Workbook for Volume 1 – Part V: Section #4.14: Template for Reading Research Papers (“Small Worlds” Statistical “Meaning”)
For new readers, please read the “Pinned Post” at the top of this Substack’s Home Page, and titled Why Use Public Peer-Review to Write a Book? - “See for Yourself”.
For returning readers & subscribers, this post presents the revised version of: Volume 1 – Part V: Section #4.14: Template for Reading Research Papers (“Small Worlds” Statistical “Meaning”)
Summary:
After the First Step for in the process for reading research papers (see Volume - Part V: Section #4.2: One-Page Summary), continue with the Second Step by taking notes for all levels of analysis in the Template, and for all parts of the paper. This table comes from Volume 1 – Part V: The Template for Reading Research Papers, and provides a framework to document an opinion about the “Meaning” of the research based on “Small Worlds” analytics:
See pdf below:
“CTRI by Francois Gadenne” writes a book in three volumes, published at the rate of one two-pages section per day on Substack for public peer-review. The book connects the dots of life-enhancing practices for the next generation, free of controlling algorithms, based on the lifetime experience of a retirement age entrepreneur, & continuously updated with insights from reading Wealth, Health, & Statistics (i.e. AI/ML/LLM) research papers on behalf of large companies as the co-founder of CTRI.