Assigned Readings
For each lecture we will have a selection of one or more
relevant papers and articles on visualization (posted on
the Calendar). All students should
download and read one of the assigned papers and post a detailed
question or comment on the assigned reading before 10am on the day
the paper will be discussed in class. The post should be
well-written and approximately 100-200 words in length. NOTE: We are
interested in what you think about the paper, not what
ChatGPT or another AI summarization bot says about the paper!
It's "ok" if you don't understand all of the details (we will
often be reading recent technical research results), but you should be
able to put that paper in the wider context of visualization research and
learn more about the technical background related to that paper (using
other reference material as needed). Perhaps the paper will serve as
a jumping off point that leads to other reading, possibly specialized
to your area of interest.
Your post should demonstrate that you did a careful and thoughtful
reading of the paper. Avoid superficial statements such as: "There
was alot of math in the paper. Math is hard. I didn't understand the
math." or "This paper was published in the dark ages using slow
computers. I wonder how fast it would be with a GPU." or "The
pictures were pretty. I liked watching the video."
Your post can respond to another student's comment/question. Multiple
posts, following up on the discussion are encouraged. Including links
to other sources of related background material and a summary of how
that material is related are encouraged as well. You must
contribute to at least 20 of the assigned reading Submitty forum
discussions in order to pass the course.
In-class Reading Discussions
For each lecture, one or two students will volunteer/be designated
as discussants for the day's assigned paper reading(s).
Note: This is not a traditional presentation of a research paper. Don't
prepare slides, but do organize notes for yourself before class.
Note: Each student will be a discussant for one or two lectures.
The discussant(s) will first give a 1-2 minute overview of the paper
-- remember that the other students in the class will have already
read the paper in detail (or at least one of the papers if we had
multiple assigned for that day). The discussant(s) should summarize
the points made by classmates in the Submitty Discussion Forum; in
particular, the in-class discussion should cover:
- the important contributions of the paper(s) to the community,
- what was interesting about the paper(s) or topic, and
- any questions or confusions that arose in the online
Submitty discussion.
As time permits, we will open up for additional input
from the whole class, moderated by the student discussants.
Note: It is important that everyone have posted their
comment/question before 10am, so the student discussants leading the discussion
have time to review the posts in preparation for class.
More information...
Many academic conferences assign "discussants" for each paper. Here's a
detailed guide to being a paper discussant at an academic conference:
Tips for Discussants, by Prof Alexopoulos, University of Toronto