CS295J/Week 3.11
< CS295J
tuesday class notes
- discuss some of the most-discussable papers we presented thursday
- Hua: Measuring effectiveness of graph visualizations: a cognitive load perspective Huang-2009-JIV
- Caroline: Cognitive Strategies and Eye Movements for Searching Hierarchical Computer Displays
- Steve: Toward a Perceptual Theory of Flow Visualization
- Clara: Could I have the Menu Please? An Eye Tracking Study of Design Conventions
- what should we be doing with what we are discussing/learning? why are we doing this?
- understanding area, understand what qualifies as research contributions, understand the lacey web of human knowledge
- connection to other things we're reading
- putting into wiki: very short summary,
- relationship to proposal
- hmm, maybe we need to go back and think about revision
- what do we need to do for that?
- understanding area, understand what qualifies as research contributions, understand the lacey web of human knowledge
- for Thursday: read reviews of proposal, identify some significant criticism, and say how it will be addressed in the revision
- examples:
- criticism: literature on XXX is not represented, here are 3 citations
- response: we have reviewed the literature in this area and added a paragraph to the significance section relating our proposed work to that done in this area
- criticism: the proposed approach won't work
- response: we have 1) added a new section summarizing risks of the approach and contingencies if parts of the approach are not successful; 2) we have included preliminary results from 2 new experiments that show that YYY and ZZZ are likely to be feasible;
- criticism: the intellectual merit of the proposed work is not clear
- response: we have rewritten portions of the project summary and significance sections to clarify the intellectual merit of the work. Changed portions are in blue.
- other examples? do one from the actual reviews?
- let's put on the reviewer's hat to understand some guidelines for writing responses
- 18 months ago read 10 proposals and wrote up evaluations of them, including yours
- OR never read yours
- now has your revised proposal and maybe the reviews from it
- does NOT have the original version
- needs to evaluate the revision
- how?
- A: find old one, read both in parallel, absorb everything, look through reviews, write up informed evaluation
- B: go through points in review and check that they have been addressed
- so write responses to make that as easy for the reviewer as possible
- a checklist for them to use
- annotate the review with responses interleaved
- describe how a change to the proposal addresses the criticism
- point to where the proposal was changed
- don't repeat what's in the proposal in the response
- try to address *every* criticism with a change
- only argue in the response for the most important battles
- make it easy for the reviewer to write "The revised proposal completely addresses all the concerns of the reviewers"
- try not to make other changes that are not essential and that don't directly address reviewer criticisms
- the exception to this is for new reviewer criticisms that you are reasonably confident you can anticipate
- examples: