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General Notes on Research Proposals

General Notes on Research Proposals

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General Notes on Research Proposals. Suggested Organization. Title, Abstract, Keywords (problem statement) Introduction and Overview Background information; problem description in context Hypotheses and objectives Assumptions and delimitations Importance and benefits - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: General Notes on Research Proposals

General Notes on Research Proposals

Page 2: General Notes on Research Proposals

Suggested Organization• Title, Abstract, Keywords (problem statement)• Introduction and Overview

– Background information; problem description in context– Hypotheses and objectives– Assumptions and delimitations– Importance and benefits

• Related Work/Literature Review• Research Design and Methodology• Plan of Work and Outcomes (deliverables, schedule)• Conclusions and Future Work• References• Budget (appendix)

Page 3: General Notes on Research Proposals

Notes on Writing and Style

Page 4: General Notes on Research Proposals

Styles

• Verbose or cryptic, flowery or plain, poetic or literal

• Conventions important – reduce the effort required from readers

• Disregarding conventions – may distract from the message (unless that is the message)

Page 5: General Notes on Research Proposals

Science Writing

• Prosaic• Clear, accurate, but not dull• Economy – every sentence necessary but

not to the point of over condensing• Ego less – you are writing for the readers

not yourself

Page 6: General Notes on Research Proposals

Scientific Tone

• Objective and accurate• To inform not entertain• Do not over qualify – modify every claim

with caveats and cautions• Limit the use of idioms like “crop up”,

“loose track”, “it turned out that”, etc.• Use examples if they aid in clarification

Page 7: General Notes on Research Proposals

Scientific Motivation

• Brief summaries at the beginning and end of each section

• The connection between one paragraph and the next should be obvious

• Make sure your reader has sufficient knowledge to understand what follows

Page 8: General Notes on Research Proposals

Beware: Unsubstantiated Claims

• Most user prefer the graphical style of interface.• to• We believe that ….• Another possibility would be a disk-based method,

but this approach is unlikely to be successful.• Another …, but our experience suggests that …

Page 9: General Notes on Research Proposals

Titles• Titles should be concise and informative• A New Signature File Scheme based on Multiple-

Block Descriptor Files for Indexing Very Large Data Bases

• (better) Signature File Indexes Based on Multiple-Block Descriptor Files

• An Investigation of the Effectiveness of Extensions to Standard Ranking Techniques for Large Text Collections

• (better) Extensions to Ranking Techniques for Large Text Collections

Page 10: General Notes on Research Proposals

Opening Paragraphs• Begin well• Most care with the opening• Bad openings

– This paper concerns– In this paper

• Should try to motivate the problem• Distinguish description of existing

knowledge from the description of the the proposal’s contribution

Page 11: General Notes on Research Proposals

Paragraphing

• Discussion of a single topic or issue• Long paragraphs can be an indication that

the author has not disentangled his/her thoughts

• Readers pay attention to the first lines and last

• Link paragraphs by reuse of key words or phrases

Page 12: General Notes on Research Proposals

Lists

• Good, but don’t overuse, only for important information

• A list of trivia can be more attention grabbing than a paragraph of important information

• But, don’t replace narrative with bulleted lists

Page 13: General Notes on Research Proposals

Sentences• Simple structure, a line or two long• Avoid nested structures• In the first stage, the backtracking tokenizer with a

two-element retry buffer, errors, including illegal adjacencies as well as unrecognized tokens, are stored on an error stack for collation in to a complete report.

• (better) The first stage is the backtracking tokenizer with a two-element retry buffer. In this stage possible errors include illegal adjacencies as well as unrecognized tokens; when detected, errors are stored on a stack for collation into a complete report

Page 14: General Notes on Research Proposals

Qualifiers

• No more than one per sentence ( might, may, perhaps, possible, likely)

• It is perhaps possible that the algorithm might fail on unusual input.

• (better) The algorithm might fail on unusual input.

Page 15: General Notes on Research Proposals

Padding

• The fact that• In general• In any caseRemove these

Page 16: General Notes on Research Proposals

Misused Words

• Watch for• Which, that, the• May, might, can

– may is for personal choice– can to indicate capability

• Less, few – less, continuous quantities (space)– Fewer, discrete quantities (errors)

Page 17: General Notes on Research Proposals

Misused Words

• Affect, effect– Effect – consequence of an action– Affect – (verb) influence, as in outcomes

• Alternate, alternative, choice– Alternate – switch between– Alternative – something that can be chosen– Choice – more than one alternative– Note, if there is but one alternative, there is no choice

Page 18: General Notes on Research Proposals

Overuse of Words

• Same word in the same sentence is annoying.

• Redundancy• Adding together -> adding• After the end of -> after• In the region of -> approximately

Page 19: General Notes on Research Proposals

Tense

• Most text past or present• Present used for eternal truths

– The algorithm has complexity … not the algorithm had complexity

• In references past tense used in describing work and outcomes– … the ideas were tested ….

Page 20: General Notes on Research Proposals

Others

• Abbreviations - best none• Acronyms – use CPU not C.P.U

– Limit – may confuse reader• Sexist language – get rid of pronouns and

recast the sentence

Page 21: General Notes on Research Proposals

Research Proposal Presentations

Page 22: General Notes on Research Proposals

Preparation

• Condensing a complex body of information• 15 minute presentation (and 5 minutes for

comments or questions)– speaking rates should not exceed 100 to 150

words per minute– about 1500 to 2000 words– 12-14 slides

Page 23: General Notes on Research Proposals

Types of Presentations

• memorized speech• read from manuscript• EXTEMPORANEOUS

Page 24: General Notes on Research Proposals

Extemporaneous Presentation• Audience centered and dynamic• made from minimal notes or outline• Slides should contain the primary concepts

or ideas being introduced– But, level of detail not the same as speaker

notes (have a copy of your slides and write the notes on margins)

– Don’t skip important elements without some visual representation in the slide

Page 25: General Notes on Research Proposals

Extemporaneous Presentation• include key phrases, illustrations, statistics,

dates (and pronunciation guides for difficult words)

• along the margin, place instructions, cues, such as SLOW, EMPHASIZE, TURN CHART, GO BACK TO CHART 3

• Dictum: better to have fewer slides that don’t cover all the things you want than to have too many slides and have to go fast.

Page 26: General Notes on Research Proposals

Speaker Problems• too soft, too fast• do not let your words trail off as you complete a

sentence• limit “uhs”, “you know”• no rocking• no fiddling with clothes (or change in your

pocket)• In general, avoid things that distract attention for

your presentation

Page 27: General Notes on Research Proposals

Title Page

• Title of Research• Your name• The date• For whom and by whom it was prepared• Collaborators, etc.

Page 28: General Notes on Research Proposals

Selecting a Title• Brief• include the variables included in the study• the type of relationship among the variables• the population to which the results may be

applied• Avoid … “Report of,” “Discussion of,”

single-word titles (and probably double word titles)

Page 29: General Notes on Research Proposals

Outline & Organization• Provide one

– tell the audience where you are taking them• Major Parts

– Opening– Background– Design– Schedule / Plan– Deliverables

Page 30: General Notes on Research Proposals

Opening• About 10-15% of the time• Motivation, setting the stage

– explain the problem, its context, and why it is important to solve it

• Explaining the nature of the project– what it attempts to do (goals)– your proposed solutions and your hypothesis– why/how is it novel

2-3 slides

Page 31: General Notes on Research Proposals

Background• Remember the audience may be unfamiliar

with the area, so basic concepts are necessary – provide the necessary definitions

• Use an illustrative example to explain complex concepts

• Discuss the prior work in the problem and how your proposed research will result in a different or a better solution (explain the gap)

A couple of slides

Page 32: General Notes on Research Proposals

Research Design• Research Methodologies (and why)• If you are proposing a new approach or

method, provide more details here• Data collection and characteristics (if any)• Experimental designs and Analysis

including metrics used to determine if proposed solutions are successful

• Tie all of this to how you will verify your hypothesis and your claims

• 3-4 slides

Page 33: General Notes on Research Proposals

Schedule and Deliverables

• Schedule– Only the important steps– Leave the details in the proposal

• Deliverables– What do we get out this study?

1 slide

Page 34: General Notes on Research Proposals

Conclusions and Ending• Have one slide for Conclusions• Include some ideas for extensions or future

work• End the talk cleanly, do just not fade away

– a bad ending is : that’s it, that’s all I have say.• Wrap up the talk with a positive spin

Page 35: General Notes on Research Proposals

Question Time

• Try to anticipate questions• Respond positively and honestly to all

questions• don’t try to bluff• no one knows all the answers – don’t try to

make things up• never be rude

Page 36: General Notes on Research Proposals