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Work To Create And Clarify A Research Problem Or Research Question For Each Of The Following Topics

Computer Vision: How do I go about working on a research problem?

A good guide and peer group is of utmost importance in tackling problems in any research field. Gain some exposure through a short term research internship at a University/Lab with a good CV group. Learning from the right guys strengthens your fundamentals, shows you where you can anticipate bugs and provides you with the right approach to fix them.Stay in trend: Follow tier 1 Computer Vision conferences relentlessly: CVPR, ICCV and ECCV. Simply reading the publication is hardly enough. In order to understand the work in context, you must either attend the conference or go through the videos from the conference that are made available online: Youtube videos and Lectures from ECCV 2014. Beat to death: Discuss the papers vigorously with your peers and find aspects that can be improved. These can be found for a slightly older paper through papers that cite it. Talk to your guide for high level input.Make stuff work: Get hold of the code for the paper. Authors generally do make code available or are usually willing to share snippets that are crucial to the work. Simply understanding their implementations goes a long way into clarifying several nitty gritty aspects of the system. If you do have to implement the code yourself, fret not. There are plenty of forums: OpenCV Q&A Forum, Stack Overflow and MATLAB Central where you can work out the implementation details. Of course, it's great if you can find a good team with enough experience to work with. Keep in touch with the theory (Coursera) and you're good to roll.

What is the difference between a research question and a research problem?

As George Perry mentions, these can mean the same thing — a way of being specific about what you want to research. In various contexts (a thesis paper vs a grant application), different terms or definitions might apply. For what its worth, in my experience:a) A research problem statement is a short (a paragraph or two) description of a specific research area or issue that you intend to address, with an explanation of why that area/issue needs to be addressed, why addressing this area/issue is of importance, and what overall benefit (i.e, to society as a whole or to other researchers) addressing the issue may provide.b) You then narrow down the research problem to one or more specific questions that are concrete and can be answered by experiment/review of data/literature review, etc.I think other terms that are similar would be: statement of purpose/specific aims; research statement/research question.

What is the difference between a research question and a research hypothesis?

A research question would set boundaries for the area to be explored and the answers that your research need to answer and hypothesis is a scientific way in which you assume an answer to the research question or its sub-components and then test if your assumption was correct. For instance, if you have a research done on causes of software project failures then your research question might be - What are the key causes of project failure in IT? based on this question, you may write answers and then develop hypotheses from them as follows:Answer: Unclear Project scope, Lack of budget and Lack of Project management skills are reasons behind project failure. So your hypotheses would be:1. H0: Null Hypothesis - Unclear project scope causes project failureHa: Alternate Hypothesis - Unclear Project Scope does not cause project failureProve that your null hypothesis is correct and the cause you identified becomes your answer otherwise alternate hypothesis is true and you can say that Unclear Project scope does not cause project failure. In similar way, you will have more hypotheses:2. H0: Null Hypothesis - Lack of budget causes project failureHa: Alternate Hypothesis - Lack of budget does not cause project failure3. H0: Null Hypothesis - Lack of Project management skills  causes project failureHa: Alternate Hypothesis - Lack of Project management skills does not cause project failureSo research question actually asks a question and hypothesis proves the possible answers. At times research question can also present question in the form of answer itself and hypothesis proves them. For example, research question could be:Does unclear project scope causes project failure? and the hypothesis assumptions say yes or no to this answer which you can prove thereafter using statistical methods of hypothesis testing

Star Wars-related research paper topic?

So I have to have a thing where I talk about what my topic for the research paper will be, but I'm out of ideas. I want it to be Star Wars-related, and there are a whole slew of things that can be written about, but my mind is blank. More specifically, I need a "problem" to be solved, because the paper is supposed to be set up as "here's the problem, here's my proposed solution, here's why it would work. here are alternate solutions, here's why they suck." Can someone help me out and give me a good topic?

Looking for a narrowed research topic - Veganism?

Hi everyone! I am having enormous writer's block with the overwhelming amount of work I need done for school. I am to come to class today with a narrowed topic for my research paper. My general topic is veganism, but I need to have something more specific to write about. Does anybody know what I could research and put into my paper that involves anything related to veganism? This is college level research/writing. Thank you!

How do I develop a research question for dissertation?

The research question(s) is a very important element of a thesis/dissertation. It is the research question(s) that guides the formative processes involved in undertaking research. For example, the literature review needs to be guided by the research question(s). Without the research question in mind, the literature search tends to be aimless and too broad to actually be useful.But how does one develop a research question?There are many ways to do so, depending on the preference of the researcher and the type of research.The following article points to a highly innovative and fun process for developing research questions: Developing Research Questions

Please give examples of a qualitative -and- quantitative nursing research question?

General definitions of "qualitative" and "quantitative" are linked closely to methodology. The applicable Oxford English Dictionary definitions of "quantitative" are:

--That which is, or may be, considered with respect to the quantity or quantities involved; estimated or estimable by quantity or Relating to, concerned with, quantity or its measurement; ascertaining or expressing quantity. (OX2)
These definitions indicate possibilities of data gathering, whether measuring or estimating.

The definition of "qualitative" cites "quantitative" as its implied opposite, therefore, also implying its links to data gathering:

--Relating to, connected or concerned with, quality or qualities. Now usually in implied or expressed opposition to QUANTITATIVE. (OX2)

The LIS literature on qualitative research methodologically follows this approach of defining qualitative in opposition to quantitative. Jack Glazier's discussion epitomizes the dichotomous and vague nature of definitions of qualitative research in LIS by suggesting that it be defined by what it is not, quantitative. "It is not ... It is not ... It is not ..." (1992, 6) He lists as qualitative methods ethnographic and naturalistic and, most curiously, unobtrusive measures.

The one characteristic that all these terms share is that they tend to obscure rather than clarify the concept. The concept seems to be confusing not only because of the number of terms applied, but also because it carries different connotations for different people. (Glazier 1992, 6)

Examples of qualitative research--

1) interview 50 elderly patients to find out what are their major health concerns
2) interview 50 nursing students to find out the five major reasons they joined nursing
3) Interview/survey 100 teen agers to determine dietary aptterns

Examples of quantative research--

1) Determine rate of deep veous thrombosis in medical ICU patients (something that will be a number 7 cases out of 100 admitted so 7%)
2) Determine mortality after acute MI in 2005 in your hospital, again will be a number

Good Luck!

What is a good scientific research topic for an inspired 17 year old?

Your question in itself requests a very broad answer but your question description significantly narrows down the scope.A good scientific topic at such an early stage is any topic that whets your interest in your chosen area, inspires you to pursue your interest by enrolling in graduate and post-graduate programs in that area, as well as informs you a bit about what work is done in that area and what are the tools and techniques used in that area. Most importantly, at this early stage, it is important to have fun while pursuing your interest.I am not a mathematician and may not be able to direct you to all the interesting problems in mathematics. You should look at the other answers to this question for more details. However, I found topology and number theory to be endless sources of easy-to-state but really challenging problems.Collatz Conjecture:Computing approximate Nash equilibria: has several applications in economics, public administration and computer scienceInscribed Square ProblemLook at the following website for more open problemshttp://w.openproblemgarden.orgHowever, given your clarification about the problem being one you can make meaningful contributions to, the set of problems changes drastically. Most of the problems that are open in mathematics are open for decades and more, and require dedicated study and training before you can make any dent in them.However, there do exist areas in mathematics that you may find interesting as well as be able to make some progress given your limited exposure to these. The areas that most readily come to my mind are the areas of optimization and statistics. Several problems in areas such as economics, operations research, artificial intelligence and machine learning reduce to problems in optimization and statistics and you need a basic knowledge of functions, sets and probability theory to start looking at these areas.If you want to know more about these areas, search online for introductory courses on optimization and statistics (or else ask another question on Quora :P)

How to write Introduction to research paper?

I'm writing research paper about working conditions and job satisfaction of professors in universities my country. there haven't been made any other researches about this topic in my country so i use sources of foreign universities. Its the first time for me writing research paper. I have a difficulty in writing introduction,how should i start? And also could you suggesr few ideas about thesis? thanks beforehand

What is the relationship between theory and research?

Students sometimes have difficulty understanding the nature of the relationship between theory and research as well as the importance of this relationship when conducting their own research. The lack of a theoretical framework through which to ground research results makes interpretation of the findings and an explanation of why the findings may have occurred difficult. Theories are the basis for the hypotheses to be tested. Without theory there is no foundation allowing hypotheses to be generated or predictions to be made regarding the expected findings. Left without hypotheses, testable relationships or predictions, the research is not likely to have practical results. Research also is the mechanism through which theories are developed, confirmed or rejected. Without the role of theory in research, either as something to be developed or tested, studies will be isolated such that they will not be linked to other research in a substantive manner and will not lead to further research.The relationship between research and theory can be discerned through the definitions of their functions. The impetus for research is the search for theory or theory development. Thus, research relies on theory and theory relies on research. This is a dialectic or transactional process such that initial theory is based on research, then research is conducted to test the theory and the theory is amended based on the research findings. These steps are repeated over and over such that theory is never considered absolute and believed always able to be further refined through the research process.

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