Thank you Andy your videos have been a great help to me as a PhD student and experimental scientist what you tell in the videos makes huge sense. Keep making such videos. It guides a lot of people like me to make the right decision.
As a new master's degree student I'm getting lost with the different new definitions such as Indexing, different types of research papers, difference between Journals and conferences. Can you make a video like a beginner's guide for new rsearchers or if you can suggest any resource for that stuff. Thank you for your great content
Just recently defended my dissertation. So, my field is in mathematical physics. I don't do experiments. Yet even so, my supervisor was totally convinced that I had to be using Mathematica to find the form of a particular class of perturbations. I had to send him attempt after attempt. Of course, it was all useless, and in the end I proved that to him. Still, i was forced to waste a whole lot of effort and time on a dead end I knew from the start was a dead end.
I've had supervisors have me write up my own reviews - it's more work for me, but I save key points over the course of a year with different projects and successes, so that makes it easier. When I encounter something useful for a review, I put in a paragraph, written like I was writing a review. Then come review time, I just would assemble these pieces. Like you say, make it easy for them. They inevitably just turned it in as-is.
Great video, I feel very related. Thank you hahahaha. I loved the part where you talked about your 'nanofibers'. In my lab when something like this happened I can imagine everyone being overly happy too. The worst part about it, you need to go back and tell them that it was just tissue.... Oh my....... I feel so sorry for you hahahaha. Great video, I loved the positivity, keep going.
Hi Dr. Stapleton, I'm a big fan of your videos! I'm just starting my second year of a business degree, and I'm wondering what AI tools you recommend for undergraduates to find references for their assignments, including references from books as well as academic papers. Thanks in advance for your help!
That's funny as hell, should make a video just of that and other comedy moments especially in experiments and tests, it's funny. That massive anticipation feeling then boom...huge fucking blunder.
@DrAndyStapleton I'm currently in an online masters program for computer science. I have never done research (although I do somewhat like reading research papers) but would like to dip my toe in the water to see if it's something I'd like. What do you think would be a good way to test the waters?
Thank you Andy your videos have been a great help to me as a PhD student and experimental scientist what you tell in the videos makes huge sense. Keep making such videos. It guides a lot of people like me to make the right decision.
I can't stop watching your videos. Thank you!
Yeah! Thank you very much! You’re really the one who brings hope to the scientific education process.
My pleasure!
As a new master's degree student I'm getting lost with the different new definitions such as Indexing, different types of research papers, difference between Journals and conferences. Can you make a video like a beginner's guide for new rsearchers or if you can suggest any resource for that stuff.
Thank you for your great content
Thanks for the video Andy!
Thanks Andy
Go, Andy, GO! Tell us it all! I've come to LOVE your channel!
Thanks so much for your support! It means a lot to me.
Just recently defended my dissertation. So, my field is in mathematical physics. I don't do experiments. Yet even so, my supervisor was totally convinced that I had to be using Mathematica to find the form of a particular class of perturbations. I had to send him attempt after attempt. Of course, it was all useless, and in the end I proved that to him. Still, i was forced to waste a whole lot of effort and time on a dead end I knew from the start was a dead end.
So valuable for new researchers, as usual!
Thanks for your support and comments!
I've had supervisors have me write up my own reviews - it's more work for me, but I save key points over the course of a year with different projects and successes, so that makes it easier. When I encounter something useful for a review, I put in a paragraph, written like I was writing a review. Then come review time, I just would assemble these pieces. Like you say, make it easy for them. They inevitably just turned it in as-is.
Great video, I feel very related. Thank you hahahaha. I loved the part where you talked about your 'nanofibers'. In my lab when something like this happened I can imagine everyone being overly happy too. The worst part about it, you need to go back and tell them that it was just tissue.... Oh my....... I feel so sorry for you hahahaha. Great video, I loved the positivity, keep going.
1 - Common sense
2 - GOLD
3 - GOLD
4 - GOLD
5 - Common sense
Hi Dr. Stapleton,
I'm a big fan of your videos! I'm just starting my second year of a business degree, and I'm wondering what AI tools you recommend for undergraduates to find references for their assignments, including references from books as well as academic papers.
Thanks in advance for your help!
thank you!
Superb guidelines...!
Thanks a lot
That's funny as hell, should make a video just of that and other comedy moments especially in experiments and tests, it's funny. That massive anticipation feeling then boom...huge fucking blunder.
@DrAndyStapleton I'm currently in an online masters program for computer science. I have never done research (although I do somewhat like reading research papers) but would like to dip my toe in the water to see if it's something I'd like. What do you think would be a good way to test the waters?
Andy, which is the best plagiarism detector besides AI for PhD thesis?
The nun in the background 🧐