Thursday, January 27, 2011

Subtractive Time Management


Writing things down is the best way to Forget them

I have recently been following a notion of subtractive time management.

What I have figured is, that our minds are always populated by distractions. Browsing the internet for some quirky question that comes across your mind, checking you stocks, checking the news, etc etc. I once read that the easiest way to forget something was to write it down, rather than to keep in your head.

So from now on, my time management methods will be subtractive.

If you come across anything that is distracting, then write the fucking thing down. Once written down, you can forget about it, and come back and have a look at it once you have free time.

 This way your brain would be focused and less bothered about the distractions.

On the other hand, don't write things down that you are working on, or that you will be working on. Work things should be kept in your head, because if they are written down, then they might as well be forgotten because the urgency to do those things will be gone, since you will now have the chance to come back and have a look at your "to do" list later on. And that "later on" never arrives, those things will be written there for ages, simply because there is no urgency left. You will never forget what you just wrote down.

Hence, the empirical conclusion so far, don't write important things down, keep those in your head!! And write all the diverging thoughts down so that they could be tackled later on.

Will this work? May be.

Subtractive is the way to go. I have gained some new found respect for the subtractive method. It appears that its a good way to handle issues and simplify things. Remove the clutter.


Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Writing and Researching Paper

Start writing and developing different ideas at the same time.


  • use lose papers (numbered and dated) and held together by a clip
  • different papers should have different stacks of lose papers
  • use your notebook for rough every day notes which should be carefully written into the lose developing papers
  • black ink for codes
  • blue ink for research notes
  • red ink and highlighter for highlighting important points
At the same time, papers should be written in the latex format, and graphs and figures could be added to these as results keep coming in and your ideas keep developing.

Daily Diary

I worked for over 2 hours in the morning which was brilliant.

I figured out that I need to start work earlier and at least get my hours in early so I can get a good nap before lunch.

*without a nap in the middle of the day, you no longer remain functional

Had a brilliant new idea about another paper which could possibly be published in a very good journal. Need to work on it.



Monday, January 24, 2011

Daily Diary

I always complain about my supervisor.

Today I was reading my supervisors online CV and figured out that there were two new papers in her "journals" list. Both were written by another PhD student who is almost 2 years my senior and both papers were published in "IEEE Transactions"!!!

I should die of shame now. I have been complaining so much recently. If this other guy could publish two papers then I should publish as well. PERIOD.

Animals and Humans in Captivity

Firstly, there is no doubt that work is slavery...on top of that we are unfortunate enough to be employed and hence unable to believe in the veracity of the statement.

I read an article about the ill effects that captivity brings to an animal. The number one problem is that animals don't reproduce in captivity and start following ritualistic behaviors while in captivity and their intelligence degrades.

So What happens if we treat our work and our work place as a place for captive prisoners. We start doing completely ritualistic things such as checking emails etc or browsing the internet.


If animals seek diversity in their environment then so do we.

http://amaurosis-fugax.blogspot.com/2011/01/animals-in-captivity-vs-humans-in.html

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Daily Diary

Its important to automate your work schedule and make a habit out of it.


Calvin Newport and Heavy Work Loads

Calvin Newport wrote about how to study if you are studying medicine where the work load is way heavier than any engineering discipline. He writes about the schedule of an A-grade student in medicine who wakes up at 6 in the morning and works two 3-hour stretches every day. Each 3-hour session is broken down into three 50-minute sessions with 10 minute breaks. A long relaxing gap after 3 hours includes lunch and may be a nap. 

Waking up really early might be a key. You need to get rid of your work as early as possible when there is little distraction.



Read Original Article: (LINK)



The Plight of the Pre-Med
Of all Study Hack readers, pre-meds are among the most skeptical. They tell me that although they like my philosophy of doing a small number of things well, this is impossible forthem. Their course load is too demanding. Filling most waking hours with work is unavoidable.
Then there’s Nathan.
Nathan is pre-med at the University of Texas at Austin, where he’s currently tackling the weed out courses that give this major its bad reputation. Here’s what makes Nathan interesting to me: he finishes his work by 5:30 pm every weekday.
In fact, he doesn’t just finish it, hedominates it.
“On the last chemistry test, the average score was a 57,” he told me recently. “I made a 98…My professors are fascinated by me.”
Naturally, I asked him to share a typical day’s schedule:
  • 6:00 to 6:30: Breakfast/Shower
  • 6:30 to 9:30: Study
  • 9:30 to 10:20: Class
  • 10:30 to 11:30: Study
  • 11:30 to 12:30: Lunch
  • 12:30 to 1:30: Class
  • 1:30 to 2:30: Class
  • 2:30 to 5:30: Study
  • 5:30 to 11:00: Chill by meeting girls, explore the rolling hills and lakes of Austin, listen to live music, etc.
Here are two things I noticed about Nathan:
First, he’s not necessarily working less than his peers. His schedule includes 40 hours of studying per week, which is about right for his course load. He simply consolidates this work better.
“But he wakes up at 6,” you might complain, “I could never do that.”
Nathan’s out chasing girls before most students have even started their work for the day. Fair trade, if you ask me.
The second thing I noticed is that he’s obsessive about focus. He doesn’t just “study,” he works on the 7th floor of the engineering library: one of the most isolated spots on campus (see the above image). He works in 50 minutes chunks, and does 10 minutes of calisthenics, right there on the library floor, between every chunk. In three hours of this focused studying, he probably accomplishes more work than most pre-meds do in ten.
I don’t claim that Nathan represents a specific system that all pre-med students should follow. To me, he’s just a nice example of a more fundamental observation: the happiest students are those who take control of their academic experience, molding it to fit their own ideal of a life well-lived.

Friday, January 21, 2011

Daily Diary

I woke up really late and ended up wasting my whole day today.

Is it possible for me to start work late. Should I just focus on work where ever and when ever I can?

I am going to be drinking tonight, so wouldn't expect to wake up early tomorrow. ANOTHER WASTED DAY!!!!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Important Research Topics

Daniel Rueckert's article in IEEE Signal Processing Magazine (2010, July) on Medical Image Registration suggests that GPGPU's are the new frontier which will help realize near real-time image registration in the future

Daily Diary

Today is one of the few rare victories over procrastination.


  • I came in the morning and instantly started working and worked for 50 minutes, generally adding citations to my thesis. 
I will now go and attend a lecture talk on fast neural networks which is also an important research area in my field . I should acquaint and actively pursue such topics that might be tangentially related to my line of work.

Plus, I read Daniel Rueckert's work and realized that GPGPU's were an important and challenging new frontier in my field 

Divide your Work into Three SLOTS

I am going to follow a simple system for managing my work.

My work will be divided into three slots

  1. Writing
  2. Coding
  3. Reading (research papers+books) and learning

Daily Diary

Woke up early.

I mustn't waste time browsing internet site. Shut down the internet.

Start working and coding on your future papers as well.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Daily Diary

Woke up at 8 today.

My supervisor has told me to submit my first draft of a pending report which needs to be submitted to school for renewal of scholarship.

I went in search of Coffee...but apparently the coffee machine is still out of order.

Aim to work for around 2 hours before I take my lunch

Daily Diary

I have just been through a terrible break up which has left me emotionally drain. I haven't been able to focus on my work since my break up.

Today was the first happy day as I filled those empty spaces in my brain with work. I was able to escape from the daily cycle of depression and focus on something that wasn't about me. This helped me relax. Work is definitely something that would  help me through this break through.

When feeling emotionally depressed, focus on something other than yourself. 

Daily Diary

I have wasted more time on the internet. I need to disconnect and focus solely on the task at hand.

My supervisor finally contacted me today. I wasn't reading any of her emails hence from now on, my first real resolution is to please my supervisor.

I will start reading her emails regularly. Reply as often as possible.

Personally she has lost all credibility but she has her positive attributes.
She is nice (which in no way helps me improve).
  • She is very good at paper writing.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Interesting PhD blog

All-But Dissertation Survival Guide:

http://www.abdsurvivalguide.com/

How a Busy Harvard Professor finds time to Write

How a Busy Harvard Professor Finds Time to Write
by Patricia Flynn Weitzman, Ph.D.

Most people facing the challenge of writing a dissertation have, at one point or another, despairingly thought, "How the heck will I keep up as an academic, if just getting my dissertation written feels so tough?"

Indeed, an academic career requires the constant juggling of writing responsibilities with teaching, committee work, mentoring, and a personal life. Such a juggling act can be tricky to say the least, but there are those who pull it off quite successfully.

Take, for example, Dr. Hannah Riley Bowles, Associate Professor of Public Policy at Harvard's Kennedy School of Government. Dr. Bowles has published widely in premier academic journals, and she won the Kennedy School's 2003 Manuel Carballo Award for Excellence in Teaching.
Dr. Bowles currently serves as the faculty director of Women & Power, the Kennedy School's executive program for women leaders. In addition to her myriad professional accomplishments, Dr. Bowles is also the mother of an almost 3-year-old daughter, so she is very adept at the complex balancing routine required to be a successful academic and an involved parent.
Who better then to pose the question of how to keep up with academic writing responsibilities than someone like Dr. Bowles? Here's a summary of our conversation:

1) How do you manage to be so productive? 
Discipline is most important. I look for chunks of time for writing. After I get off the phone with you, I go directly to a meeting. Scheduling things this way allowed me to spend this morning working on only one thing.

2) Do you have a writing schedule?
Yes, but it changes from day-to-day.

3) Where do you do your writing, in your office or your home?
Either place. I carry my laptop with me wherever I go so if my daughter is napping for 20 minutes, I write.

4) So you do your writing on the fly?
No, you really can't do good writing on the fly. But if you don't do some things on the fly, you'll never have a chance to write. You have to schedule your writing time.

5) How do you balance writing with teaching?
The hardest part in balancing writing and teaching is saying no to students. I really care about my students; I've been engaged and available to them. But you really need to make sure you say no to certain things-- and sometimes they're the things that are the most fun part of the job-- in order to discipline yourself so that you get the other stuff done.

I think that's very important for an ABD student. There are a lot of things you can do as an ABD: you can go to seminars, you can teach in classes, there are a million things you can do with that unstructured time. But you need to impose structure on your time. You need to impose structure on unstructured days.

For example, these are the tasks I'm going to accomplish today, these are the tasks I'm going to accomplish in this three-hour period, etc. That's what I mean by discipline. I really am quite disciplined. I remember some of my friends in graduate school. They needed to be writing at their desks, they needed to have their teacup right there, but life really doesn't allow for that.

6) How do you keep yourself in a disciplined place? If you feel yourself drifting away from that discipline, how do you bring yourself back? 
Self talk, like "You're screwing up, get back to work!" [Laughter].

7) Do family obligations ever interrupt your writing time?
Yes, and then I lose writing time. I'll try to wake up early to cover it. My ideal would be to wake up at 4am each morning and write for 3 or 4 hours before my daughter gets up. But that assumes you have a daughter who goes to bed at a reasonable hour [laughter].

8) What do you think about this concept of work/life balance?
It's a profound question. I think the person who views work/life balance in terms of happiness, and the person who views it in terms of meaningfulness; well, they are two very different things.
If you are really working, and trying to be an engaged mom, it's very messy and exhausting. But if it's really about feeling like you've got meaning in your life, well throw out some sleep and physical comfort, and throw in a bit of stress-- but you feel it's meaningful, so ultimately your cup runneth over. I don't know if you call that balanced, but you can be fulfilled in multiple dimensions of your person.

9) What advice would you give to academics early in their career about productivity?
I think the critical thing is that you schedule large blocks of time to write. Your days can get eaten up. You need to schedule large blocks of time, but at the same time, if you have a half hour here and there, you need to take advantage of it.

Focus is also really important for people starting out. You want to do good stuff that takes thought and time. You can get pulled into too many directions. You need to pick a few things that you really care about, and dig into them. There's the good advice that you need to pick a research stream, and not just be writing a paper.

10) Do you schedule "think" time? 
You have to. You need to say this morning is about X. If you find yourself frittering away time with lots of meetings, you're not going to go anywhere. Sometimes I think really hard about something, very focused, for about 45 minutes, and then I'll need to take a break. If I've thought myself into a corner, then I'll take a break. I think you need to be very self aware, though, and know if you're work-avoiding when you take a break.

11) How much do you think your dissertation prepared you for your academic career? 
Oh, very much so. It's fundamental. Of course, I had a lot more to learn, but my dissertation was basic to the research I'm doing now. I think people who don't write dissertations that become the basis for their future research, that's a tough way to start. You have to build off of your dissertation. You're really working on creating a foundation for what you ultimately want to do.



So, take heart ABD students, you're in very good company. Even a Harvard professor can find it challenging to attend to her writing! It's also nice to get confirmation from Dr. Bowles that the simple strategies of discipline, focus, structure, and scheduling really do work. Moreover, the way that Dr. Bowles survives the stresses of working motherhood by connecting to its meaningfulness might also have use for ABD students. When the going gets tough, you might try following her lead.

For example, remind yourself of the value that completing your PhD will have, not only to you personally, but to the many others who will benefit from your expertise and guidance. Search for what there is to be grateful for in this whole ABD experience. (Surely you are learning and growing a lot.)

Maybe even picture your joy on being awarded your diploma, hurrah! Take a moment to bask in all those happy, appreciative feelings and images. Then roll up your sleeves and get back to work. It's worth it!

PhD Thesis: Introduction

A typical outline of a good Introduction to a PhD thesis is:


  • Describe what the broader problem is. In my case, the research area deals with non-rigid image registration. I still haven't gotten to grips with my research topic, but the general idea that I have is that non-rigid registration is slow and not very accurate and point based non-rigid registration methods should be used to increase the accuracy as well as speed of the registration scheme.
    • Break the problem up into its subsequent parts.
      • Point based feature descriptor
      • Similarity measure
      • Transformation and alignment
      • Interpolation
      • Optimization and speed
  • Applications of the problem that will be  specifically worked on can be analyzed. 
    • Gall bladder segmentation
    • Liver registration
    • Brain shift
    • One the broader problem is identified, then, start writing what you are going to be doing about it. State at least three very well defined goals.
      • Goal 1
      • Goal 2
      • Goal 3 
    • State the contributions. To really get a PhD, each contribution should be forcefully backed with a publication of the contribution in a reputable journal
      • Contribution 1
      • Contribution 2
      • Contribution 3
    • Once the goals are clearly stated, then at the end of the chapter give the outline describing which chapter contains what.

    Why doing a PhD is pointless: The Economist



    Here's is the link to the original Economist article

    ON THE evening before All Saints’ Day in 1517, Martin Luther nailed 95 theses to the door of a church in Wittenberg. In those days a thesis was simply a position one wanted to argue. Luther, an Augustinian friar, asserted that Christians could not buy their way to heaven. Today a doctoral thesis is both an idea and an account of a period of original research. Writing one is the aim of the hundreds of thousands of students who embark on a doctorate of philosophy (PhD) every year.
    In most countries a PhD is a basic requirement for a career in academia. It is an introduction to the world of independent research—a kind of intellectual masterpiece, created by an apprentice in close collaboration with a supervisor. The requirements to complete one vary enormously between countries, universities and even subjects. Some students will first have to spend two years working on a master’s degree or diploma. Some will receive a stipend; others will pay their own way. Some PhDs involve only research, some require classes and examinations and some require the student to teach undergraduates. A thesis can be dozens of pages in mathematics, or many hundreds in history. As a result, newly minted PhDs can be as young as their early 20s or world-weary forty-somethings.
    One thing many PhD students have in common is dissatisfaction. Some describe their work as “slave labour”. Seven-day weeks, ten-hour days, low pay and uncertain prospects are widespread. You know you are a graduate student, goes one quip, when your office is better decorated than your home and you have a favourite flavour of instant noodle. “It isn’t graduate school itself that is discouraging,” says one student, who confesses to rather enjoying the hunt for free pizza. “What’s discouraging is realising the end point has been yanked out of reach.”
    Whining PhD students are nothing new, but there seem to be genuine problems with the system that produces research doctorates (the practical “professional doctorates” in fields such as law, business and medicine have a more obvious value). There is an oversupply of PhDs. Although a doctorate is designed as training for a job in academia, the number of PhD positions is unrelated to the number of job openings. Meanwhile, business leaders complain about shortages of high-level skills, suggesting PhDs are not teaching the right things. The fiercest critics compare research doctorates to Ponzi or pyramid schemes.
    Rich pickings
    For most of history even a first degree at a university was the privilege of a rich few, and many academic staff did not hold doctorates. But as higher education expanded after the second world war, so did the expectation that lecturers would hold advanced degrees. American universities geared up first: by 1970 America was producing just under a third of the world’s university students and half of its science and technology PhDs (at that time it had only 6% of the global population). Since then America’s annual output of PhDs has doubled, to 64,000.
    Other countries are catching up. Between 1998 and 2006 the number of doctorates handed out in all OECD countries grew by 40%, compared with 22% for America. PhD production sped up most dramatically in Mexico, Portugal, Italy and Slovakia. Even Japan, where the number of young people is shrinking, churned out about 46% more PhDs. Part of that growth reflects the expansion of university education outside America. Richard Freeman, a labour economist at Harvard University, says that by 2006 America was enrolling just 12% of the world’s students.
    But universities have discovered that PhD students are cheap, highly motivated and disposable labour. With more PhD students they can do more research, and in some countries more teaching, with less money. A graduate assistant at Yale might earn $20,000 a year for nine months of teaching. The average pay of full professors in America was $109,000 in 2009—higher than the average for judges and magistrates.
    Indeed, the production of PhDs has far outstripped demand for university lecturers. In a recent book, Andrew Hacker and Claudia Dreifus, an academic and a journalist, report that America produced more than 100,000 doctoral degrees between 2005 and 2009. In the same period there were just 16,000 new professorships. Using PhD students to do much of the undergraduate teaching cuts the number of full-time jobs. Even in Canada, where the output of PhD graduates has grown relatively modestly, universities conferred 4,800 doctorate degrees in 2007 but hired just 2,616 new full-time professors. Only a few fast-developing countries, such as Brazil and China, now seem short of PhDs.
    A short course in supply and demand
    In research the story is similar. PhD students and contract staff known as “postdocs”, described by one student as “the ugly underbelly of academia”, do much of the research these days. There is a glut of postdocs too. Dr Freeman concluded from pre-2000 data that if American faculty jobs in the life sciences were increasing at 5% a year, just 20% of students would land one. In Canada 80% of postdocs earn $38,600 or less per year before tax—the average salary of a construction worker. The rise of the postdoc has created another obstacle on the way to an academic post. In some areas five years as a postdoc is now a prerequisite for landing a secure full-time job.
    These armies of low-paid PhD researchers and postdocs boost universities’, and therefore countries’, research capacity. Yet that is not always a good thing. Brilliant, well-trained minds can go to waste when fashions change. The post-Sputnik era drove the rapid growth in PhD physicists that came to an abrupt halt as the Vietnam war drained the science budget. Brian Schwartz, a professor of physics at the City University of New York, says that in the 1970s as many as 5,000 physicists had to find jobs in other areas.
    In America the rise of PhD teachers’ unions reflects the breakdown of an implicit contract between universities and PhD students: crummy pay now for a good academic job later. Student teachers in public universities such as the University of Wisconsin-Madison formed unions as early as the 1960s, but the pace of unionisation has increased recently. Unions are now spreading to private universities; though Yale and Cornell, where university administrators and some faculty argue that PhD students who teach are not workers but apprentices, have resisted union drives. In 2002 New York University was the first private university to recognise a PhD teachers’ union, but stopped negotiating with it three years later.
    In some countries, such as Britain and America, poor pay and job prospects are reflected in the number of foreign-born PhD students. Dr Freeman estimates that in 1966 only 23% of science and engineering PhDs in America were awarded to students born outside the country. By 2006 that proportion had increased to 48%. Foreign students tend to tolerate poorer working conditions, and the supply of cheap, brilliant, foreign labour also keeps wages down.
    A PhD may offer no financial benefit over a master’s degree. It can even reduce earnings
    Proponents of the PhD argue that it is worthwhile even if it does not lead to permanent academic employment. Not every student embarks on a PhD wanting a university career and many move successfully into private-sector jobs in, for instance, industrial research. That is true; but drop-out rates suggest that many students become dispirited. In America only 57% of doctoral students will have a PhD ten years after their first date of enrolment. In the humanities, where most students pay for their own PhDs, the figure is 49%. Worse still, whereas in other subject areas students tend to jump ship in the early years, in the humanities they cling like limpets before eventually falling off. And these students started out as the academic cream of the nation. Research at one American university found that those who finish are no cleverer than those who do not. Poor supervision, bad job prospects or lack of money cause them to run out of steam.
    Even graduates who find work outside universities may not fare all that well. PhD courses are so specialised that university careers offices struggle to assist graduates looking for jobs, and supervisors tend to have little interest in students who are leaving academia. One OECD study shows that five years after receiving their degrees, more than 60% of PhDs in Slovakia and more than 45% in Belgium, the Czech Republic, Germany and Spain were still on temporary contracts. Many were postdocs. About one-third of Austria’s PhD graduates take jobs unrelated to their degrees. In Germany 13% of all PhD graduates end up in lowly occupations. In the Netherlands the proportion is 21%.
    A very slim premium
    PhD graduates do at least earn more than those with a bachelor’s degree. A study in the Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management by Bernard Casey shows that British men with a bachelor’s degree earn 14% more than those who could have gone to university but chose not to. The earnings premium for a PhD is 26%. But the premium for a master’s degree, which can be accomplished in as little as one year, is almost as high, at 23%. In some subjects the premium for a PhD vanishes entirely. PhDs in maths and computing, social sciences and languages earn no more than those with master’s degrees. The premium for a PhD is actually smaller than for a master’s degree in engineering and technology, architecture and education. Only in medicine, other sciences, and business and financial studies is it high enough to be worthwhile. Over all subjects, a PhD commands only a 3% premium over a master’s degree.
    Dr Schwartz, the New York physicist, says the skills learned in the course of a PhD can be readily acquired through much shorter courses. Thirty years ago, he says, Wall Street firms realised that some physicists could work out differential equations and recruited them to become “quants”, analysts and traders. Today several short courses offer the advanced maths useful for finance. “A PhD physicist with one course on differential equations is not competitive,” says Dr Schwartz.
    Many students say they are pursuing their subject out of love, and that education is an end in itself. Some give little thought to where the qualification might lead. In one study of British PhD graduates, about a third admitted that they were doing their doctorate partly to go on being a student, or put off job hunting. Nearly half of engineering students admitted to this. Scientists can easily get stipends, and therefore drift into doing a PhD. But there are penalties, as well as benefits, to staying at university. Workers with “surplus schooling”—more education than a job requires—are likely to be less satisfied, less productive and more likely to say they are going to leave their jobs.
    The interests of universities and tenured academics are misaligned with those of PhD students
    Academics tend to regard asking whether a PhD is worthwhile as analogous to wondering whether there is too much art or culture in the world. They believe that knowledge spills from universities into society, making it more productive and healthier. That may well be true; but doing a PhD may still be a bad choice for an individual.
    The interests of academics and universities on the one hand and PhD students on the other are not well aligned. The more bright students stay at universities, the better it is for academics. Postgraduate students bring in grants and beef up their supervisors’ publication records. Academics pick bright undergraduate students and groom them as potential graduate students. It isn’t in their interests to turn the smart kids away, at least at the beginning. One female student spoke of being told of glowing opportunities at the outset, but after seven years of hard slog she was fobbed off with a joke about finding a rich husband.
    Monica Harris, a professor of psychology at the University of Kentucky, is a rare exception. She believes that too many PhDs are being produced, and has stopped admitting them. But such unilateral academic birth control is rare. One Ivy-League president, asked recently about PhD oversupply, said that if the top universities cut back others will step in to offer them instead.
    Noble pursuits
    Many of the drawbacks of doing a PhD are well known. Your correspondent was aware of them over a decade ago while she slogged through a largely pointless PhD in theoretical ecology. As Europeans try to harmonise higher education, some institutions are pushing the more structured learning that comes with an American PhD.
    The organisations that pay for research have realised that many PhDs find it tough to transfer their skills into the job market. Writing lab reports, giving academic presentations and conducting six-month literature reviews can be surprisingly unhelpful in a world where technical knowledge has to be assimilated quickly and presented simply to a wide audience. Some universities are now offering their PhD students training in soft skills such as communication and teamwork that may be useful in the labour market. In Britain a four-year NewRoutePhD claims to develop just such skills in graduates.
    Measurements and incentives might be changed, too. Some university departments and academics regard numbers of PhD graduates as an indicator of success and compete to produce more. For the students, a measure of how quickly those students get a permanent job, and what they earn, would be more useful. Where penalties are levied on academics who allow PhDs to overrun, the number of students who complete rises abruptly, suggesting that students were previously allowed to fester.
    Many of those who embark on a PhD are the smartest in their class and will have been the best at everything they have done. They will have amassed awards and prizes. As this year’s new crop of graduate students bounce into their research, few will be willing to accept that the system they are entering could be designed for the benefit of others, that even hard work and brilliance may well not be enough to succeed, and that they would be better off doing something else. They might use their research skills to look harder at the lot of the disposable academic. Someone should write a thesis about that.

    Daily Diary

    I have started waking up really early which is a very positive development. Unlike my previous years, when I would mostly be sleeping in the day and working at night. I have figured out that the most productive time of the day is between early morning (around 8) till one in the afternoon.

    Today I came in the lab early but wasted a lot of time in search of the elusive coffee machine (the coffee machine in my lab stopped working). I finally managed to get some coffee, which was conveniently spilled onto a wall.

    Hours of possible work lost.

    Previous successful attempt at work, if analyzed, suggests that coffee is not all that important.

    Its 11 o'clock already. 2 hours of intense burst of work is possible before somebody calls me out for lunch

    Introduction

    I am a PhD student in Biomedical Engineering who has just completed his 2nd year in PhD. Like most PhD students, he finds himself stuck, unable to progress any further.

    In this blog I will share my reflections of a post graduate student life. The daily victories and losses would be analyzed. Important and useful information about my field and work ethic will be shared.

    This would be like an experiment which would hopefully gather some useful readership among PhD students, as I feel that post graduates are lonely souls who hardly find anyone to share their experiences with.

    Fingers crossed, let's start the journey and see if I am able to complete my PhD.

    Regards,
    A lost PhD student

    *All that is gold, does not glitter.
    *Not all those who wander are lost