HOW TO READ A RESEARCH PAPER
Among the questions that you should ask yourself when reading a research
paper are the following.
- What is the research paradigm that the author is using? Example paradigms
are psychological experiments, formalization and theorem proving, and
artifact design and construction. If the paper is part of a well
established field, you should describe the field and its current state.
- What is the problem area with which the paper is concerned? For example,
"Automatic Generation of Compilers from Denotational Semantic Descriptions
of the Source Code" would describe a research paper on compilation.
- What is the author's thesis? That is, what is he/she trying to convince
you of?
- Summarize the author's argument. That is, how does the author go about
trying to convince you of the thesis?
- Does the author describe other work in the field? If so, how does the
research described in the paper differ from the other work?
- Does the paper succeed? Are you convinced of the thesis by the time that
you have finished reading the paper?
- Does the author indicate how the work should be followed up on? Does the
paper generate new ideas.
- Some papers implicitly or explicitly provide a new way of doing things or
of thinking about problems. If your paper does so, describe the approach.