Recommend papers for an undergraduate. [on hold]Undergraduate mathematics programsUndergraduate mathematics studyWhat are the best ways to prepare one's self for introductory classes in proofs, analysis, and modern algebra?Undergraduate mathematical magazines to improve mathematical knowledgeHow can I begin reading journals and papers?Research Papers readable by undergraduatesWhat are some easy papers in mathematics understood by undergraduates?What are some research problems that fit as a good candidate for undergraduate research?Papers for an undergraduate project (numerical methods, numerical algebra)How to read papers of professors?
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Recommend papers for an undergraduate. [on hold]
Undergraduate mathematics programsUndergraduate mathematics studyWhat are the best ways to prepare one's self for introductory classes in proofs, analysis, and modern algebra?Undergraduate mathematical magazines to improve mathematical knowledgeHow can I begin reading journals and papers?Research Papers readable by undergraduatesWhat are some easy papers in mathematics understood by undergraduates?What are some research problems that fit as a good candidate for undergraduate research?Papers for an undergraduate project (numerical methods, numerical algebra)How to read papers of professors?
$begingroup$
I'm a mathematics (undergraduate) student, and as the title claims, I would like to get into reading papers. I don't know how to get into them. I need some advice about sources, magazines, forums, etc.
I thought some of you could had been in my spot when you were in college.
soft-question
New contributor
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
$endgroup$
put on hold as too broad by quid♦ Apr 26 at 14:25
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'm a mathematics (undergraduate) student, and as the title claims, I would like to get into reading papers. I don't know how to get into them. I need some advice about sources, magazines, forums, etc.
I thought some of you could had been in my spot when you were in college.
soft-question
New contributor
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
$endgroup$
put on hold as too broad by quid♦ Apr 26 at 14:25
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
$begingroup$
You mean like, how to start writing papers? Or where to get papers of other people?
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 9:09
$begingroup$
Oh sorry, I will change the post now, I want to start reading papers (ones I can understand, part of it at least). Obv i want to write them too, but it is a little bit early to start writing papers, isn't it?
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:12
1
$begingroup$
Some mathematicians (your professors for instance) sometimes have notes or expository articles about various subjects. These are not always research paper per say but I found them extremely useful to know what is going on in some research fields. For instance Paul Garrett has some nice things: www-users.math.umn.edu/~garrett (might be a bit too advanced though).
$endgroup$
– Thibaut Dumont
Apr 26 at 11:22
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I'm a mathematics (undergraduate) student, and as the title claims, I would like to get into reading papers. I don't know how to get into them. I need some advice about sources, magazines, forums, etc.
I thought some of you could had been in my spot when you were in college.
soft-question
New contributor
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
$endgroup$
I'm a mathematics (undergraduate) student, and as the title claims, I would like to get into reading papers. I don't know how to get into them. I need some advice about sources, magazines, forums, etc.
I thought some of you could had been in my spot when you were in college.
soft-question
soft-question
New contributor
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited Apr 26 at 14:39
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
New contributor
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked Apr 26 at 9:02
Ignacio Correcher SánchezIgnacio Correcher Sánchez
194
194
New contributor
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Ignacio Correcher Sánchez is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
put on hold as too broad by quid♦ Apr 26 at 14:25
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as too broad by quid♦ Apr 26 at 14:25
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
$begingroup$
You mean like, how to start writing papers? Or where to get papers of other people?
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 9:09
$begingroup$
Oh sorry, I will change the post now, I want to start reading papers (ones I can understand, part of it at least). Obv i want to write them too, but it is a little bit early to start writing papers, isn't it?
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:12
1
$begingroup$
Some mathematicians (your professors for instance) sometimes have notes or expository articles about various subjects. These are not always research paper per say but I found them extremely useful to know what is going on in some research fields. For instance Paul Garrett has some nice things: www-users.math.umn.edu/~garrett (might be a bit too advanced though).
$endgroup$
– Thibaut Dumont
Apr 26 at 11:22
add a comment |
$begingroup$
You mean like, how to start writing papers? Or where to get papers of other people?
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 9:09
$begingroup$
Oh sorry, I will change the post now, I want to start reading papers (ones I can understand, part of it at least). Obv i want to write them too, but it is a little bit early to start writing papers, isn't it?
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:12
1
$begingroup$
Some mathematicians (your professors for instance) sometimes have notes or expository articles about various subjects. These are not always research paper per say but I found them extremely useful to know what is going on in some research fields. For instance Paul Garrett has some nice things: www-users.math.umn.edu/~garrett (might be a bit too advanced though).
$endgroup$
– Thibaut Dumont
Apr 26 at 11:22
$begingroup$
You mean like, how to start writing papers? Or where to get papers of other people?
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 9:09
$begingroup$
You mean like, how to start writing papers? Or where to get papers of other people?
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 9:09
$begingroup$
Oh sorry, I will change the post now, I want to start reading papers (ones I can understand, part of it at least). Obv i want to write them too, but it is a little bit early to start writing papers, isn't it?
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:12
$begingroup$
Oh sorry, I will change the post now, I want to start reading papers (ones I can understand, part of it at least). Obv i want to write them too, but it is a little bit early to start writing papers, isn't it?
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:12
1
1
$begingroup$
Some mathematicians (your professors for instance) sometimes have notes or expository articles about various subjects. These are not always research paper per say but I found them extremely useful to know what is going on in some research fields. For instance Paul Garrett has some nice things: www-users.math.umn.edu/~garrett (might be a bit too advanced though).
$endgroup$
– Thibaut Dumont
Apr 26 at 11:22
$begingroup$
Some mathematicians (your professors for instance) sometimes have notes or expository articles about various subjects. These are not always research paper per say but I found them extremely useful to know what is going on in some research fields. For instance Paul Garrett has some nice things: www-users.math.umn.edu/~garrett (might be a bit too advanced though).
$endgroup$
– Thibaut Dumont
Apr 26 at 11:22
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Well, it basically relies on your field of interest. For different fields there are different journals in which papers concerning that topic are published. Then again, many different journals are published by the same publisher, see for example Elsevier. Wikipedia has a list of journals.
Usually, unless they are open access or your university has a contract with the publisher, you need to pay money to read a paper or journal. But your local math library probably has a lot of old (and new) journal articles to read from. arxiv.org should also be mentioned, as perhaps the most well known source for open access prepapers as well as Google Scholar which can help you to find a specific paper given the title and/or author. But also note that the quality of journals differ, going down to journals which will publish anything for money (see also).
Reading new papers nowadays is challenging anyway, because they are basically the frontier of science and therefore often really specialized. For example, I can hardly make sense of papers about vector bundles because I didn't really ever had anything to do with them and so hardly know what they are anyway. If you want to start with a topic, it is usually more advisable to read a structured book about it, which usually contains a lot of references to papers, if you want to delve into it.
On another note, it can be very educational to read the original papers of great mathematicans. For example, there is the Euler Archive but there exist paper collections of almost all great mathematicians.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Wow this was REALLY helpful. Thank you so much, I will take a look to the Euler Archive and arxiv. But I definitely agree that reading a book will be more optimal, but papers have such a "romanticism" around them that I wanted to take a look.
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:56
$begingroup$
@IgnacioCorrecherSánchez You know, if you are completely satisfied with my answer, you can "accept" it by clicking on the checkmark right under the points. This can only be done for one answer per question though. Welcome to Math.StackExchange :D
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 10:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
One type of journals with papers students can understand are those that are intended for a broader audience than researchers, often including educators of mathematics. These papers are usually more expository (the word 'expository' itself is also a good term to search for) than the 'cutting edge' work.
For example, I can certainly recommend "Nieuw archief voor de wiskunde" to Dutch students. (some articles are in English, but most non-technical articles are only in Dutch.) I'm not aware of any such publication in Spanish, but its likely there is one (and probably easier to find for someone who can speak that language.)
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I suppose you have at least a vague idea about topics you are interested. Let's say "non-Riemann topology" or "elliptic PDE stability" (I do not even know if they are research topics, I am just packing math terms altogether out of my ignorance)
How I would do it then, if I were xx years younger:
- search in my favorite Internet search engine for a recording of seminar/talk/presentation on a topic I am interested. Example searching for "topology seminar youtube" gives some results, among them the official youtube channel of a French institution https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFqg88K7NWY2xjWB6CeRyAw
- after watching one/two interesting seminars, I would start from the referenced papers there presented. If I found nothing interesting, I would start looking into the most recent awarded persons at Mathematics Symposium: there is a good chance that the last paper with the awarded person as first-author is a nice review of his personal and group contributions to the subject.
Doing all these research from your university library increases the chances of having meaningful results and possibly accessing the pdf of the papers.
In my times, there was not so much available online, so newsletters and mailing lists were very useful, in getting into the world of research professionals. An example relevant to you is probably the page of the european mathematics society.
Check their newsletter
https://www.ems-ph.org/journals/journal.php?jrn=news
and for the remote future, you may be interested in their job page
https://euro-math-soc.eu/jobs
Good luck!
New contributor
EarlGrey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
$begingroup$
Well, it basically relies on your field of interest. For different fields there are different journals in which papers concerning that topic are published. Then again, many different journals are published by the same publisher, see for example Elsevier. Wikipedia has a list of journals.
Usually, unless they are open access or your university has a contract with the publisher, you need to pay money to read a paper or journal. But your local math library probably has a lot of old (and new) journal articles to read from. arxiv.org should also be mentioned, as perhaps the most well known source for open access prepapers as well as Google Scholar which can help you to find a specific paper given the title and/or author. But also note that the quality of journals differ, going down to journals which will publish anything for money (see also).
Reading new papers nowadays is challenging anyway, because they are basically the frontier of science and therefore often really specialized. For example, I can hardly make sense of papers about vector bundles because I didn't really ever had anything to do with them and so hardly know what they are anyway. If you want to start with a topic, it is usually more advisable to read a structured book about it, which usually contains a lot of references to papers, if you want to delve into it.
On another note, it can be very educational to read the original papers of great mathematicans. For example, there is the Euler Archive but there exist paper collections of almost all great mathematicians.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Wow this was REALLY helpful. Thank you so much, I will take a look to the Euler Archive and arxiv. But I definitely agree that reading a book will be more optimal, but papers have such a "romanticism" around them that I wanted to take a look.
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:56
$begingroup$
@IgnacioCorrecherSánchez You know, if you are completely satisfied with my answer, you can "accept" it by clicking on the checkmark right under the points. This can only be done for one answer per question though. Welcome to Math.StackExchange :D
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 10:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Well, it basically relies on your field of interest. For different fields there are different journals in which papers concerning that topic are published. Then again, many different journals are published by the same publisher, see for example Elsevier. Wikipedia has a list of journals.
Usually, unless they are open access or your university has a contract with the publisher, you need to pay money to read a paper or journal. But your local math library probably has a lot of old (and new) journal articles to read from. arxiv.org should also be mentioned, as perhaps the most well known source for open access prepapers as well as Google Scholar which can help you to find a specific paper given the title and/or author. But also note that the quality of journals differ, going down to journals which will publish anything for money (see also).
Reading new papers nowadays is challenging anyway, because they are basically the frontier of science and therefore often really specialized. For example, I can hardly make sense of papers about vector bundles because I didn't really ever had anything to do with them and so hardly know what they are anyway. If you want to start with a topic, it is usually more advisable to read a structured book about it, which usually contains a lot of references to papers, if you want to delve into it.
On another note, it can be very educational to read the original papers of great mathematicans. For example, there is the Euler Archive but there exist paper collections of almost all great mathematicians.
$endgroup$
$begingroup$
Wow this was REALLY helpful. Thank you so much, I will take a look to the Euler Archive and arxiv. But I definitely agree that reading a book will be more optimal, but papers have such a "romanticism" around them that I wanted to take a look.
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:56
$begingroup$
@IgnacioCorrecherSánchez You know, if you are completely satisfied with my answer, you can "accept" it by clicking on the checkmark right under the points. This can only be done for one answer per question though. Welcome to Math.StackExchange :D
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 10:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Well, it basically relies on your field of interest. For different fields there are different journals in which papers concerning that topic are published. Then again, many different journals are published by the same publisher, see for example Elsevier. Wikipedia has a list of journals.
Usually, unless they are open access or your university has a contract with the publisher, you need to pay money to read a paper or journal. But your local math library probably has a lot of old (and new) journal articles to read from. arxiv.org should also be mentioned, as perhaps the most well known source for open access prepapers as well as Google Scholar which can help you to find a specific paper given the title and/or author. But also note that the quality of journals differ, going down to journals which will publish anything for money (see also).
Reading new papers nowadays is challenging anyway, because they are basically the frontier of science and therefore often really specialized. For example, I can hardly make sense of papers about vector bundles because I didn't really ever had anything to do with them and so hardly know what they are anyway. If you want to start with a topic, it is usually more advisable to read a structured book about it, which usually contains a lot of references to papers, if you want to delve into it.
On another note, it can be very educational to read the original papers of great mathematicans. For example, there is the Euler Archive but there exist paper collections of almost all great mathematicians.
$endgroup$
Well, it basically relies on your field of interest. For different fields there are different journals in which papers concerning that topic are published. Then again, many different journals are published by the same publisher, see for example Elsevier. Wikipedia has a list of journals.
Usually, unless they are open access or your university has a contract with the publisher, you need to pay money to read a paper or journal. But your local math library probably has a lot of old (and new) journal articles to read from. arxiv.org should also be mentioned, as perhaps the most well known source for open access prepapers as well as Google Scholar which can help you to find a specific paper given the title and/or author. But also note that the quality of journals differ, going down to journals which will publish anything for money (see also).
Reading new papers nowadays is challenging anyway, because they are basically the frontier of science and therefore often really specialized. For example, I can hardly make sense of papers about vector bundles because I didn't really ever had anything to do with them and so hardly know what they are anyway. If you want to start with a topic, it is usually more advisable to read a structured book about it, which usually contains a lot of references to papers, if you want to delve into it.
On another note, it can be very educational to read the original papers of great mathematicans. For example, there is the Euler Archive but there exist paper collections of almost all great mathematicians.
edited Apr 26 at 10:38
answered Apr 26 at 9:43
SK19SK19
1,736331
1,736331
$begingroup$
Wow this was REALLY helpful. Thank you so much, I will take a look to the Euler Archive and arxiv. But I definitely agree that reading a book will be more optimal, but papers have such a "romanticism" around them that I wanted to take a look.
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:56
$begingroup$
@IgnacioCorrecherSánchez You know, if you are completely satisfied with my answer, you can "accept" it by clicking on the checkmark right under the points. This can only be done for one answer per question though. Welcome to Math.StackExchange :D
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 10:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
Wow this was REALLY helpful. Thank you so much, I will take a look to the Euler Archive and arxiv. But I definitely agree that reading a book will be more optimal, but papers have such a "romanticism" around them that I wanted to take a look.
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:56
$begingroup$
@IgnacioCorrecherSánchez You know, if you are completely satisfied with my answer, you can "accept" it by clicking on the checkmark right under the points. This can only be done for one answer per question though. Welcome to Math.StackExchange :D
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 10:36
$begingroup$
Wow this was REALLY helpful. Thank you so much, I will take a look to the Euler Archive and arxiv. But I definitely agree that reading a book will be more optimal, but papers have such a "romanticism" around them that I wanted to take a look.
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:56
$begingroup$
Wow this was REALLY helpful. Thank you so much, I will take a look to the Euler Archive and arxiv. But I definitely agree that reading a book will be more optimal, but papers have such a "romanticism" around them that I wanted to take a look.
$endgroup$
– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:56
$begingroup$
@IgnacioCorrecherSánchez You know, if you are completely satisfied with my answer, you can "accept" it by clicking on the checkmark right under the points. This can only be done for one answer per question though. Welcome to Math.StackExchange :D
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 10:36
$begingroup$
@IgnacioCorrecherSánchez You know, if you are completely satisfied with my answer, you can "accept" it by clicking on the checkmark right under the points. This can only be done for one answer per question though. Welcome to Math.StackExchange :D
$endgroup$
– SK19
Apr 26 at 10:36
add a comment |
$begingroup$
One type of journals with papers students can understand are those that are intended for a broader audience than researchers, often including educators of mathematics. These papers are usually more expository (the word 'expository' itself is also a good term to search for) than the 'cutting edge' work.
For example, I can certainly recommend "Nieuw archief voor de wiskunde" to Dutch students. (some articles are in English, but most non-technical articles are only in Dutch.) I'm not aware of any such publication in Spanish, but its likely there is one (and probably easier to find for someone who can speak that language.)
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
One type of journals with papers students can understand are those that are intended for a broader audience than researchers, often including educators of mathematics. These papers are usually more expository (the word 'expository' itself is also a good term to search for) than the 'cutting edge' work.
For example, I can certainly recommend "Nieuw archief voor de wiskunde" to Dutch students. (some articles are in English, but most non-technical articles are only in Dutch.) I'm not aware of any such publication in Spanish, but its likely there is one (and probably easier to find for someone who can speak that language.)
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
One type of journals with papers students can understand are those that are intended for a broader audience than researchers, often including educators of mathematics. These papers are usually more expository (the word 'expository' itself is also a good term to search for) than the 'cutting edge' work.
For example, I can certainly recommend "Nieuw archief voor de wiskunde" to Dutch students. (some articles are in English, but most non-technical articles are only in Dutch.) I'm not aware of any such publication in Spanish, but its likely there is one (and probably easier to find for someone who can speak that language.)
$endgroup$
One type of journals with papers students can understand are those that are intended for a broader audience than researchers, often including educators of mathematics. These papers are usually more expository (the word 'expository' itself is also a good term to search for) than the 'cutting edge' work.
For example, I can certainly recommend "Nieuw archief voor de wiskunde" to Dutch students. (some articles are in English, but most non-technical articles are only in Dutch.) I'm not aware of any such publication in Spanish, but its likely there is one (and probably easier to find for someone who can speak that language.)
answered Apr 26 at 11:33
Discrete lizardDiscrete lizard
15211
15211
add a comment |
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I suppose you have at least a vague idea about topics you are interested. Let's say "non-Riemann topology" or "elliptic PDE stability" (I do not even know if they are research topics, I am just packing math terms altogether out of my ignorance)
How I would do it then, if I were xx years younger:
- search in my favorite Internet search engine for a recording of seminar/talk/presentation on a topic I am interested. Example searching for "topology seminar youtube" gives some results, among them the official youtube channel of a French institution https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFqg88K7NWY2xjWB6CeRyAw
- after watching one/two interesting seminars, I would start from the referenced papers there presented. If I found nothing interesting, I would start looking into the most recent awarded persons at Mathematics Symposium: there is a good chance that the last paper with the awarded person as first-author is a nice review of his personal and group contributions to the subject.
Doing all these research from your university library increases the chances of having meaningful results and possibly accessing the pdf of the papers.
In my times, there was not so much available online, so newsletters and mailing lists were very useful, in getting into the world of research professionals. An example relevant to you is probably the page of the european mathematics society.
Check their newsletter
https://www.ems-ph.org/journals/journal.php?jrn=news
and for the remote future, you may be interested in their job page
https://euro-math-soc.eu/jobs
Good luck!
New contributor
EarlGrey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I suppose you have at least a vague idea about topics you are interested. Let's say "non-Riemann topology" or "elliptic PDE stability" (I do not even know if they are research topics, I am just packing math terms altogether out of my ignorance)
How I would do it then, if I were xx years younger:
- search in my favorite Internet search engine for a recording of seminar/talk/presentation on a topic I am interested. Example searching for "topology seminar youtube" gives some results, among them the official youtube channel of a French institution https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFqg88K7NWY2xjWB6CeRyAw
- after watching one/two interesting seminars, I would start from the referenced papers there presented. If I found nothing interesting, I would start looking into the most recent awarded persons at Mathematics Symposium: there is a good chance that the last paper with the awarded person as first-author is a nice review of his personal and group contributions to the subject.
Doing all these research from your university library increases the chances of having meaningful results and possibly accessing the pdf of the papers.
In my times, there was not so much available online, so newsletters and mailing lists were very useful, in getting into the world of research professionals. An example relevant to you is probably the page of the european mathematics society.
Check their newsletter
https://www.ems-ph.org/journals/journal.php?jrn=news
and for the remote future, you may be interested in their job page
https://euro-math-soc.eu/jobs
Good luck!
New contributor
EarlGrey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
$endgroup$
add a comment |
$begingroup$
I suppose you have at least a vague idea about topics you are interested. Let's say "non-Riemann topology" or "elliptic PDE stability" (I do not even know if they are research topics, I am just packing math terms altogether out of my ignorance)
How I would do it then, if I were xx years younger:
- search in my favorite Internet search engine for a recording of seminar/talk/presentation on a topic I am interested. Example searching for "topology seminar youtube" gives some results, among them the official youtube channel of a French institution https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFqg88K7NWY2xjWB6CeRyAw
- after watching one/two interesting seminars, I would start from the referenced papers there presented. If I found nothing interesting, I would start looking into the most recent awarded persons at Mathematics Symposium: there is a good chance that the last paper with the awarded person as first-author is a nice review of his personal and group contributions to the subject.
Doing all these research from your university library increases the chances of having meaningful results and possibly accessing the pdf of the papers.
In my times, there was not so much available online, so newsletters and mailing lists were very useful, in getting into the world of research professionals. An example relevant to you is probably the page of the european mathematics society.
Check their newsletter
https://www.ems-ph.org/journals/journal.php?jrn=news
and for the remote future, you may be interested in their job page
https://euro-math-soc.eu/jobs
Good luck!
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I suppose you have at least a vague idea about topics you are interested. Let's say "non-Riemann topology" or "elliptic PDE stability" (I do not even know if they are research topics, I am just packing math terms altogether out of my ignorance)
How I would do it then, if I were xx years younger:
- search in my favorite Internet search engine for a recording of seminar/talk/presentation on a topic I am interested. Example searching for "topology seminar youtube" gives some results, among them the official youtube channel of a French institution https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFqg88K7NWY2xjWB6CeRyAw
- after watching one/two interesting seminars, I would start from the referenced papers there presented. If I found nothing interesting, I would start looking into the most recent awarded persons at Mathematics Symposium: there is a good chance that the last paper with the awarded person as first-author is a nice review of his personal and group contributions to the subject.
Doing all these research from your university library increases the chances of having meaningful results and possibly accessing the pdf of the papers.
In my times, there was not so much available online, so newsletters and mailing lists were very useful, in getting into the world of research professionals. An example relevant to you is probably the page of the european mathematics society.
Check their newsletter
https://www.ems-ph.org/journals/journal.php?jrn=news
and for the remote future, you may be interested in their job page
https://euro-math-soc.eu/jobs
Good luck!
New contributor
EarlGrey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
EarlGrey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
answered Apr 26 at 13:43
EarlGreyEarlGrey
112
112
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EarlGrey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
EarlGrey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
EarlGrey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
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You mean like, how to start writing papers? Or where to get papers of other people?
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– SK19
Apr 26 at 9:09
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Oh sorry, I will change the post now, I want to start reading papers (ones I can understand, part of it at least). Obv i want to write them too, but it is a little bit early to start writing papers, isn't it?
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– Ignacio Correcher Sánchez
Apr 26 at 9:12
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Some mathematicians (your professors for instance) sometimes have notes or expository articles about various subjects. These are not always research paper per say but I found them extremely useful to know what is going on in some research fields. For instance Paul Garrett has some nice things: www-users.math.umn.edu/~garrett (might be a bit too advanced though).
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– Thibaut Dumont
Apr 26 at 11:22