detailed specification of the paper study format and link for uploading your pdf file

detailed specification of the paper study format and link for uploading your pdf file

by Ronan Boulic -
Number of replies: 0

You'll find all these details in Topic 5 because the deadline is on March 18th:

https://moodlearchive.epfl.ch/2018-2019/mod/turnitintooltwo/view.php?id=1014042

[note:you have to permanently accept popup windows from moodle to be able to upload your file]
Please upload a pdf structured as follow:
- 1 page = [min: 2400 , max: 3000] characters including spaces (use text editing tools to count characters) - you may have one image on page 1, only if it is essential to understand the paper. - use numbered references like this [1] to spare space on pages 1 and 2. - the full reference of the studied paper appears at the beginning of page 3 and is referred to as [0] in page 1 and 2.
HEADER : your name + beginning of paper title/only first author/year.
Contributions: (on PAGE 1) : this page focuses on the contributions of the paper, highlighting a selection of key earlier papers [min: 2, max: 4] to show how the paper exploits them/ compares to them. At the bottom of the page, provide a 1-2 sentence(s) summary for each of the selected earlier papers. Follow this style : Paper [1] compares the effectiveness of.... with.... etc....
Citation analysis (on PAGE 2): includes your analysis of the citations of this paper by others (e.g. who, why, when) ; first indicate the tool you used and the total number of citations you found. Then make a selection of papers (min 4, max 8) to highlight a variety of cases about how the field has evolved since the paper appeared in publication. Include the most cited paper among this selection. Provide a conclusion stating your own viewpoint on the past and future evolution of the topic.
references (on PAGE 3) : list of the papers references used for pages 1and 2. For each numbered reference provide the paper title, publication year, author list, source of publication (conference, journal, book), publisher, volume and number (for journal) or chapter (for book), page numbers, and DOI (or a link to the internet location where you found the paper) so that we can find it easily.