This is a short note on how to start defining your topic of interest and zooming in on specific research problems and challenges.
1. decide a direction or research area of interest based on your background in crime (e.g., courses you have got taken, readings, conferences, talks to Professors, etc.). try and be as specific as potential. for instance do not decide it is too general, however maybe spatial temporal crime analysis' or crime analysis using algorithms'.
2. Compile a group of 'keywords' to begin finding out top quality readings for every of the previously selected topics. Smart places to start out your search are IEEE and standard journals.decide one research topic at a time. You can additionally search on the online (e.g., Google, or Google scholar) however please double check the publication details for quality (there are plenty of papers out there!).
3. Out of the search hits, choose around 15-20 papers that you simply assume are most associated with what you had in mind and are of the very best quality. do not scan of these papers yet! Check the title, abstract, names of authors, their affiliations, and most significantly the conference or journal.
4. For the chosen 15-20 papers scan only the abstract, introduction and conclusion in detail (you could skim the rest of the paper for a general idea). Determine the stress of every paper:
• which problem it addresses,
• what resolution it proposes,
• how the answer differs from previous solutions, and
• what are the most contributions and conclusions.
Out of those 15-20 papers, and based mostly on your reading and understanding, choose a listing of 4-6 papers that you simply assume are the very best quality which address your research interests and also the challenges within the field most appropriately.
Read those 4-6 papers from starting to end, identifying in detail:
(I) the main approaches,
(II) methods of analysis:
(a) metrics,
(b) analysis tools,
(c) analysis and interpretation of resulting simulation or measured data,
(III) conclusions.
At identical time, attempt to keep a listing of what you think that the authors could have missed within the paper, gaps or limitations that would be improved upon and any concepts on the way to accomplish these enhancements.
6. Write a research proposal defining, as clearly as possible, the following items:
- Research Motivation
- Research challenges
- Overview of existing work and Drawbacks
- Limitations of existing work
- Potential directions and ideas for improvement
- Expected results and impact on the field.
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