • At the end, summarize the key things you will do
    before the next meeting
  • For this to work, before each meeting make sure
    that
  • You have addressed the questions and pending
    issues raised during the previous meeting.
  • If you believe that a raised question actually
    was not worth addressing, then be sure to explain
    why.
  • This is very important because your advisor may
    envision a given step to be necessary for your
    research to go forward (e.g., run a control
    experiment, perform a given analysis, replot the
    data in a given way) as long as you dont take
    that step, your advisor will be stuck in his/her
    thinking because his/her beliefs have not changed.

56
Beyond your advisor
  • A secondary goal throughout my studies was to
    maximally benefit from the incredible resources
    provided by the university.
  • Identify key people and meet with them (you need
    to be prepared and have things to show them)
  • Identify key labs and hang around them
  • Identify key facilities and exploit them

57
Beyond your advisor
  • Show your work to other professors and students
    get feedback!
  • In difficult situations, most professors will
    open their door to you but you need to do the
    first step.

58
Ethical Issues
  • What is plagiarism?
  • Using others work and misrepresenting it as
    being your own.
  • This includes
  • Cut paste from the reading assigmnent
  • Cut paste from the web
  • Cut paste from books, other papers, etc.
  • Cut paste from ANYTHING that is not your own!
  • Changing wording of a sentence but keeping the
    ideas
  • Summary which does not include proper references
  • Etc.

59
Ethical issues
  • This and the following slides are from
  • http//www.usc.edu/student-affairs
    /student-conduct/ug_plag.htm
  • Plagiarism is the unacknowledged and
    inappropriate use of the ideas or wording of
    another writer.
  • As defined in the University Student Conduct Code
    (published in the current SCampus), plagiarism
    includes
  • "The submission of material authored by another
    person but represented as the student's own work,
    whether that material is paraphrased or copied in
    verbatim or near verbatim form"
  • "The submission of material subjected to
    editorial revision by another person that results
    in substantive changes in content or major
    alteration of writing style" and
  • "Improper acknowledgment of sources in essays or
    papers." (11.11)

60
Example 1 Repeating Another's Words Without
Acknowledgment
  • Original Source (From Neil Postman. Amusing
    Ourselves to Death. New York Penguin, 1985.
    127-128.)
  • The television commercial is the most peculiar
    and pervasive form of communication to issue
    forth from the electric plug....The move away
    from the use of propositions in commercial
    advertising began at the end of the nineteenth
    century. But it was not until the 1950's that the
    television commercial made linguistic discourse
    obsolete as the basis for product decisions. By
    substituting images for claims, the pictorial
    commercial made emotional appeal, not tests of
    truth, the basis of consumer decisions.

61
Example 1 Repeating Another's Words Without
Acknowledgment
  • Plagiarized Version (essentially verbatim)
  • Television commercials have made language
    obsolete as a basis for making decisions about
    products. The pictorial commercial has
    substituted images for claims and thereby made
    emotional appeal, rather than tests of truth, the
    basis of consumer decisions.

62
Example 1 Repeating Another's Words Without
Acknowledgment
  • Plagiarized Version (essentially verbatim)
  • Television commercials have made language
    obsolete as a basis for making decisions about
    products. The pictorial commercial has
    substituted images for claims and thereby made
    emotional appeal, rather than tests of truth, the
    basis of consumer decisions.
  • Although the writer has changed, rearranged, and
    deleted words in the version above, the text is
    essentially the same as the original source. In
    paraphrasing, you take the writer's ideas and put
    them in your own words. It is not a process of
    substituting synonyms or rearranging the order of
    words. Even if the version above gave credit to
    Postman for his ideas, the passage would be
    considered plagiarized.

63
Example 1 Repeating Another's Words Without
Acknowledgment
  • Correctly Paraphrased and Documented Version
  • Postman argues that television commercials do
    not use language or "test of truth" to help
    viewers decide whether to buy a product. Instead,
    they rely on images to create an emotional appeal
    that influences consumers' decisions (127-128).

64
Example 1 Repeating Another's Words Without
Acknowledgment
  • Correctly Paraphrased and Documented Version
  • Postman argues that television commercials do
    not use language or "test of truth" to help
    viewers decide whether to buy a product. Instead,
    they rely on images to create an emotional appeal
    that influences consumers' decisions (127-128).
  • In the correctly paraphrased and documented
    version above, most of the ideas have been
    paraphrased or restated in the writer's own
    words. Quotation marks have been placed around a
    key phrase that is taken directly from the
    original source. In addition, the name of the
    author refers readers to a corresponding entry in
    the Works Cited page, and the page number
    indicates the location of the information in the
    source cited.

65
Example 2 Presenting Another Writer's Argument
or Point of View Without Acknowledgment
  • Original Source (From Arlene Skolnick. Embattled
    Paradise. New York Basic Books, 1991. 11.)
  • The changes in larger society, as well as their
    reverberations in the family, call into question
    basic assumptions about the nature of American
    society, it family arrangements, and Americans
    themselves. A "Cultural struggle" ensues as
    people debate the meaning of change. One of these
    periods of cultural upheaval occurred in the
    early decades of the nineteenth century a second
    occurred in the decades just before and after the
    turn of the twentieth century. For the last
    thirty years, we have been living through another
    such wave of social change.
  • Three related structural changes seem to have set
    the current cycle of family change in motion
    first, the shift into a "postindustrial"
    information and service economy second, a
    demographic revolution that not only created mass
    longevity but reshaped the individual and family
    life course, creating life stages and
    circumstances unknown to earlier generations
    third, a process I call "psychological
    gentrification," which involves an introspective
    approach to experience, a greater sense of one's
    own individuality and subjectivity, a concern
    with self-fulfillment and self-development. This
    is the change misdiagnosed as narcissism.

66
Example 2 Presenting Another Writer's Argument
or Point of View Without Acknowledgment
  • Plagiarized Version
  • Three periods of cultural upheaval in the
    nineteenth and twentieth centuries have caused
    major changes in American society. The first
    occurred during the beginning of the nineteenth
    century, the second during the decades before and
    after 1900, and the third has been underway for
    the last thirty years. Three structural changes
    occurring during the current upheaval are
    primarily responsible for changes in American
    families. These include the development of a
    postindustrial information and service economy ,
    demographics changes (including longer life spans
    that have created new and different life stages),
    and an increased sense of individuality including
    a desire for self-fulfillment and self
    development.

67
Example 2 Presenting Another Writer's Argument
or Point of View Without Acknowledgment
  • Plagiarized Version
  • Three periods of cultural upheaval in the
    nineteenth and twentieth centuries have caused
    major changes in American society. The first
    occurred during the beginning of the nineteenth
    century, the second during the decades before and
    after 1900, and the third has been underway for
    the last thirty years. Three structural changes
    occurring during the current upheaval are
    primarily responsible for changes in American
    families. These include the development of a
    postindustrial information and service economy ,
    demographics changes (including longer life spans
    that have created new and different life stages),
    and an increased sense of individuality including
    a desire for self-fulfillment and self
    development.
  • The writer of the passage above correctly
    paraphrases Skolnick's ideas but does not give
    her credit for her ideas or line of argument. The
    version on the next slide eliminates the
    plagiarism by attributing the ideas to Skolnick.

68
Example 2 Presenting Another Writer's Argument
or Point of View Without Acknowledgment
  • Correctly Documented Version
  • According to Skolnick, three periods of cultural
    upheaval in the nineteenth and twentieth
    centuries have caused major changes in American
    society. The first occurred during the beginning
    of the nineteenth century, the second during the
    decades before and after 1900, and the third has
    been underway for the last thirty years. Three
    structural changes occurring during the current
    upheaval are primarily responsible for changes in
    American families. These include the development
    of a postindustrial informat ion and service
    economy, demographics changes (including longer
    life spans that have created new and different
    life stages), and an increased sense of
    individuality including a desire for
    self-fulfillment and self development (11).

69
Example 2 Presenting Another Writer's Argument
or Point of View Without Acknowledgment
  • Correctly Documented Version
  • According to Skolnick, three periods of cultural
    upheaval in the nineteenth and twentieth
    centuries have caused major changes in American
    society. The first occurred during the beginning
    of the nineteenth century, the second during the
    decades before and after 1900, and the third has
    been underway for the last thirty years. Three
    structural changes occurring during the current
    upheaval are primarily responsible for changes in
    American families. These include the development
    of a postindustrial information and service
    economy, demographics changes (including longer
    life spans that have created new and different
    life stages), and an increased sense of
    individuality including a desire for
    self-fulfillment and self development (11).
  • In the version above, a reader would be able to
    locate the source by finding the title of
    Skolnick's book in the Works Cited page and
    looking on page 11, the number indicated at the
    end of the paragraph.

70
Example 3 Repeating Another Writer's
Particularly Apt Phrase or Term Without
Acknowledgment
  • Original Source (From Arlene Skolnick. Embattled
    Paradise. New York Basic Books, 1991. 11.)
  • Three related structural changes seem to have
    set the current cycle of family change in motion
    first, the shift into a "postindustrial"
    information and service economy second, a
    demographic revolution that not only created mass
    longevity but reshaped the individual and family
    life course, creating life stages and
    circumstances unknown to early generations
    third, a process I call "psychological
    gentrification," which involves an introspective
    approach to experience, a greater sense of one's
    own individuality and subjectivity, a concern
    with self-fulfillment and self-development. This
    is the change misdiagnosed as narcissism.

71
Example 3 Repeating Another Writer's
Particularly Apt Phrase or Term Without
Acknowledgment
  • Plagiarized Version
  • The large number of "self-help" books published
    each year attest to Americans' concern with
    self-improvement and achieving more fulfilling
    lives. This process might be described as
    "psychological gentrification."
  • Correctly Documented Version
  • The large number of self-help books published
    each year attest to Americans' concern with
    self-improvement and their desire to have a more
    fulfilling life. Skolnick labels this process as
    "psychological gentrification" (11).

72
Example 3 Repeating Another Writer's
Particularly Apt Phrase or Term Without
Acknowledgment
  • Plagiarized Version
  • The large number of "self-help" books published
    each year attest to Americans' concern with
    self-improvement and achieving more fulfilling
    lives. This process might be described as
    "psychological gentrification."
  • Correctly Documented Version
  • The large number of self-help books published
    each year attest to Americans' concern with
    self-improvement and their desire to have a more
    fulfilling life. Skolnick labels this process as
    "psychological gentrification" (11).
  • As the example above illustrates, putting
    quotation marks around a borrowed word or phrase
    is not sufficient documentation. You must also
    acknowledge the author and give the page numbers
    so a reader would be able to consult the original
    source and loc ate the word or phrase. In the
    original source, Skolnick takes credit ("a
    process I call") for coining the term
    "psychological gentrification." Quotation marks
    in the original appear to be used for emphasis.
    Phrases in quotations should be cited unless they
    have become common usage (e.g., "postindustrial"
    in the original source above).

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Remember
  • When you write a paper, youll remember all nice
    phrases you come up with. This applies to others
    too!
  • Professors can feel plagiarism very easily
  • Professors often conduct extensive searches to
    check for plagiarism
  • Professors are likely to know or have seen the
    material you come across when writing a class
    paper
  • So yes, do research and find material that can
    help you writing your essay. But do not
    plagiarize that material!

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Regarding scientific papers
  • Readers and reviewers need to know that you are
    honest and that you have a good command of the
    literature
  • So plagiarism just does not make sense!
  • Indeed, if you write
  • Neurons in the early visual system respond to
    contrast between two regions in the visual field
    rather than to the absolute amount of light
    stimulation in a single region.
  • You will make a weaker point than
  • The pioneering work of Kuffler (1953) and Hubel
    Wiesel (1962) has clearly demonstrated that
    neurons in the early visual system

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So, dont be shy about citing others!
  • WEAK There has been some research about
    autonomous robots, but mostly confined to indoors
    environments.
  • STRONG A recent review by DeSouza Kak (2002)
    suggests that autonomous robot research has been
    mostly confined to indoors environments.
  • And remember that a lot of what you know stems
    from what you have read!
  • WEAK Try to explain why previous research does
    not work, hence your new work was required.
  • STRONG Show how previous research has
    established a basis for your new work.

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For additional information
  • SCampus
  • http//www.usc.edu/student-affairs/student-conduct
    /
  • Office for Student ConductFIG-107740-6666
  • Google search for plagiarism, etc.
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