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Name: Adi Afzaal

Roll#: 18101002-033
Section: (Yellow C)
Dep: BSCS-2018
Instructor: Fahad Aslam
Assignment of:

Human Computer Interaction


Conference Paper:

Conference papers can be an effective way to try out new ideas, introduce
your work to colleagues, and hone your research questions. Presenting at a conference is a great
opportunity for gaining valuable feedback from a community of scholars and for increasing your
professional stature in your field.

A conference paper is often both a written document and an oral presentation. You may be asked to
submit a copy of your paper to a commentator before you present at the conference. Thus, your
paper should follow the conventions for academic papers and oral presentations

Determine the structure and style


How will you structure your presentation? This is an important question, because your presentation
format will shape your written document. Some possibilities for your session include:

 A visual presentation, including software such as PowerPoint or Prezi


 A paper that you read aloud
 A roundtable discussion

Presentations can be a combination of these styles. For example, you might read a paper aloud
while displaying images. Following your paper, you might participate in an informal conversation
with your fellow presenters.

You will also need to know how long your paper should be. Presentations are usually 15-20 minutes.
A general rule of thumb is that one double-spaced page takes 2-2.5 minutes to read out loud. Thus
an 8-10 page, double-spaced paper is often a good fit for a 15-20 minute presentation. Adhere to the
time limit.  Make sure that your written paper conforms to the presentation constraints.

Journal Paper:

If you have a writing assignment and your instructor asks you to use ''journal articles''
in your research, you might wonder if she means articles from popular magazines and newspapers.
But journal articles are quite a bit different from the kind you find in magazines. For one thing,
journal articles focus on research. They're also written by experts and for other professionals and are
usually scholarly and peer-reviewed articles.
For example:

An example of a journal is a diary in which you write about what happens to you
and what you are thinking. An example of a journal is the New England Journal of Medicine, in
which new studies are published that are relevant to doctors and medicine. A newspaper or
magazine dealing with a particular subject.

Patents Paper:
Patent gives an authority to sell the product whereas paper gives an idea of the
work to others to do further research. A good patented product can be commercialized and
gives value over and above a paper.
For Example:
Patents are a right granted to an inventor that allows them to exclude all others
from making, using, or selling their invention for 20 years. In the U.S. the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office reviews and approves patent applications, which provide protection against
others stealing their idea.

Survey Paper:
A survey paper is a paper that summarizes and organizes recent research
results in a novel way that integrates and adds understanding to work in the field.
For example:
suppose a researcher intends to learn about the eating habits of teenagers. In
that case, he/she will follow a sample of teenagers over a considerable period to ensure that the
collected information is reliable. Often, cross-sectional survey research follows a longitudinal
study.

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