Week 1!
Read the About page for context regarding this blog.
Here’s a table of contents:
First day, sort of
My contract was supposed to start on the 15th of January. That morning, I dutifully packed my laptop and headed to the 6th floor of the Engineering Building. As I waited for my boss1 to arrive, I caught some sun and tried to fill in the NYT crosswords.

Wordle word was ‘chasm’ on 2026-01-15.
Office tour
An hour later or so, professor Guarín arrived and showed me around my work space. He introduced me to advisee graduate students OARC and AYMV2. They’re doing research on pellet mechanics and seismic inversion, respectively. I was shown around the coworking space (5th floor, same building), got a locker key, and sat down to read.
Research 101
Professor Guarín asked me whether I had any former research experience (I don’t), and promptly gave me an introduction to the concept: trying stuff out and seeing if it works. We’re starting with a literature review, i.e., playing catch up by reading what’s already been done (e.g. the Riascos-Goyes paper or his Bachelor’s Thesis).
He also strongly suggested I first read Keshav’s How to Read a Paper, which I already knew of thanks to professor Juan Carlos Montoya Mendoza.
Early leave
I had lunch with OARC, AYMV, and two other fellows whose names I’ve since forgotten (although one of them was an S, I seem to recall3). I left early that day, as the project hadn’t even started yet. My teammates weren’t there.
Initial meeting
The next day, I got to attend the project’s initial meeting. I met several research associates (’co-researchers’?) as well as master’s and doctoral students.
In all, we spent an hour introducing ourselves around the table, discussing the meaning of terms such as urban form or computational modelling.
First actual week
More reading: the project proposal, R-G’s Bachelor’s Thesis (mentioned earlier), skimming Batty’s 2017 book (quite dense). On Thursday, I got access to the Zotero group library. Two other papers on generative grammars were there, but I didn’t read them in their entirety.
Meeting new people
- JDAC, a doctoral student in Mathematics Engineering;
- JAGS, a master’s student in Urban and Environmental Processes;
- EMB, a master’s student in Applied Mathematics.
Then there’s AYMV, C., and MABB, but I’m still in the dark as to what they research.
Guitar
EMB suggested I enrol in one of those Art Workshops offered by the University. So far, I’m inclined to pick either Digital Photography or Guitar. I have owned a Yamaha PSR E-423 keyboard since I was around 6, but never learnt to play it properly. Perhaps it would be wise to learn the foundations of music through this mini guitar-course before moving on to the piano?
Closing remarks
This whole research affair vaguely resembles some of the projects I have been handed out during my time as a student. Unlike those projects, research stands out in that you are attempting to do a new thing. There’s no measuring stick to tell you how you are doing.
In other words, I can’t simply count on a rubric to know whether I fulfilled the evaluation specs or not. That bothers me to some extent.
I’m still warming up to this new reality where one has more freedom and, conversely, more responsibility.