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Report Writing & Preparation for
Viva
Research Methodology Class
Your report must contains, Abstract Chapter 1 - Introduction Chapter 2 - Literature Review Chapter 3 - System Analysis & Design / Techniques
used / Algorithm or Rules development Chapter 4 - Implementation/ System Development Chapter 5 - Evaluation & Analysis of Result Chapter 6 – Conclusion & Future Work References/Bibliography Appendix
REPORT WRITING
Project I
The first chapter of your report is normally
given the title Introduction. The introduction chapter should be written to
engage the interest of the reader. It is the place where you should,
1. discuss the background of the study2. state and define the problem that you are
trying to address or solve3. state the aims and objectives of the project4. state the scope of the project
Chapter 1 - Introduction
Background of the study
An introductory section to discuss the general field of the subject area from which your research is to be drawn.
You should give some explanation as to why it is important to do this project title and why it is of interest to you.
Problem statement This section is the most important as in any
research the establishment of one of the above represents the whole basis for completing the project.
Describe the problem/difficulty/situation that interests you.
Aims and objectives
In this section, you should explain what you are intending to achieve by doing this research.
The intentions should be derived from the existing body of knowledge .
The overall aim would be to satisfy the requirements of the objectives.
Scope of the project To discuss the particular domain on which you will
focus. To limit the scope of the project
May include some of these information:
Theoretical background of the research area/domain – past, present or future
Methodology and/or research methods Previous works/findings Rationale and/or relevance of the current study
Chapter 2 - LR
A chapter to discuss about:
The methodology used to conduct the research activities Survey Observations Experiments Simulations Interview
The system analysis or the system design (modules, flow) The techniques/tools/languages proposed The development of a new Algorithm /a set of Rules /
engines The development of the database or knowledgebase
Chapter 3
Data Collection or Knowledge Acquisition
This chapter presents the implementation of
the system or how you develop the system
Chapter 4 - Implementation
This chapter discusses about the evaluation
performs on your system: To measure the performance of the system
Workability / functionality Efficiency Accuracy Precision/Recall Usability ???
Chapter 5 - Evaluation
The main purpose of the last chapter, Conclusion,
are to: show how you have attempted to fill the gap on
knowledge that was identified earlier clarify to what extent the study has been
successful. Four basic steps to take in writing Conclusion:
Summarize your research Spell out your contribution State the limitations of your study Suggest potential areas of further research
Chapter 6 – Conclusion
Example:
CONCLUSIONSIn this paper, we propose an ensemble approach which integrates two of the most effective assessment techniques of LSA and n-gram co-occurrence into an efficient technique for automatic summary assessment. Performance comparison between the proposed ensemble approach with other existing techniques has also been conducted. The proposed approach has achieved an overall accuracy of 96% as compared to the best existing technique, BLEU, which has an overall accuracy of 87%. For future work, as the techniques used and proposed in this paper are mainly based on latent semantic analysis or machine translation based evaluation techniques, we will investigate the effectiveness of using machine learning or statistical approaches for the assessment of summary writings. In addition, as our current approach only focuses on semantic assessment of contents, we also intend to develop a complete summary assessment system by incorporating an English language assessor and style checker.
The abstract is the last section of a thesis to
be written. It is written after the research has been
completed. It provides the reader with a summary of the
contents of the thesis. It is generally one of the first a reader will look
at and therefore it is important that the Abstract gives the reader a good initial impression.
Abstract
An abstract should ideally present these
information, following the order in which the information is presented in the thesis: The purpose/objectives of the research The reasons/justifications why the research was
carried out. The research method/techniques employed. The mains results and conclusion. Recommendation
Length The length of an abstract of a thesis is usually around
200 – 500 words. It must include all the essential points with no
redundant words or expressions.
Tense
Approach 1: which sees the abstract as a description of the thesis
itself, i.e., the document that the abstract is summarising – present tense.
Approach 2: which sees an abstract as a summary of the research
that is reported in that document – both present simple and past simple tenses. The present is used for stating the purpose and for
presenting the conclusions recommendations The past is used to describe the method used and to
present the individual findings.
TITLE The title must be the title of research which has been approved by the Supervisor.
ABSTRACT
(a) Not more than 500 words (b) Written in English or Bahasa Malaysia (based on the language chosen for the report writing)
BINDING / SUBMISSION
Copy for final submission (to the office):(a) Academic Project I - One (1) printed copy of your report using ring binding (b) Academic Project II - One (2) printed copy of your report using ring binding - One (1) softcopy of your report (in PDF or WORD format) - One (1) softcopy of your system
FORMAT OF THE REPORT
These 2 can be combined
into 1 CD
MAXIMUM LENGTH 20,000 words (Excluding footnote, appendices, tables, diagrams, references and bibliography)
PRINTING QUALITY (a) 1.5 lines -spacing for all sections. Single-spacing can be
used for footnote, appendices, tables and diagrams. (b) Font type: Times New Roman and Equation Editor for
mathematical text. (c) Font size 12 for all text and font size 8 for footnotes.
INDENT The indents of pages are as follows:
Top : 2.0 cm Right : 2.0 cm Left : 4.0 cm Bottom : 2.0 cm
PAGE NUMBERING (a) Font size 8 is recommended for page numbering. (b) All page numbers should be printed 1.0 cm from the bottom margin and placed on the right-hand side; (c) Roman numerals (i, ii, iii etc) should be used in the Preface section; (d) The Title Page and the first page of the Preface should not be numbered. Numbering begins on the second page with ‘ii’.
REFERENCESAPA style.
Format references – please refer to the APA guideline: http://www.ips.um.edu.my/images/ips/doc/download/APA-Guide.pdf
Viva I Presentation of your proposal – 10min To show the mastery of tool, you need to develop a
prototype of your project – 10 min Q&A – 10 min
Viva II Briefly explain about your project – 5 min Demonstrate the working system – 15 min Q&A – 10 min
PREPARATION FOR VIVA
Viva Project I
SLIDES:1. Introduction – explain the
background of the study2. Objectives3. Scopes4. Literature Reviews –
1. Domain of the project2. Previous works
5. Techniques proposed6. Data Collection/Knowledge
Acquisition 7. System Design /
Knowledgebase / Rules / Model / Algorithm
Viva Project II
SLIDES:
1. Introduction – briefly explain about the project
2. Objectives3. Scopes4. Techniques/Rules/
Model/Algorithm employed or developed
5. Evaluation – results6. Conclusion