Difference between revisions of "How to Read Technical Papers"

From dftwiki3
Jump to: navigation, search
(How to Read Technical Papers: the 5-Z Method)
 
(8 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
==<center>How to Read Technical Papers: the 5-Z Method</center>==
 
==<center>How to Read Technical Papers: the 5-Z Method</center>==
 
+
===<center>D. Thiebaut</center>===
This document is a list of guidelines inspired by Rob Weir's [[Rob_Weir's_4_Z-Rules 4-Z | Methods]] for reviewing papers.  Here we focus on reading, summarizing, and understanding ''technical papers''.
+
This document is a list of guidelines inspired by Rob Weir's [[Rob Weir's 4 Z-Rules| 4-Z Method]] for reviewing papers.  Here we focus on reading, summarizing, and understanding ''technical papers''.
  
 
The goal of the exercise of reading an article is to gather information and extract one or several '''messages'''.  These messages may become new rulers by which you are going to measure future discoveries.
 
The goal of the exercise of reading an article is to gather information and extract one or several '''messages'''.  These messages may become new rulers by which you are going to measure future discoveries.
Line 14: Line 14:
 
We explore each one separately.
 
We explore each one separately.
 
;Summarize
 
;Summarize
: Go from the ground up.  Write a half page summary of the paper.  Do not stick to the details, unless they are important.  What are the results?   
+
: Go from the ground up.  As you read the paper, take notes.  Then write a half page summary of the paper.  Do not stick to the details, unless they are important.  What are the results?   
 
;Analyze
 
;Analyze
 
:Is the article in question interesting, important, or useful?  When was it written?  Where was it written?  Which publication does it appear in?  These are clues that help understand the importance, if any, of the article.  Are the results presented going to influence the field dramatically?  Some?  Is it just theoretical?
 
:Is the article in question interesting, important, or useful?  When was it written?  Where was it written?  Which publication does it appear in?  These are clues that help understand the importance, if any, of the article.  Are the results presented going to influence the field dramatically?  Some?  Is it just theoretical?
Line 20: Line 20:
 
:If the paper presents results, how were the results obtained?  The measurements done?  Is there a comparison of the system presented to other systems?  Is the comparison fair?  Is it multi-dimensional (comparing the system to other systems and to itself under different conditions)?  Is the work original?  Just something that was part of the body of knowledge, but with a different twist?   
 
:If the paper presents results, how were the results obtained?  The measurements done?  Is there a comparison of the system presented to other systems?  Is the comparison fair?  Is it multi-dimensional (comparing the system to other systems and to itself under different conditions)?  Is the work original?  Just something that was part of the body of knowledge, but with a different twist?   
 
;Synthesize
 
;Synthesize
:How does the information presented in the paper fit in the context of the discipline?  Does the paper offer a bridge to future development?  Does it offer a new point of view on something we already new?
+
:How does the information presented in the paper fit in the context of the discipline?  Does the paper offer a bridge to future development?  Does it offer a new point of view on something we already knew?
 
;Summarize Again!
 
;Summarize Again!
:Once you have gone through the 4 steps above, take the information you gathered in the previous 3 steps (Analyze, Criticize, and Synthesize), and summarize your half-page to a paragraph.  You'll have to leave a lot of stuff out, but keep the results, the contribution, what is important.  Finally when you are done with the paragraph, try to figure out how you could tell a friend who's passing you in the hallway what this paper is all about.  You just have a few seconds.  What's it all about?  
+
:Once you have gone through the 4 steps above, take the information you gathered in the previous 3 steps (Analyze, Criticize, and Synthesize), and summarize your half-page to a paragraph.  You'll have to leave a lot of stuff out, but keep the results, the contribution, what is important.  Finally when you are done with the paragraph, try to figure out how you could tell a friend who's passing you in the hallway what this paper is all about.  You just have a few seconds.  What is it all about?  
<br />That's the one-sentence summary.
+
:That's the one-sentence summary
 +
 
 +
<br />
 +
<br />
 +
<br />
 +
<br />
 +
<br />
 +
<br />
 +
<br />
 +
[[Category:CSC352]][[Category:Research]]

Latest revision as of 09:37, 18 February 2010

How to Read Technical Papers: the 5-Z Method

D. Thiebaut

This document is a list of guidelines inspired by Rob Weir's 4-Z Method for reviewing papers. Here we focus on reading, summarizing, and understanding technical papers.

The goal of the exercise of reading an article is to gather information and extract one or several messages. These messages may become new rulers by which you are going to measure future discoveries.

The five steps below (the first four corresponding to Weir's 4-Z method) should help you get to the core of the paper and extract the marrow:

  • summarize
  • analyze
  • criticize
  • synthesize
  • summarize again!

We explore each one separately.

Summarize
Go from the ground up. As you read the paper, take notes. Then write a half page summary of the paper. Do not stick to the details, unless they are important. What are the results?
Analyze
Is the article in question interesting, important, or useful? When was it written? Where was it written? Which publication does it appear in? These are clues that help understand the importance, if any, of the article. Are the results presented going to influence the field dramatically? Some? Is it just theoretical?
Criticize
If the paper presents results, how were the results obtained? The measurements done? Is there a comparison of the system presented to other systems? Is the comparison fair? Is it multi-dimensional (comparing the system to other systems and to itself under different conditions)? Is the work original? Just something that was part of the body of knowledge, but with a different twist?
Synthesize
How does the information presented in the paper fit in the context of the discipline? Does the paper offer a bridge to future development? Does it offer a new point of view on something we already knew?
Summarize Again!
Once you have gone through the 4 steps above, take the information you gathered in the previous 3 steps (Analyze, Criticize, and Synthesize), and summarize your half-page to a paragraph. You'll have to leave a lot of stuff out, but keep the results, the contribution, what is important. Finally when you are done with the paragraph, try to figure out how you could tell a friend who's passing you in the hallway what this paper is all about. You just have a few seconds. What is it all about?
That's the one-sentence summary