Speaker: Michael Fang (University of Florida)
1. How do you train your vision?
- Through the process of doing research
- Summarizing all you have done and putting it in the perspective (from a tree to a forest)
- Thinking philosophically (methodologies and tools)
- Generalizing and checking whether what you invent can be applied to other fields
- Learning from the master !
2. How to choose a good problem?
- Make sure that the problem is important and timely
- Articulate that the problem has practical relevance
- Demonstrate that your problem is of great interest to its community
- Ensure that the problem is challenging
- Predict that a possible solution to the problem will generate significant impact
3. The solution of a problem does not make you great, the problem itself does
- The solution gives you the feeling of ending, while the problem indicates the beginning!
- Problems can always motivate you to think, to create, and to search for solutions
- Only when your problems are important can your solutions be recognized and appreciated more
- Good problems tend to lead to many innovative tools useful for other problems
- Frequently check whether you are working on important problems!
4. How to write a good paper?
- It is NOT your English problem! Technical flow is the key!
- Be aware of the logical flow: organization may give better impressions to the receivers
- Know the culture of the publications(format, requirements, acceptance rate, people or community who will review your paper etc.)
- Minimize the easy mistakes reviewers may use to write quick reviews! (Everybody writes and nobody reads!)
- Minimize the typos and grammatical errors!
- Write a good abstract, a good on should tell the real contribution of your work in this paper: this is crucial, you must impress the reviewers at the first sight!
- Write a good introduction: important! Many reviews only read this part to get the idea or find your faults
- Use a comprehensive and up-to-date reference list: missing one crucial paper may lead to rejection
- Do not be confrontational when replying or responding to editors and reviewers
5. How to write abstract?
- What is the problem to be addressed?
- How important is it?
- What is the current status?
- What are the problems in the current solutions, if any?
- What is the intuitive idea of your solution to address these problems?
- What is your finding? What do you conclude from your study?
6. How to write introduction?
- What is the problem to be addressed? If the problem is well known, you can skip this, but it is always good to have this
- Expand on how important the problem is
- Give a comprehensive survey on the problem research
- Comment on current solutions and point out the strength and weakness
- Identify the problems to be addressed and offer the intuitive solutions with intuitive ideas
- Find a simple yet illustrative example to demonstrate the interesting intuitive ideas
- Summarize the main finding and conclusions
7. When do you feel you can graduate?
- What does a Ph.D degree actually require?
- Fundamental training: course work
- Fundamental skill: the Ph.D training process
- Ph.D dissertation: your work
- To be a good Ph.D, you have to have the feeling of being a PH.D
- Ph.D is Doctor of Philosophy, you need to have the feel of quantum jump during your Ph.D study process
- You must have the feeling that you actually accomplish a little and need to push a little further
- "When you feel you do not know anything they give you a Ph.D"
- You need to have both the breadth and depth in your own field and you must be an expert on your topic
- You must have the skill set of problem solving
- You must have had the moment or feeling or sensation of "quantum leap" during your Ph.D study!