I'm happy to promote your #ICLR2021 *rejections* if you believe your (or others') work is of value, and simply didn't won the lottery this time. I will 1) read and tweet 2) discuss them at our reading group. Send your work in!
Ways to send in:
- my DM is open
- my email can be found on my website
- anonymous form for the reading group https://forms.gle/HJUrn4jCgD4QJfUd7
- my DM is open
- my email can be found on my website
- anonymous form for the reading group https://forms.gle/HJUrn4jCgD4QJfUd7
Rejection is not the end of world. Many of my proudest work went though MANY rejections. You deserve a "congratulations" as well :)
Update: we've received 10+ submissions. We've funneled 4 into our DLCT schedule. Will start a thread soon featuring all those gems.
Personal thought: makes me sigh that lots of work have solid content but poor presentation. I'm not talking about english but everything else.
Personal thought: makes me sigh that lots of work have solid content but poor presentation. I'm not talking about english but everything else.
Common mistake is *overclaiming* your contribution. It's great work, we get it, but saying "novel" 15 times can be too much.
Highly recommend this great thread from @bneyshabur on how to improve from purely the point of presenting/writing: https://twitter.com/bneyshabur/status/1349225440435728385?s=20
Highly recommend this great thread from @bneyshabur on how to improve from purely the point of presenting/writing: https://twitter.com/bneyshabur/status/1349225440435728385?s=20