Difference between revisions of "Tutorial:Reading"

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Image:Readingtips1.jpg|''Why reading is important.''
Image:Readingtips1.jpg|Why reading is important.
Image:Readingtips2.jpg|Challenges for amateur readers.
Image:Readingtips2.jpg|Challenges for amateur readers.
Image:Readingtips3.jpg|General logic flows.
Image:Readingtips3.jpg|General logic flows.
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Image:Readingtips11.jpg|Beyond reading: ideas.
Image:Readingtips11.jpg|Beyond reading: ideas.
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===Why reading is important===
* Find interesting problems.
* Know the literature.
* Learn methodologies.
===Challenges for amateur readers===
* Lack of background fundamentals.
* Dive too deep into details.
* Lose focus.
*- Too many papers.
*- Treat all materials as equally important.
* Lack of critical thinking.
===Tip #1: What-why-how===
Follow the logic flow, and go directly to the target part.
===Tip #2: Top-down===
* Overview -> Details
Most papers are written following the ``Overview-details'' policy.
One can skip details and grasp the skeleton of the paper.
* Claims -> Reasons
First claim, then reasons.
If you have doubts about a claim, usually, you can continue to the following explanation.
If a claim is intuitive and reasonable, you may stip the explanations.
===Tip #3: Problem-driven===
A good paper is organized with intuitive problems.
It is a journey of solving problems, instead of introducing endless points.
* Motivation: Why the problem is important and challenging
* Aim/Goal: What is the paper's main goal and the rough idea to address the challenges.
* Solutions: Details to implement the proposed idea.
===Understand the examples===
If a detailed example is used in the paper, try to ''fully'' understand that example.
That would save a lot of time understanding the soul of the paper.
===Critical thinking: questions while reading===
* Is the problem really important and necessary?
* Do the challenges/assumptions hold? Why existing works cannot handle it.
* Are the problems really solved by the proposal.
* Do the reasons presented explain the observation/problem statment.

Latest revision as of 17:28, 13 August 2021

Why reading is important

  • Find interesting problems.
  • Know the literature.
  • Learn methodologies.

Challenges for amateur readers

  • Lack of background fundamentals.
  • Dive too deep into details.
  • Lose focus.
  • - Too many papers.
  • - Treat all materials as equally important.
  • Lack of critical thinking.

Tip #1: What-why-how

Follow the logic flow, and go directly to the target part.

Tip #2: Top-down

  • Overview -> Details

Most papers are written following the ``Overview-details policy. One can skip details and grasp the skeleton of the paper.

  • Claims -> Reasons

First claim, then reasons. If you have doubts about a claim, usually, you can continue to the following explanation. If a claim is intuitive and reasonable, you may stip the explanations.

Tip #3: Problem-driven

A good paper is organized with intuitive problems. It is a journey of solving problems, instead of introducing endless points.

  • Motivation: Why the problem is important and challenging
  • Aim/Goal: What is the paper's main goal and the rough idea to address the challenges.
  • Solutions: Details to implement the proposed idea.

Understand the examples

If a detailed example is used in the paper, try to fully understand that example. That would save a lot of time understanding the soul of the paper.

Critical thinking: questions while reading

  • Is the problem really important and necessary?
  • Do the challenges/assumptions hold? Why existing works cannot handle it.
  • Are the problems really solved by the proposal.
  • Do the reasons presented explain the observation/problem statment.