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Created March 5, 2022 21:51
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Notes from "How to read a paper"

"How to read a paper"

S. Keshav

Three pass approach

  1. Get a general idea of the paper

    • Should take five to ten minutes
    • Read title, abstract, and intro
    • Read section, subsection headings
    • Read conclusion
    • Glance over references (noting which ones you've read before)
    • Should be able to answer the Five C's
    • Most folks only take one pass, so take care with your headings, abstract, intro, and conclusion
  2. Grasp the paper's content

    • Should take up to an hour
    • At the end of this pass, you should be able to summarize the main thrust -- with supporting details -- to someone else
    • Read with greater care, but ignore details
    • Take notes in the margins as you go along
    • Be critical when reviewing figures, diagrams, illustrations
    • Note which relevant references you haven't read before
    • If you didn't grok the paper after this pass, you might be tired; the paper might not have been written well; or you might need more background information to make the most of the paper's contributions
  3. Dive deep into the details

    • May take four to five hours for the beginner, an hour for an experienced reader
    • Making the same assumptions as the authors, attempt to recreate their work
    • At the end of it, you should be able to explain the details of the paper from memory
    • You should also have determined hidden assumptions, missing citations, and potential issues

Five C's

  1. Category
  2. Context
  3. Correctness
  4. Contributions
  5. Clarity

Doing a literature survey

(Maybe only one step: finding an existing survey when doing research using Google Scholar or CiteSeer)

  1. Start searching Google Scholar or CiteSeer using some well-chosen keywords
  2. Identify three to five recent papers on the subject at hand
  3. Do one pass on each paper, then check their related sections
  4. Determine the key researchers and papers by finding the most-cited ones across the papers' related works
  5. Go to those researchers' websites and find to which conferences they've submitted papers recently
  6. Those conferences' websites will have links to the most recent top papers in the field
  7. Make two passes through these papers
  8. (optional) If these papers cite a paper you haven't already collected, go get it, and repeat these steps.
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