I am near done with my second academic paper. This paper came about in a very unusual way, as opposed to my first one. The first one was created after months of exploration and tweaking along my adviser. We finished it a few months ago, and it is now off to the IEEE Oakland conference in May. Wish me luck. (For anyone interested, it is entitled “Identifying Tipping Points in a Game-Theoretic Model of Network Security”).

My journey towards the second paper began at the very end of the Fall semester, when I severely doubted some conclusions made in the first paper. I shouldn’t have doubted myself; I meticulously reviewed every detail of that paper. Nonetheless, something struck me as not quite right. This was confirmed when I tried to simulate some of the theoretic results from Paper 1. After hours of trying, I simply couldn’t make them match up. Was my simulation wrong? Did I make a typo somewhere?

I brought all of these concerns to my adviser, who was much more logical than I about the situation. Instead of fussing with simulation results for hours, he suggested I try to rebuild the model I took for granted at the start of the paper. After finals and the first round of grad school apps were due, I began to scrap everything and really think the problem through. The first round was pretty rough and consisted of notes scratched on various papers, and half-finished paragraphs in a nameless MS Word document.

However, the act of laying out all these notes was very cathartic. I got a chance to put my thoughts on paper. I wrote everything from possible loose-ends to something that others might call research. When I realized the latter existed, I decided to collect my notes into the document which is (to this day) entitled “2 Draft.” I was on my way! After many, many re-reads and changes in notation, I was finally able to re-create the model that many (<10) people have created before me. Anticlimactic, right?

Despite being disappointed that all I’d done was re-create work, I felt accomplished and able to take on the world. This is where Google Scholar came in. All of those scratched notes with concerns were now validated by reputable academics. I downloaded en-masse tens of papers concerning interdependent security - everything from Nature articles to conference proceedings. I learned a lot from reading these papers and got numerous good ideas from them, which have now been incorporated into “2 Draft.”

It’s funny though; those first few pages were easy to write. The last few were a bit harder, but not much. The introduction, though, is killing me. Re-tooling everything was painful due to Word’s idiosyncrasies (I can’t change the font for equations!). This whole process has been fun, and I can’t wait to submit to a conference (and suggestions?).

I’ve taken away many things: 1) Use LaTex if I was control over my documen, 2) Just start writing and the rest will come, and 3) Always keep a pad handy for random ideas.

(If you want a peek at either paper, email me.)

 

Thanks

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It’s been 10 days since my last cup of coffee. It’s been rough. This summer, similar to the last few summers, coffee became quite a staple. I got into the normal American routine, having a cup every morning, while working full time doing software development. This was in addition to my significant iced tea addiction, which I’ve had since high school. I’ve started to give it all up. Since coming back to school for my senior year, I decided to stop having caffeine in order to boost my productivity. I used to need two or 3 cups of coffee to get my job done. Now, I keep falling asleep at random times (just like when writing this post), and am generally having some trouble getting through a full day without a nap. Hopefully it will get better. At least school is kicking up now, so I get to focus on my work.

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