lrlrlrlrlr Posted March 29, 2015 Posted March 29, 2015 Some people I work with do everyday and read at least one paper a day, I know others as well who went through their phd having read very few papers.
rising_star Posted March 29, 2015 Posted March 29, 2015 I think reading a paper a day, at least on weekdays, is an excellent habit. I also regularly peruse the table of contents for numerous journals related to my research and teaching interests, even if I don't read that many articles from them.
bsharpe269 Posted March 29, 2015 Posted March 29, 2015 I read 1-2 papers a day at least. I am not that great about reading current stuff... whenever I come across papers that I want to read in the citations of other interesting papers, I put them in a Mendeley "to read" folder. I try to read a paper out of that folder every morning. music 1
The Wayfarer Posted March 31, 2015 Posted March 31, 2015 I don't necessarily read a new journal article everyday but I'm at least browing the table of contents in the new issues of journals in my field -- I'll skim an article of some interest. (Usually I try to tackle one of the articles in my 'to-read' folder on my laptop first.)
Realities Posted March 31, 2015 Posted March 31, 2015 I've been trying to read 5 articles every morning and 5 every evening - inputting notes into a database for future reference. Not sure I will keep up this pace, but as a first year graduate student, I really feel the need to get caught up in my field and really understand the articles I'm citing. It also is already helping me develop original research ideas.
victorydance Posted March 31, 2015 Posted March 31, 2015 I just basically read my sub-topic(s) on my own. The rest of the important literature will come to me through seminars, which in my discipline are extremely heavy reading. I think you need to be strategic, there is a shitload of literature in any discipline that really has no relevance or value to a lot of people in that field.
dstock Posted April 3, 2015 Posted April 3, 2015 I wish I could read a paper a day but I haven't been able to make that happen. Maybe 2-3 each week, usually over the weekend.
TakeruK Posted April 3, 2015 Posted April 3, 2015 I read daily abstracts from my field's preprint server each morning (usually 3-4 abstracts). If there is a particularly relevant paper, I will read it and make notes (in Mendeley)--I'd say this happens about once every 2-3 weeks. I try to make notes that summarize the paper so that I don't have to read the paper again in order to cite it. If there is a somewhat relevant paper, then I usually put it in my Mendeley folder, read the abstract, introduction and conclusion and make notes. I also make note of whatever method they use. For these papers, I don't make notes that summarize the paper, but instead, I make notes so that if, later on, I wanted to read more about X, I would go back and read this paper. I would say that I find papers in this category about 1-2 times per week. I also skim a lot of papers that I do not save at all. I mostly do this to know what else is going on in my field and for the weekly informal "science news" discussion group we have. I probably skim ~1 paper per day. I also skim/read papers for things like group meetings or classes. Finally, in addition to this, I read in depth the papers that are directly relevant to my work. It's hard to say I do this for X papers per day because it varies. When I start a new project, I might read 1-2 papers per day for the first week, and then I start spending all my time doing the calculations/analysis/work etc. so I don't read that many more papers. I'm impressed by all the people that read 1 entire paper per day on a regular basis. I am not able to do this. To be honest, I don't think there is enough interesting papers out there in my field to sustain a rate of 1 paper per day! I just checked my Mendeley folder for my PhD work and there are 233 papers. I definitely have not read the majority of them in depth and some of them are only there because I needed to cite a single value from the work. I would estimate the total number of papers I've fully read (i.e more than just intro/conclusion) since starting my PhD program to be about 100 (I'm a third year PhD student), which puts me at an average of one paper every 2 weeks.
juilletmercredi Posted April 7, 2015 Posted April 7, 2015 I wish I had read more often in the beginning of my program, because it would've made the process of studying for my orals less painful, lol. I don't have a concrete schedule for how often I read, but I look over the literature just about every day. I need to set up some article alerts or something for new articles in my field so I can read them.
kotov Posted April 9, 2015 Posted April 9, 2015 I've honestly started reading a lot more once I got through with my exams, just because now I'm focusing more specifically on what really interests me. It also helped that my language skills (especially German) got better, so now I can work through a lot of the foreign-language texts for my work and sub-field (I work on southeastern Europe and the Holocaust, so a great deal of the literature in my field is in German). I got better about reading secondary literature because I had to basically.
scarvesandcardigans Posted April 9, 2015 Posted April 9, 2015 I'm on a mailing list for Linguist List that sends a daily email of abstracts, with links, sometimes job postings. If I see one that catches my interest (since it's all languages, not always only Spanish/Hispanic or English), I will browse the abstract. Currently I'm reading a book authored by one of my undergrad professors. I'm not sure if that counts, but it has helped me develop ideas for my own research.
Eigen Posted April 9, 2015 Posted April 9, 2015 I used to spend about 2 hours each morning reading literature- I don't have time for that regularity anymore, but I set aside at least one afternoon a week to peruse the ASAP articles from each of the major journals I follow. I tend to read in sprees now- need to track something down, take a day, go into the literature and read a couple of dozen papers relating to it.
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