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CPE%20626%20Writing%20Scholarly%20Papers

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Stephen A. Edwards lecture s. http://www.cs. ... Not 'In Smith, a clear-cut distinction was made ...' Instead 'Smith made a clear-cut distinction... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CPE%20626%20Writing%20Scholarly%20Papers


1
CPE 626 Writing Scholarly Papers
  • Aleksandar Milenkovic
  • E-mail milenka_at_ece.uah.edu
  • Web http//www.ece.uah.edu/milenka

2
Why Are We Bothering?
  • Useful for writing your final report.
  • Useful to know the style for doing future
    research.
  • This is how academics communicate
  • You should know the technique
  • Proven over time

3
Sources
  • Stephen A. Edwards lecture slides
  • http//www.cs.columbia.edu/sedwards/
  • Veljko Milutinovic
  • V. Milutinovic, The Best Method for
    Presentation of Research Results,IEEE TCCA
    Newsletter, Sep. 1996.http//tab.computer.org/tcc
    a/NEWS/sept96/bestmeth.pdf

4
Research Papers
  • Clear statement of the problem being addressed
  • What has been done before and what is new
  • Proposed solution
  • Results achieved
  • Literature survey should have included the first
    two
  • Final report should include all four

5
Typical Outline
  • Abstract
  • Introduction
  • Related Work
  • Description of problem solution
  • Experimental results
  • Conclusions and future work
  • Bibliography

6
The Abstract
  • Short
  • 2-3 paragraphs
  • 100-150 words
  • Introduce problem in first paragraph
  • Describe your approach in second
  • Brief conclusions and impact in third
  • Abstract must stand alone as pure English
  • No bibliographic citations
  • No mathematics

7
A Sample Abstract
  • Improvement of the branch predictors has been one
    of focal points in the computer architecture
    research during the last decade, from two-level
    predictors to the use of genetic algorithms. The
    most of the research efforts try to use the real,
    already implemented, branch predictor sizes and
    organization for comparison and evaluation. Yet,
    a little is known about exact predictor
    implementation in Intel processors, apart from a
    few size hints in the Intel manuals and a
    valuable but unverified hacker efforts. On the
    other hand, Intel processors include performance
    monitoring counters that can count the events
    related to branches, and Intel provides a
    powerful VTune Performance Analyzer enabling the
    easy access to performance counters.
  • In this paper, we propose a series of simple
    experiments that explore the organization and
    size of a branch predictor, and use it to
    investigate Pentium III and Pentium 4 predictor
    implementations.
  • Experiments showed that BTB has 4 ways in both
    implementations. PIII predictor has just the
    local history component, while P4 has both global
    and local history components. Such knowledge
    could be used in further predictor research, as
    well as in the design of new, architecture-ware
    compilers.

8
The Introduction
  • Describe both the area youre working on and
    what youve found
  • Cut to the chase early My field is interesting
    and heres what Ive done
  • Dont repeat the abstract
  • Orient the readers about what they should expect
  • Some references are appropriate here, but they
    need not be exhaustive

9
Related Work
  • Describe the relevant work of others
  • You wont be exactly duplicating their work, so
    contrast your results with theirs
  • Be respectful to authors
  • Smith 1 describes a system for real-time
    scheduling
  • Dont use citations as nouns
  • In 1, a system for real-time scheduling is
    described

10
Goals of the Related Work Section
  • Orient the reader
  • Part of your job is to figure out the state of
    the field and communicate that clearly
  • They need to know how your work is a huge step
    forward from what youve done
  • Convince the reader you are knowledgeable
  • Academics work by consensus
  • Theres an accepted body of knowledge
  • Yours wont be added to it unless you understand
    and acknowledge it, too

11
Bibliography
  • Many different styles that differ only slightly
  • All have the same goal of providing enough
    information so that a reader can find what you
    read
  • Information in most citations
  • Author(s) of the work
  • Title of the work
  • Where it appeared (if a conference or journal
    publication)
  • Date (at least year) at which it appeared

12
Example Bibliographic Entries
  • A paper in a conference
  • 1 A. Milenkovic, V. Milutinovic, "Cache
    Injection A Novel Technique for Tolerating
    Memory Latency in Bus-Based SMPs," Lecture Notes
    in Computer Science, vol. 1900, Proceedings of
    the 6th International Euro-Par Conference,
    Munich, Germany, August/September 2000, pp.
    558-566.
  • Authors names, Title, Conference title,
    Conference Location, Month 20xx, pp. xx-yy.

13
Example Bibliographic Entries
  • A book
  • 2 M. J. Smith, Application-Specific Integrated
    Circuits, Addison-Wesley, New York, 1997.
  • Author, Title, Publisher, 19xx.

14
Example Bibliographic Entries
  • A journal paper
  • 1 A. Milenkovic,"Achieving High Performance in
    Bus-Based Shared Memory Multiprocessors," IEEE
    Concurrency, Vol. 8, No. 3, July-September 2000,
    pp. 36-44.
  • Author(s), Title, Journal, Vol. x, No. y,
    month, 20xx, pp. xx-yy.

15
Example Bibliographic Entries
  • A technical manual
  • 1 M. D. Smith, Energy-efficient cache memories,
    Phd Thesis, University of Alabama in Huntsville,
    2001.
  • Author(s). Title, Organization, 20xx.

16
Citing Web Pages
  • URLs are not generally considered reasonable
    scholarly citations
  • Not peer-reviewed
  • Very fragile
  • Can easily be changed
  • Best used for pointing people to projects or
    companies

17
The Body
  • Describe what youve done with reasonable detail
  • Make sure to describe any unexpected or
    particularly difficult problems
  • Goal is to simplify life for those in the future
  • Describe what you did and how it turned out
  • No requirement to include everything
  • Thanks, but thats a little more information
    than I needed to know.

18
Clear Writing
  • Be concise
  • This is the main goal
  • Think of it as an engineering problem
  • How can I communicate using the fewest words?
  • Be emphatic
  • Avoid passive constructions

19
Clear Writing
  • Avoid wordy idioms
  • Instead of Prefer
  • make assumption assume
  • is a function of depends on
  • is an illustration of illustrates
  • Avoid inactive verbs
  • Avoid writing to be
  • Not In Smith, a clear-cut distinction was made
  • Instead Smith made a clear-cut distinction

20
Clear Writing
  • Start each paragraph with a topic sentence
  • You will be amazed by how much this helps.
    People will sing your praises. Professors will
    grade you higher. Your peers will call you The
    Exalted One. Little children will bow in your
    presence.
  • Technical writing is not a murder mystery
  • Explain whodunit immediately
  • Suspense is not the point

21
That vs. Which
  • Restrictive clauses use that
  • Added to constraint the number of different
    things being considered
  • Dont need commas
  • Buildings that have white walls are common
    here.
  • Nonrestrictive clauses use which
  • Added to give additional information without
    changing collection being considered
  • Need commas
  • Stucco buildings, which have white walls, are
    common here.

22
Experimental Results
  • Include important results that actually show
    something
  • Avoid including endless tables or graphs if they
    dont further your point
  • Clearly label and explain how to interpret your
    graph
  • What are you measuring?
  • What are you controlling?
  • What is your experimental setup?

23
Experimental Results
  • Dont do this

24
Experimental Results
  • Graphs often illustrate trends and behaviors much
    more clearly than tables
  • Consider using graphics where you can
  • Often much more succinct

25
Conclusion Section
  • Here, summarize the results, say what worked and
    what didnt, and explain what remains to be done
  • Be careful not to save the best for last
  • Ive read many papers where the contents of the
    conclusions section should have been written in
    the introduction
  • This is not a murder mystery

26
Paper Format
  • Most conferences and workshops require a common
    format
  • Two columns
  • 10 point
  • Usually Times Roman
  • Single-spaced
  • Paper is precious dont waste it
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