Project Assignment Details =========================== As you know there are two "hand-ins" each of you have to do for your project: - On 12/2 you must hand-in a one page abstract for your project. This is an individual assignment, so we should get 2 abstracts per project. - On (date to be determined) there will be public (open to the whole department) talks of your projects, with 7 minutes joint talks for each group, with 3 minutes for questions. Final versions of your abstracts should be handed in this same day. Notes on how to write an abstract for your project: =================================================== Imagine you are on an elevator at the CIT and you need to explain your project to someone in the time it takes from the 1st floor to the 5th. That, but on paper and with some images, is what you should write on your abstract. Maybe it'll take more floors than four, but you get the idea. This abstract is what introduces your project to people, so it needs to catch their attention and make them ask for more details. I'll list some useful points to keep in mind: - It should be one page, double column, with references and images. All in just one side of the page! Font 11 and 'normal spacing'... don't cramp the lines together! For examples, look at: + http://www.cs.brown.edu/courses/cs237/2000/proc.pdf + http://www.cs.brown.edu/courses/cs237/2000/1999/isvw.html - There are two templates (example.tex and example.doc) you can use in /pro/web/web/courses/cs237/examples - A possible organization would be: + Say what you did. + Indicate the results you've got and what your goals were. + Describe the pieces of the project. + Describe the applications of your project. + Introduce the evaluation procedure. + Conclude again with the results and how relevant they are. - The idea of the abstract is to catch the readers' attention to make them read more and go to the presentation, not to compress the possible paper in one page. It should still explain the important ideas in enough detail so the abstract itself stands alone. - The abstract should stand alone. - Make sure the title and the abstract work together. Don't leave readers wondering about things you mention in one but not in the other. - Although sometimes it feels better to leave the good stuff for the end, after getting the full idea of the project, not here. Try to give enough information to support how you've got your results, but don't overwhelm with details. - Readers want to know if it's worth going into the details based on your best results. Present those EARLY! - Work with the rhetoric fellow early and often! Send questions to cs237ta@cs