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go back to [[Main Page]], [[Group Pages]], [[Núria López and Group]], | go back to [[Main Page]], [[Group Pages]], [[Núria López and Group]], | ||
* Make sure you master all the [[basics of DFT calculations in VASP | ==First steps: The literature review== | ||
* Make sure you master all the [[VASP_beginners|basics of DFT calculations in VASP]], the VASP documentation, and the content of our internal wiki relevant to your project. | |||
* Print 20-50 papers related to your project. Give priority to those recent, published in high-impact journals, and cover both theoretical and experimental ones. | |||
* Print 20-50 papers related to your project. Give priority to those recent, in high-impact journals, and cover both theoretical and experimental ones. | * Read these papers (Seriously!). Highlight all information relevant to you. Start at least with the 20-25 you find more relevant. | ||
* Read these papers | |||
* Sketch some ideas: What you can and cannot get from DFT (and related) simulations. What information will be useful to you. | * Sketch some ideas: What you can and cannot get from DFT (and related) simulations. What information will be useful to you. | ||
* | * Update your paper list each week, including at least one new paper. Keep reading throughout all your project. | ||
* | |||
==Second phase: the objectives== | |||
* Establish your research objectives in the light of the ideas you got from literature, your supervisor, and your colleagues. | |||
* Plan which calculations you need to submit to cover these objectives. | |||
* Plan how you want to process such data. | |||
==Third phase: the paper== | |||
* Write a first draft of the paper, even a crude one, containing at least the objective, the methods, and a backbone of the discussion. | |||
* Include an early abstract and conclusions. Do not be afraid to strongly edit those later on if your initial impressions were wrong. | |||
* Identify any potential gap in logic that would need to be filled, and cover it (Akin to [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feynman_Technique Feynman's technique]). | |||
* Select a target journal in the light of the expected impact. Adopt the format of such a Journal early on. | |||
* Update your coworkers and collaborators on a regular basis. Mind uploading your draft into iciq's mysharepoint (for Word) or Overleaf (for LaTeX). | |||
* Use an automated reference manager. Recommended: Mendeley (Word) and Bibtex (LaTeX). | |||
* Do all line art in Origin. Mind the [[Colour_codes]] standard in the group. | |||
* [[]] | |||
==Fourth phase: peer review== | |||
* Be humble when you write your [[Reply to reviewers]]. | |||
Revision as of 14:38, 13 September 2021
go back to Main Page, Group Pages, Núria López and Group,
First steps: The literature review
- Make sure you master all the basics of DFT calculations in VASP, the VASP documentation, and the content of our internal wiki relevant to your project.
- Print 20-50 papers related to your project. Give priority to those recent, published in high-impact journals, and cover both theoretical and experimental ones.
- Read these papers (Seriously!). Highlight all information relevant to you. Start at least with the 20-25 you find more relevant.
- Sketch some ideas: What you can and cannot get from DFT (and related) simulations. What information will be useful to you.
- Update your paper list each week, including at least one new paper. Keep reading throughout all your project.
Second phase: the objectives
- Establish your research objectives in the light of the ideas you got from literature, your supervisor, and your colleagues.
- Plan which calculations you need to submit to cover these objectives.
- Plan how you want to process such data.
Third phase: the paper
- Write a first draft of the paper, even a crude one, containing at least the objective, the methods, and a backbone of the discussion.
- Include an early abstract and conclusions. Do not be afraid to strongly edit those later on if your initial impressions were wrong.
- Identify any potential gap in logic that would need to be filled, and cover it (Akin to Feynman's technique).
- Select a target journal in the light of the expected impact. Adopt the format of such a Journal early on.
- Update your coworkers and collaborators on a regular basis. Mind uploading your draft into iciq's mysharepoint (for Word) or Overleaf (for LaTeX).
- Use an automated reference manager. Recommended: Mendeley (Word) and Bibtex (LaTeX).
- Do all line art in Origin. Mind the Colour_codes standard in the group.
- [[]]
Fourth phase: peer review
- Be humble when you write your Reply to reviewers.