Seminar Schedule - All Graduate Students Expected to Attend Please send me your seminar titles! Dr. Ladisch Discussion on Preparing a Manuscript for Submission to a Referred Journal The preparation of a scientific paper for submission to a journal is a key part of communicating new findings. Based on the productivity of our research, our goal in LORRE is to publish 16 or more papers per year. This activity and goal will require proactive participation from all of us, and will provide valuable experience to students or researchers who have not previously published their work. Key elements for preparing a manuscript will be discussed, and steps leading up to a paper ready for internal review and submission will be addressed. Key elements to be part of our discussion include: o crafting the key take-home message, o concisely and clearly organizing data that supports this message, o presenting informative and integrated figures and tables, o applying of models and statistics, writing concise introductory and result sections, and then o threading elements of a manuscript into an integrated form that clearly explains what is new, unexpected, and/or fundamentally important. The need for building a paper as the research progresses will also be addressed. Schedule for the Fall Semester Date Seminar September 1 Iman Beheshti Organizing New ABE Grad Student Tour September 8 Dr. Ladisch Discussion on Preparing a Manuscript for Submission to a Referred Journal September 15 LORRE 2015 Safety Retaining September 22 Rafaela de Souza Ladeira Ázar September 29 Iman Beheshti October 6 Barron Hewetson October 13 Fall Break October 20 Mahdieh Aghazadeh October 27 Antonio dos Santos November 3 Daehwan Kim November 10 David Orrego November 17 Neal Hengge November 24 Sidnei Bordignon December 1 Amanda Kreger December 8 Mine Necla December 15 Final Exam Week At LORRE, How Do I ...? This series is to help everyone access the resources they need to be successful. Each week will highlight a different "How do I" question. If you have suggestions for "How do I" questions, please send them to Nate Mosier (mosiern@purdue.edu<mailto:mosiern@purdue.edu>). At LORRE, how do I get help with problems with my desktop computer? Support for desktop computers at LORRE is handled through the Engineering Computer Network (ECN). Requests for software installation, problems with performance, etc. can be requested through the support website (https://engineering.purdue.edu/ECN/AboutUs/ContactUs). You should select "Potter Engineering Building," not "Agricultural & Biological Engineering" for your School/Department. If a computer repair or upgrade is needed to solve your problem, please let your advisor/major professor know right away. He or she must approve purchase of new equipment or parts.
Dear All, First, let's thank Corey Mathis for taking and sharing her detailed notes during yesterday's seminar (9/8/2015). It will help us review the important topics from the meeting. Professor Ladisch and Professor Mosier lead the seminar.The two main topics were "Lab Safety" and "Publishing Research Papers". */Topic 1: Lab Safety/* *//* Iman's presentation gave all of us a profound lesson in lab safety. Dr. Nacla Mine Eren and Raymond (Studie), Barron, Neal, ect... present opinions and helpful insights. Lab Incident Report: Heat and Stir Plate left on Overnight. -There was a lab accident where a student left an experiment running overnight and as a result it ruined the equipment and the experiment -Preventions oLook up the MSDS for your chemicals oFind out if setting up experiment in the hood is needed oAsk about equipment and set up of equipment (communication) oDon't leave your experiments unattended -Doors have been left open when no one is in the lab. Doors should be locked when you leave. -Even if outside of your area, keep an eye out for areas that may need attention. -It was suggested that you let others know what experiments being done -Complete a hazardous assessments: oHow do you know if something is hot? oWhat might happen if pieces of glass wear breaks? If it breaks, is it placed in such away that it is safest? -It was suggested that someone review the set up prior to running the experiment. oInspections done by Dr. Ladisch, Dr. Mosier, Dr. Engelberth, Dr. Ximenes, Dr. Kilaz, and LORRE safety members are a few examples. -Label areas with information about who is using equipment with a description of experiment being done.May include contact information and date/time the area will be in use. oWrite boards, writing on glass,.... somehow share this information -Need to work on consistent procedures so everyone knows the expectations -Benches need to be cleaned à we can't afford to replace them. -The names on the doors have changed.These need to be updated with the correctly identified person responsible so that others know whom to contact. oThere should be two names on each door.The first person is responsible (call them if needed), the second name is the backup contact person. oOld, black signs need to be removed as they are not accurate oUpdate and use the white signs -Final words: Stay safe The best way to stay safe - don't leave the heat and stir plate left on overnight. If a person is not attending the equipment, please turn it off so that we can avoid an accidental fire. If an experiment needs to be running overnight (constant agitation and constant temperature) we have other shaker equipment that is available, which is much safer. */Topic 2: Publishing our work and questions/* *//* -The first review process, make sure your paper is error free (grammar...) -How do you organize your data? oThis can vary and may not appear in the order that your experiment is done in. It needs to be organized so that it clearly conveys how the experiment was done. oBe very clear and detailed within the methods.It helps to write a summary every week or so. This will help you compile information quickly and accurately. oWrite the methods first. -When do you start the draft of your paper? oGet help from your advisor/major professor. oDo you have something to report?What is your hook? §Once you have this, things start to come together oWhat have we learned new that we did not learn before?You don't have a paper without this. oLiterature review helps identify the holes in the research so you can show how your paper is helping to contribute something new. -How do you determine author ship? oA person who is prepared to take credit and blame. oHas contributed to the work oSome journals will ask for a list of the contributions made by each author -What about patent disclosures? oTo keep sponsors happy oIt is a requirement oKeep public discussion/presentation from being delayed(not private meetings) oPapers will be delayed if patent disclosures aren't filed. -What should the cover letters include? oDear so and so.... oTitle of paper oCoauthors oThe hook (in two sentences) oPolite closer; thank you -What do editors look for first? oWho is submitting it? (coauthors helps) oBe a reviewer, this helps oThe university you are affiliated with can influences submission -Do journals ask you to provide reviewer? oThis depend on the journal oThey may ask you to provide a list of names which may or may not review your paper Thank you, LORRE Safety Committee
participants (2)
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Mosier, Nathan S -
Xingya Liu