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Writing good scientific 
papers 
Reza Assadi 
MD, HSCR, MPH, Mphil, PhD candidate
Without publication science is dead 
Piel
 Aspects of writing a paper: 
 Contents 
 Language 
 Figures and Tables 
 Literature (introduction, discussion) 
 Choosing a Journal 
 First draft 
 Submitting draft to supervisor
1. Nineteen Suggestions for 
Writing Good Scientific Papers: 
from: 
 http://course1.winona.edu/mdelong/EcoL 
ab/21%20Suggestions.html
 1. Know your audience and write for that 
specific audience. 
 Scientific and technical writing is never a 'general 
purpose‘, but written for a specific audience, i.e. 
the community who read a particular journal or 
study a particular subject. 
 You must adopt the style and level of writing that is 
appropriate for your audience. Study them as they 
are manifested in a selection of highly regarded 
papers and in the "Instructions for Authors" for key 
journals.
 2. Your supervisor/professor is not here to 
teach you basic grammar and spelling. 
 The more time and emotional energy she or he 
spends on correcting basic English usage, the less 
remains for issues of content or fine-tuning. You are 
responsible for mastering the basics of the 
language. With word processors and spellcheckers 
having become standard writing tools, typos or 
other spelling errors should be very rare.
 3. Do Not Turn in a First Draft! 
 Ever! Most people's first drafts are terrible. "Good 
writing is rewriting," and you should make a serious 
effort at editing, rewriting, and fine-tuning before 
you give the manuscript to anyone else to read. If 
you need to put a piece of writing away for a few 
days before you can approach it dispassionately 
enough to rework it, do so.
 4. Get and use stylebooks. 
 Distinguish between those that are primarily 
manuals of accepted rules, those that address how 
to create a draft (e.g., disconnecting the creative 
from the critical voice, etc.), and those that focus 
on rewriting.
 5. Avoid abusing word forms. 
 Use words in the form that conveys your meaning as 
clearly and simply as possible. 
 For example, consider the sentence, "The low rate 
of encounters was a reflection of population density 
reductions." versus: "The low rate of encounters 
reflects a reduced population density."
 6. Do not use more words where fewer will 
do. 
 Do not use long words where short ones will do. 
 For example: 
 "utilization" vs. "use" 
 "in order to" vs. "to" 
 Do not use special words to make your writing seem 
more technical, scientific, or academic when the 
message is more clearly presented otherwise.
 7. Use an outline to organize your ideas and 
writing. 
 When you first start a writing project, make an 
outline of the major headings. List the key ideas to 
be covered under each heading. Organize your 
thinking logic and the logic of your arguments at 
this level, not when you are trying to write 
complete, grammatical, and elegant sentences. 
 Separate out the three tasks of: (1) figuring out what 
you want to say, (2) planning the order and logic of 
your arguments, and (3) crafting the exact 
language in which you will express your ideas.
 8. Think about the structure of paragraphs. 
 Though most students can write reasonable 
sentences, a surprising number have difficulty 
organizing sentences into effective paragraphs. A 
paragraph should begin with a topic sentence that 
sets the stage clearly for what will follow. Make 
topic sentences short and direct. Build the 
paragraph from the ideas introduced in your topic 
sentence and make the flow of individual 
sentences follow a logical sequence.
ساختار یک پاراگراف استاندارد 
جمله 
:پیشرو 
حاوی پیام 
اصلی 
پاراگراف. 
مابقی 
جملت 
پیرامون 
همان 
موضوع 
بحث می 
.کنند
 9. Pay attention to tenses. 
 Problems of inappropriate or inconsistent tenses are 
common in student writing. What you, or others, did 
in the past should be stated in the past tense (e.g. 
data were collected...."). Events or objects that 
continue to happen or exist can be described in 
the present tense (e.g., "in this paper, I examine....... 
The data reject the hypothesis that......). Whatever 
tense you choose, be consistent. 
 Be careful in using "might," "may," and "would" (as in 
"this might indicate that..."). They are frequently 
used as ways of weaseling out of making a clear 
statement.
 10. Captions should not merely name a 
table or figure, they should explain how to 
read it. 
 A caption (figure or table heading) should contain 
sufficient information so that a reader can 
understand a table or figure, in most cases, without 
reference to the text. Very simple tables and figures 
may require only a title for clarity, and exceptionally 
complex ones may require reference to the text for 
explanation. 
 Do not leave caption writing to the end of the 
project; write captions when you organize your 
Results section and it will help you write the text.
 11. When citing a reference, focus on the 
ideas, not the authors. 
 Unless the person who reported a result is an 
important point in a statement, literature citations 
should be parenthetical, rather than in the body of 
the sentence: “… growth rates of > 80 cm are 
common in populations in Alberta (Marx 1982)." 
rather than “…, Marx (1982) found growth rates of 
>80 cm to be common in populations in Alberta.'
 12. Show us don't tell us. 
 Rather than telling the reader that a result is 
interesting or significant, show them how it is 
interesting or significant. For instance, rather than 
'The large difference in mean size between 
population C and population D is particularly 
interesting," write 'Mean size generally varied 
among populations by only a few centimeters, but 
mean size in populations C and D differed by 25 
cm.“.
 13. Write about your results, not your tables, 
figures, and statistics. 
 Confusing and disjointed Results sections often arise 
because the writer does not have a clear idea of 
the story she/he intends to tell. When preparing to 
write your results, decide on the elements of the 
story you wish to tell, then choose the subset of text, 
figures, and tables that most effectively and 
concisely coveys your message. Organize this 
subset of tables and figures in a logical sequence; 
then write your story around them.
 14. Develop a strategy for your Discussion. 
 Many novice paper writers begin their Discussion 
section with a statement about problems with their 
methods or the items in their results about which they 
feel most insecure. Unless these really are the most 
important thing about your research (in which case 
you have problems), save them for later. Begin a 
Discussion with a short restatement of the most 
important points from your results. Use this statement 
to set up the ideas you want to focus on in 
interpreting your results and relating them to the 
literature. Use sub-headings that structure the 
discussion around these ideas. 
 Note: Often 1 “results and discussion” section!
 15. Introductions and conclusions are the 
hardest parts. 
 Many technical writers prefer to write their 
introductions last because it is too difficult to craft that 
balance of general context and specific focus 
required for a good introduction. If you need to write 
the introduction first to set the stage for your own 
thinking, resist the temptation to perfect it. The 
introduction will likely need substantial modification by 
the time you have finished the rest of the paper. The 
same concerns apply to conclusions, abstracts, and 
summaries. These components of the paper are all 
that many people will read, and you must get your 
message across in as direct, crisp, and enticing a 
manner as possible.
 16. Break up large projects into small pieces 
and work on the pieces. 
 Writing and analysis for any given paper is often an 
iterative process. Writing the results section of a 
paper is often the best way to discover the analyses 
and figures that still need to be done.
 17. Make your writing flow and resonate. 
 Papers written so well that they 'flow and resonate' 
are much more likely to influence your readers than 
the equivalent message presented in a form that is 
merely clear. When you find a paper that succeeds 
in this, study carefully how the authors constructed 
their augments and used language; try to identify 
what makes the paper work so well.
 18. Use word processors effectively and 
back up your work religiously. 
 You need not learn how to use all the more exotic 
features of your word processor, but learn the 
options that are available and how to find out the 
details when you need them. Minimally, be familiar 
with basic requirements for document formatting 
and basic operating system requirements. The same 
comments apply to the use of statistical packages, 
graphics programs, and spreadsheets.
 19. Take editorial comments seriously. 
 It may be clear from an editor's comments that they 
did not understand the point you were making. If 
so, that is a clear indication that you need to 
improve your writing. Also, an editor, no matter 
who they might be, has invested their time to help 
improve the quality of your writing. Respect their 
investment.
 The structure of a journal paper 
 http://classweb.gmu.edu/biologyresources/ 
writingguide/ScientificPaper.htm
ساختار استاندارد یک مقاله 
Introduction 
Method 
Results 
Discussions 
Conclucion 
از دانسته های عمومی 
شروع و به جزییات کار 
حاضر خاتمه می یابد. 
این دو بخش باید 
هماهنگ و هم اندازه 
باشند 
از مهمترین یافته های کار 
حاضر شروع و به تعمیم و 
مقایسه با کارهای مشابه و 
مرتبط سایر محققین بسط 
داده می شود
 The Scientific Paper 
 A well-written scientific paper explains the scientist's 
motivation for doing an experiment, the experimental design 
and execution, and the meaning of the results. Scientific 
papers are written in a style that is exceedingly clear and 
concise. Their purpose is to inform an audience of other 
scientists about an important issue and to document the 
particular approach they used to investigate that issue. 
 Please do not think that good English is not critical in science 
writing. In fact, scientists try to be so concise that their English 
should be better than that of workers in other disciplines! If 
English is not your first language, then proofreading by a 
native-speaker might be helpful. 
 If you have read scientific papers, you will have noticed that 
a standard format is frequently used. This format allows a 
researcher to present information clearly and concisely.
 Types of title that can be used for scientific papers 
 Indicative titles indicate the subject matter of a paper but give no 
indication of any results obtained or conclusions drawn e.g. The 
effectiveness of bed nets in controlling mosquitoes at different 
seasons of the year. 
 Informative titles give an indication of results achieved and 
conclusions drawn as well as the subject matter of the paper e.g. 
Bed nets control mosquitoes most effectively when used in the 
rainy season. 
 Question-type titles 
 This type of title obviously asks a question. e.g. When are bed nets 
most effective when used to control mosquitoes? 
 Main-subtitle (series) type 
 This approach is not liked by editors of scientific journals because if 
they accept the first paper they will be duty bound to accept 
sequels. e.g. The effect of bed nets on mosquitoes: 1.Their 
effectiveness when used only in the rainy season.
2. General organization and order of writing: 
 (6) Abstract 
 (3) Introduction 
 (1) Methods 
 (2) Results / Results and Discussion 
 (4) Discussion / Conclusion 
 (5) Literature Cited
 The Scientific Paper: Abstract 
 An abstract is a shortened version of the paper and should 
contain all information necessary for the reader to determine: 
 (1) what the objectives of the study were; 
 (2) how the study was done; 
 (3) what results were obtained; 
 (4) and the significance of the results. 
 Frequently, readers of a scientific journal will only read the 
abstract, choosing to read at length those papers that are most 
interesting to them. For this reason, and because abstracts are 
frequently made available to scientists by various computer 
abstracting services, this section should be written carefully and 
succinctly to have the greatest impact in as few words as 
possible. 
 Although it appears as the first section in a paper, most scientists 
write the abstract section last.
How to Write an 
Introduction
Purpose: 
Main job: Why the study is done.
Practical importance: • Introduction is a transition from the world outside the article to the 
world within it. 
• Most referees make up their minds within 15 minutes of reading a 
paper, i.e. while reading the introduction. 
• The editor may choose the referees from those referenced in 
Introduction. 
• The type of terminology, logic and evidence the reader should 
expect in the body is shown in Introduction.
So, 
Devote half the writing time to 
introduction and conclusion
When to write: 
Some prefer to do it first, 
Some, last.
Questions to answer before 
writing: 
• What do I have to say? 
• Is it worth saying? 
• What’s the right format for the message? 
• Who is the audience? 
• Which journal?
Answer what really 
interested you 
1. A patient was anaesthetized for an operation to 
repair his hernia and asked whether the fact that 
he used Ecstasy four nights a week would cause 
problems. We were unable to find an answer in 
published medical reports, and so we designed a 
study to answer the question. 
2. Because of pressure to reduce night work for 
junior doctors we wondered if it would be safe to 
delay operating on patients with appendicitis 
until the morning after they were admitted.
Content 
First line: 
• Hook the readers. 
• Say something the reader doesn’t know. 
Bad: It is widely accepted that X is important 
Bad: Metal foams are a new class of material attracting 
interest world-wide and with great potential….. X, Y, Z have 
measured their strength properties … P, Q, and R have 
developed theoretical models … Comparison of the 
experiments with the models suggests that the measured 
strength are less than those predicted …..
Better: 
Metal foams are not as strong as they should be. Models, which 
describe polymer foams well, overestimate the strength of metal 
foams by factor of 2 to 5. This research explores the reasons. To 
be more specific… (details of literature X, Y, Z, P, Q, R here).
You can start the first 
sentence by: 
• A question 
• An opposite opinion 
• A very short relevant narrative or anecdote 
• An interesting fact 
• An irony or a paradox 
• An original analogy 
• Definition or explanation of a term
Use quotations 
cautiously: 
“God created solids, but Devil created surfaces”. 
(suitable as the first sentence for a review-article on friction and wear)
First paragraph: 
• You can use journalistic devices 
sparingly (arresting story, interesting 
facts, describing a scene vividly). 
• Don’t go straight to what you did in 
the article. 
• But, use some key words from the 
title in the first few sentences.
Later on… 
• Make clear how your work adds importantly to what gone before. 
• Discuss real world examples. 
• A systematic review of all previous works and explaining that the 
new work is needed. If difficult, a brief account is enough. 
• Don’t forget the ELPS rule (electronic long, paper short) and focus on 
works directly related to your study.
Important: 
• Try hard to clarify the relevance of cited works to your 
study. 
• Unsatisfactory explanation of this relevance is a common 
problem. 
• Try to make generalizations from literature, rather than just 
naming them.
The rule of inverted 
triangle 
• Start by general considerations. 
• Then, slowly focus on your specific work. 
• You can first write it in reverse and then invert 
everything. 
• Use the rule even for your literature review.
• Mention the cited authors with 
publication dates while giving the 
exact source in the References. 
• Cite original articles in primary 
research journals, not textbooks 
and encyclopedias. 
• Mention works of the potential 
referees in the first page 
(Introduction).
• Explain about how the works of 
potential referees is related to your 
study. 
• Use quotations from well known 
people but not from dead ones too 
often.
Last paragraph: 
• The best place for statement of 
purpose is the topic sentence of 
the last paragraph. 
• Look for the match between the research problem and title. 
• It is the place for the merits of 
the new technique or 
methodology (if applied to your 
article).
Last sentence: 
• You can explain the study’s design briefly, but not the 
conclusion 
We therefore conducted a double blind 
randomized study with 10 year follow up 
to determine whether teetotalers drinking 
3 glasses of whisky a week can reduce 
their chances of dying of coronary artery 
disease.
Important Don’t s 
• Don’t compare strengths and weaknesses of your study with 
others. 
• Don’t put detailed critique of other studies. 
• Don’t repeat consistently textbook materials that everybody 
knows. Either, 
• Don’t write so vague that nobody knows. 
• Don’t say what the paper does not do.
• Don’t impress the readers by 
summarizing everything gone before. 
• Don’t use references only to show 
you’ve done a lot of study. 
• Don’t cite your own works 
predominantly. 
• Don’t use others’ statements without 
using quotation marks.
• Don’t attack previous studies rudely. 
• Don’t use negative words to 
criticize previous works: 
The deficiency of Smith’s approach is… 
Or 
The problem of these papers…
Length: 
• Introduction should be short. 
• It should be 2 pages or 1/6 of the paper at most (whichever 
is less).
Vocabulary: 
• Don’t use meaningless 
abbreviations. 
• Don,t use the words “hypothesis” 
and “null hypothesis” if possible. 
• Don’t use “I”. Referees hate it. 
• Don’t use your keywords 
repeatedly. 
• “The purpose of this study is that…” 
has become very common. Try not 
to use the exact phrase.
Most common problems: 
• Not answering the question of “why”. 
• Not citing relevant references. 
• Describing studies only tangentially related to your article. 
• Ignoring the theoretical framework underlying your work. 
• Omitting a clear statement of purpose.
 The Scientific Paper: Introduction 
 Why is this study of scientific interest and what is your 
objective? 
 This section discusses the results and conclusions of previously 
published studies, to help explain why the current study is of 
scientific interest. 
 The Introduction is organized to move from general 
information to specific information. The background must be 
summarized succinctly, but it should not be itemized. Limit the 
introduction to studies that relate directly to the present study. 
Emphasize your specific contribution to the topic. 
 The last sentences of the introduction should be a statement 
of objectives and a statement of hypotheses. This will be a 
good transition to the next section, Methods, in which you will 
explain how you proceeded to meet your objectives and test 
your hypotheses.
 How to Cite Sources in the Introduction Section 
 It is important to cite sources in the introduction section of 
your paper as evidence of the claims you are making. There 
are ways of citing sources in the text so that the reader can 
find the full reference in the literature cited section at the end 
of the paper, yet the flow of the reading is not badly 
interrupted. 
 Note that articles by one or two authors are always cited in 
the text using their last names. However, if there are more 
than two authors, the last name of the 1st author is given 
followed by the abbreviation et al.. It is acceptable, and 
encouraged, to cite more than one source for a particular 
statement. This gives the statement more validity in its context 
and suggests that your research was thorough.
Material & Methods 
How did we do the research
 Function 
 Subjects 
 Design (experimental of sampling) 
 Protocol of collecting data 
 analysis 
 Style
 Area, population, sampling, gathering 
data, analysis. 
 Organism: source, size, handling, 
 Site: physical & biological, map 
 Design: hypothesis, controls, treatments, 
variables, data, … 
 Protocols: how much, how long when,… 
 Others should be able to repeat it. 
 Probability & Power, analysing
 Analysis: 
 Summarized & measures of variability 
 Data transformation (normalize) 
 Statistical tests 
 Other techniques
Common problems 
 Avoid repeatedly a single sentence to relate a single 
action.
Problematic Example: 
"The petri dish was placed on the turntable. The lid was then raised slightly. 
An inoculating loop was used to transfer culture to the agar surface. The 
turntable was rotated 90 degrees by hand. The loop was moved lightly back 
and forth over the agar to spread the culture. The bacteria were then 
incubated at 37 C for 24 hr." 
Improved Example: 
"Each plate was placed on a turntable and streaked at opposing angles with 
fresh overnight E. coli culture using an inoculating loop. The bacteria were 
then incubated at 37 C for 24 hr." 
Best: 
. 
"Each plate was streaked with fresh overnight E. coli culture and incubated at 
37 C for 24 hr."
Common problems 
 Avoid using ambiguous terms 
Problematic example: 
"A Spec 20 was used to measure A600 of Tubes 1,2, and 3 immediately after 
chloroplasts were added (Time 0) and every 2 min. thereafter until the DCIP was 
completely reduced. Tube 4's A600 was measured only at Time 0 and at the end 
of the experiment." 
Improved example: 
"A Spec 20 was used to measure A600 of the reaction mixtures exposed to light 
intensities of 1500, 750, and 350 uE/m2/sec immediately after chloroplasts were 
added (Time 0) and every 2 min. thereafter until the DCIP was completely 
reduced. The A600 of the no light control was measured only at Time 0 and at the 
end of the experiment."
انواع مطالعات 
مطالعه اولیه  
مطالعه ثانویه 
Primary studies 
مطالعات تجربی  
مطالعات کارآزمایی بالینی  
مطالعات توصیفی 
مطالعات ثانویه 
مرورها  
مرور غیرنظام مند  
مرور نظام مند همراه با متاآنالیز 
انواع مقالت پزشکی 
 Original Article 
 Review Article 
 Case Reports 
 Editorial 
 Short Communication (short papers) 
 Letter to Editor 
 Personal Views
Letter 
اشاره یک مساله  
بیان یک مشکل یا ارایه یک فرضیه  
توصیف بستر یک مساله  
تمرکز بر پیشنهادات، نظرات و راه حل های نویسنده  
ارایه یک نتیجه گیری قوی  
توجه به محدودیت ها 
Editorial 
نگارش برای خوانندگان یک مجله خاص  
توجه به نظرات و ابعاد مختلف مساله  
کلی گویی و عدم قطعی صحبت کردن بهتر است 
Short communication 
این نوع مقالت در حال بیشتر شدن است  
دارای مقدمه مشخص  
ارایه داده ها و بحث درباره آن  
تعداد جداول و نمودار اندک  
محدودیت تعداد کلمه 
مزایای این سه نوع مقاله کوتاه؟ 
چاپ آسان تر و سریع تر  
ورود سریع تر نام نویسنده به پایگاه ها و مجلت  
مناسب برای کارهای کوچک، داده های اندک و نتایج  
contraversy
Writing Methods
Methods 
 Study design 
 Participants 
 Ethical approval 
 Sample size 
Design (experimental of sampling) 
Protocol of collecting data 
 Questionnaires 
 Interventions 
 Clinical assessments 
 Statistical methods
 Area, population, sampling, gathering data, 
analysis. 
 Organism: source, size, handling, 
 Site: physical & biological, map 
 Design: hypothesis, controls, treatments, 
variables, data, … 
 Protocols: how much, how long when,… 
 Others should be able to repeat it. 
 Probability & Power, analysing
 Analysis: 
Summarized & measures of variability 
Data transformation (normalize) 
Statistical tests 
Other techniques
Problematic Example: 
"The petri dish was placed on the turntable. The lid was then raised slightly. 
An inoculating loop was used to transfer culture to the agar surface. The 
turntable was rotated 90 degrees by hand. The loop was moved lightly back 
and forth over the agar to spread the culture. The bacteria were then 
incubated at 37 C for 24 hr." 
Improved Example: 
"Each plate was placed on a turntable and streaked at opposing angles with 
fresh overnight E. coli culture using an inoculating loop. The bacteria were 
then incubated at 37 C for 24 hr." 
Best: 
. 
"Each plate was streaked with fresh overnight E. coli culture and incubated at 
37 C for 24 hr."
Common problems 
 Avoid using ambiguous terms 
Problematic example: 
"A Spec 20 was used to measure A600 of Tubes 1,2, and 3 immediately after 
chloroplasts were added (Time 0) and every 2 min. thereafter until the DCIP was 
completely reduced. Tube 4's A600 was measured only at Time 0 and at the end 
of the experiment." 
Improved example: 
"A Spec 20 was used to measure A600 of the reaction mixtures exposed to light 
intensities of 1500, 750, and 350 uE/m2/sec immediately after chloroplasts were 
added (Time 0) and every 2 min. thereafter until the DCIP was completely 
reduced. The A600 of the no light control was measured only at Time 0 and at the 
end of the experiment."
What to include in the methods 
section (1) 
 How the study was designed: 
 Keep the description brief 
 Say how randomization was done 
 Use names to identify parts of study 
sequence
What to include in the methods section 
(2) 
 How the study was carried out: 
 How the participants were recruited and 
chosen 
 Give reasons for excluding participants 
 Consider mentioning ethical features 
 Give accurate details of materials used 
 Give exact drug dosages 
 Give exact form of treatments
What to include in the methods section 
(3) 
 How the data were analysed: 
 Use a P value to disprove the null 
hypothesis 
 Give an estimate of power of the study 
 Give the exact tests used for statistical 
analysis
Writing Results
Results 
Simple complex 
 Describe the population 
 Start with positive findings 
 Establish how comparable your groups were 
 Use a mixture of text, tables and figures 
 Mention units of measurement 
 Mention what numbers, brackets, etc. refer to 
 9+4, 854 (12.3) 
 Bring the P values
Sample 
 "Males (180.5 ± 5.1 cm; n=34) averaged 
12.5 cm taller than females (168 ± 7.6 cm; 
n=34) in the AY 1995 pool of Biology 
majors (two-sample t-test, t = 5.78, 33 d.f., 
p < 0.001)." 
84
Results 
Provide only enough interpretation to lead 
the reader from one experiment to the 
other 
Avoid lengthy analysis and comparison to 
the work of others 
 No need to follow chronology of study 
Rather, provide a logical progression and 
tell a story
Results 
1. Start with positive findings. 
2. Do not compare the present data with 
previously published results. 
3. Write the text of the Results section 
concisely and objectively. 
4. The passive voice will likely dominate 
here, but use the active voice as much as 
possible 
86
Tables and Figures 
 Consider using a table to present large 
amounts of data/results. 
87 
Must refer to all tables in text. 
 Use figures to graphically represent 
significant results.
Results 
 Use the “Stand alone” tables 
 Make sure totals add to 100% 
 Do not repeat the Tables and Figures in 
text 
Summarize: e.g., there were no significant 
associations… 
Describe: e.g. there was a three fold increase 
in the risk of ..
Tables and Figures 
 Each Table or Figure must include a brief 
description of the results being presented and 
other necessary information in a legend. 
 Table legends go above the Table; tables are 
read from top to bottom. 
 Figure legends go below the figure; figures are 
usually viewed from bottom to top 
89
Tables and Figures 
 Tables and Figures are assigned numbers 
separately and in the sequence that you 
will refer to them from the text. 
90 
The first Table you refer to is Table 1, the next 
Table 2 and so forth. 
Similarly, the first Figure is Figure 1, the next 
Figure 2, etc.
Tables and Figures 
 When referring to a table from the text, 
"Figure" is abbreviated as Fig.,e.g., 
Fig. 1. 
 Table is never abbreviated, e.g., Table 1. 
91
Example 1: Courtesy of Shelley Ball. 
Example 2: Courtesy of Shelley Ball. 
92
93
Figures 
 Used when we want to distinguish a result 
& make it prominent into readers view 
 Figures are visual presentations of results, 
including graphs, diagrams, photos, 
drawings, schematics, maps, etc. 
 Graphs are the most common type of 
figure. 
 Graphs show trends or patterns of 
relationship. 
94
Figures 
Avoid clutter (too many numbers or 
symbols) 
 Should provide a clear statistical message 
Vertical (“Y”) axis: outcome/dependent 
variable 
Horizontal (“X”) axis: exposure/independent 
variable 
Name & define each axis 
Give the measurement unit of each axis 
95
96
97
Results 
Common mistakes 
Raw data 
Redundancy 
Discussion and interpretation of data 
No figures or tables 
Methods/materials reported
Figure 1. Effect of total alkaloid fraction of methanolic extract on mean 
survival time
Figure 1. Effect of total alkaloid fraction of methanolic extract of unripe fruit of Solanum 
pseudocapsicum on mean survival time (MST) in tumor bearing mice.
Something to avoid ! 
 Do not present the same data in both a 
Table and Figure - this is considered 
redundant and a waste of space and 
energy. 
 Decide which format best shows the result 
and go through it. 
 Do not report raw data values when they 
can be summarized as means, percents, 
etc. 
102
Do NOT ! 
103 
 Use big words that you do not really mean 
Attributable 
Causality 
Preferential 
Significant (without statistical evidence) 
Validity 
 Mix incidence and prevalence 
 Mix frequency, rate, proportion, ratio
گزارش نتايج آماري 
نوشتن تعداد فراواني همراه با درصدها وقتي  
تعداد نمونه اندك است. 
عدم نياز به نوشتن فرمول های حجم نمونه و  
آزمون های آماری 
ارائه پارامترهاي یكه آزمون شده اند مانند ميانگين,  
نسبت يا درصد, ضريب همبستگي, حتي اگر 
آزمون ها معن يدار نشده باشند. 
نوشتن شاخص آزمون و مقدار آن همراه با درجه  
آزادي و
گزارش نتايج آماري 
تعريف كردن علئمي كه براي نتايج معن يدار ب هكار  
م يرود (مانند ستاره) و ب هكار بردن علئم مشابه 
نوشتن اعداد ب هصورت گرد شده با درنظرگرفتن  
دقت داد ههاي اوليه (ميانگين تا يك رقم اعشار و 
انحراف معيار و خطاي معيار تا دو رقم اعشار 
بيشتر از داد ههاي خام) 
درج درصدها تا يك رقم اعشار (گاهي حتي نياز به  
ارقام اعشاري هم نيست). 
تا دو رقم اعشار t ,r نوشتن شاخص هايي مانند 
The p-value in a nutshell 
Could the result have occurred by chance? 
The result is 
unlikely to be due 
to chance 
0 1 
p < 0.05 
a statistically 
significant result 
p = 0.05 
or 1 in 20 
result fairly 
unlikely to be due 
to chance 
The result is 
likely to be due 
to chance 
1 
20 
p > 0.05 
not a statistically 
significant result 
p = 0.5 
1 
2 
or 1 in 2 
result quite likely 
to be due to 
chance
Confidence Interval (CI) 
Is the range within which the true size of 
effect (never exactly known) lies, with a 
given degree of assurance (usually 
95%)
Check list for Results 
 Baseline data provided? 
 Primary and other endpoints clear and 
complete? 
 Does the text complement figures and 
tables? 
 Are measures of uncertainty mentioned? 
(SD, SE, CI)
Mechanics of Writing-Results 
 Tell a story 
 Use the most logical sequence to present 
the data (not necessarily the order in 
which you did the experiments) 
 Just report the data - do not include 
interpretation or comparison to literature 
 No duplication of data
Guidelines for Writing Results - 
The Study as it was Conducted 
 Specify the dates of the study 
 Provide a schematic summary 
 Describe the characteristics of each 
group 
 Indicate if the sample is representative 
 Indicate if randomization was successful 
 Describe duration and nature of follow up
Guidelines for Writing Results: 
The Study Outcomes 
 Report statistical findings in detail 
 Report actual p values , 95% CI , etc. 
 Report the main findings in figures or 
tables, you don’t need to also report them 
in the text 
 Report confounders
A Few Rules 
 The first time you use an abbreviation, 
define it 
 When you give the commercial source for 
a reagent, the first time you cite the source 
include the location of the company (city 
and state) 
 Make sure the subject and verb agree in 
every sentence 
 No contract. or exclamation points!
A Few Rules - continued 
 Look for redundancy within the manuscript 
 Try not to use “it” or “they” - be specific! 
 No jargon 
 Two shorter sentences are frequently much 
more effective than a long, complex sentence 
 “Data” is plural not singular, i.e., “the data 
are…” NOT “ the data is…”
A Few Rules - continued 
 Capitalize people’s names, i.e., Golgi 
apparatus 
 Never, ever plagiarize! (even from 
yourself!) 
 Use numbers when expressing 
measurements, except when the number 
would begin a sentence
Discussion
Discusion 
• When most people read paper, they read the title 
and abstract first, then the introduction, some 
graphs or tables and then the discussion. 
THEREFORE: 
the discussion should begin by summarizing the 
main findings .Then interpret the findings in 
relation to the introduction and finally draw 
conclusion.Keep the discussion to the results; 
don`t go beyond the data
Discussion 
• The least formalized part of an article 
• The most difficult part of an article 
• The structure is the the same for every experiment 
• It`s practice of logic and discipline 
• It`s not repeating the results 
• Since sometimes results are self-explanatory,many 
students find it difficult to know what material to 
add in this last section
Discussion 
• Simply: 
Discussion is where you 
REFER to your results … 
EXPLAIN your results … 
INTERPRET your results in light of other work 
in field … 
(Don`t repeat or reformulate or 
recapitulate results!)
A n s w e r r e s e a r c h q u e s t i o n 
S u p p o r t a n d d e f e n d a n s w e r s w i t h r e s u l t s 
E X P L A I N 
- C o n f l i c t i n g r e s u l t s y o u g o t o 
- U n e x p e c t e d f i n d i n g s 
- D i s c r e p a n c i e s w i t h o t e h r r e s e a r c h 
S t a t e l i m i t a t i o n o f t h e s t u d y 
E s t a b l i s h n e w n e s 
A n n o u n c e f u r t h e r r e s e a r c h
Discussion 
• Answer research question 
• Support and defend answers with results 
• EXPLAIN: 
- conflicting results you got 
- unexpected findings 
- discrepancies with other research 
• State limitations of the study 
• Establish newness 
• Announce further research
Discussion 
• Why the research was done? 
• Interpretation 
• Findings in association with hypothesis 
• Findings in association with other researches 
• Evaluation of scientific validity 
• Comments about meaningful results 
• Explanation of negative opinions 
• Association of topic with current sitiuation 
• Future studies
Discussion 
First paragraph 
** Summarize main findings 
** Start by presenting the essential 
conclusions of your specific study
Discussion 
• What`s this?
Discussion 
• Remember inverted triangle at Introduction…! 
• There is a triangle at Discussion too, but is not 
inverted..! 
Basically discussion contains several parts in no 
particular order but roughly moving from specific 
(related to your experiment only) to general (how 
your finding fit in the larger scientific community)
Discussion 
• General structure of an article
Discussion 
• Explain whether data support your hypothesis 
• Acknowledge any anomalous data or deviations 
from what you expected (next slide) 
• Derive conclusions based on your findings and 
about the process you`re studing 
• Relate your findings to earlier work in the same 
area (if you can) 
• Explore the theoritical and practical implications 
of your findings
Discussion 
• Explain whether the data support your 
hypothesis 
You should begin this part of discussion by 
explicitly stating the relationships or 
correlations your data indicate between the 
independent and dependent variables. 
Example
Discussion 
• Make sure you are very explicit about the 
relationship between the evidence and the 
conclusions you draw from it. 
• Tell your readers exactly how you got from 
point A (was the hypothesis supported) to 
point B (yes or no) 
• You should defend your claim !
Discusion 
• Occasionally it is appropriate to introduce new 
data in the discussion section.Give this only as a 
description of unpublished results, and make it 
very clear that `s only a preliminary evidence.This 
should not be used as a means to publish your new 
materials, and should only be included to make a 
point,perhaps confirming your major conclusions 
or to show the direction your work is going.
Discussion 
• Abstract >>> Past tense 
• Theory >>> Past tense 
• Methods & Materials >>> Past tense 
• Discussion >>> Alternates! :
Discussion 
Past tense 
Your current results 
Other studies that are 
preliminary or cast 
into doubt by your 
studies 
Present tense 
Results of previous 
studies that are well-known 
and confirmed 
Interpretation of your 
results
Discussion 
• Last paragraph 
- Draw conclusion 
- Mention to theoritical implications 
- Mention to practical implications 
- Extend your findings to other species 
- Point to broader topics and need to further 
researches 
- Show that you`ll continue research on it
Some advices 
• Emphasize the new and important aspects of the 
study 
• Compare and contrast the results with other 
relevant studies 
• State the limitation of study 
• If your method is new and strange,explain more 
and try to defend it 
• In randomized clinical trials mention to: 
- sources of potential bias 
- imprecisions 
- dangers associated with multiplicity of analysis 
and outcome
Some advices(continued) 
• Be sure that all conclusions are supported by 
results(give evidence for each conclusion) 
• Make it clear that are major hypotheses in the field 
supported by your research or contradicted? 
• Although there may be some repetition of 
information in the results and discussion section, it 
should kept to minimum 
• Point out any exception or any lack of correlation 
• Discussion is often far too long
Don`t…! 
1) Don`t write an unabridged and long 
criticism on previous researches 
2) Avoid making statements on economic 
benefits and costs unless their manuscript 
includes the appropriate economic data and 
analysis 
3) Avoid claiming priority and alluding to 
work that has not been completed
Don`t…!(continued) 
3) Don`t omit other previous good evidences to show 
your study is unique …don`t magnify it! 
4) Don`t explain the concepts more than what is 
necessary 
5) Discussion part is not for review of literature 
6) Don`t be shy! Discuss the theoritical implications 
& practical applications of your work
Don`t…!(continued) 
7) Don`t hide unexpected results…they`re useful 
8) Keep the discussion to the results,don`t go beyond 
data 
9) Don`t ignore or bury the major issue 
10) don`t over generalize 
11) Don`t ignore deviations in your data 
12) Avoid speculation that can`t be tested in the 
foreseeable future
Don`t…!(continued) 
13) Be direct; avoid qualifying phrases such as “it 
appears that…” or “our data suggest that…” 
14) Labs are not as practical tests of undeniable 
scientific truths, so don`t say that the hypothesis 
was “proved” or “disproved” or that it was 
“correct” or “incorrect”. 
words like “supported”, “indicated” and 
“suggested” are more acceptable ways to evaluate 
your hypothesis
AA ssmmiillee iiss tthhee sshhoorrtteesstt 
ddiissttaannccee bbeettwweeeenn 
hhuummaann--bbeeiinnggss
 The Scientific Paper: Discussion 
 In this section, you are free to explain what the results mean or why 
they differ from what other workers have found. 
 You should interpret your results in light of other published results, by 
adding additional information from sources you cited in the 
Introduction section as well as by introducing new sources. Make sure 
you provide accurate citations. 
 Relate your discussion back to the objectives and questions you raised 
in the Introduction section. However, do not simply re-state the 
objectives. Make statements that synthesize all the evidence 
(including previous work and the current work). 
 Limit your conclusions to those that your data can actually 
support. You can then proceed to speculate on why this occurred 
and whether you expected this to occur, based on other workers' 
findings. 
 Suggest future directions for research, new methods, explanations for 
deviations from previously published results, etc.
 How to Cite Sources in the Discussion Section 
 It is important to cite sources in the discussion section of your 
paper as evidence of the claims you are making. There are 
ways of citing sources in the text so that the reader can find 
the full reference in the literature cited section at the end of 
the paper, yet the flow of the reading is not badly interrupted 
(see also Introduction). 
 Make sure you give a full citation in the Literature Cited 
section (“references”) for all sources mentioned in the text.
 The Scientific Paper: Literature Cited 
 This is the last section of the paper. Here you should provide an 
alphabetical (or numbered according to the occurrence in 
your paper) listing of all the published work you cited in the text 
of the paper. 
Note: in most journals, listed and numbered according to 
sequential appearance in text! 
 A standard format is used both to cite literature in the text and 
to list these studies in the Literature Cited section. Consult a 
recent issue of the respective journal for guidance. 
 For papers published in journals you must provide the date, title, 
journal name, volume number, and page numbers. For books 
you need the publication date, title, publisher, and place of 
publication.
 Practical Tips for Scientific Writing 
 PROOFREAD!!! You should check your paper to catch and 
correct these and other common errors: 
 You should avoid abbreviations by writing out the full word 
(minimum, October, first, temperature, ...). Exceptions include 
common terms like ATP and DNA, units of measure (m, g, cm, °C), 
and mathematical or chemical formulas. Sentences should 
never begin with an abbreviation or an acronym. 
 You may wish to introduce an acronym for a term that is 
repeated often: if your paper deals with soybeans, Glycine max, 
you may use the full scientific name once and substitute G. max 
thereafter. 
 Chemical elements are not proper nouns, so do not capitalize 
them. Only the first letter of the symbol is a capital letter: nitrogen 
(N), carbon (C), calcium (Ca). 
 Reference: 
 V.E. McMillan's Writing Papers in the Biological Sciences , a highly recommended 
resource for scientific writing).
 In formal writing, you should never use contractions (didn't, 
can't, haven't...). 
 The word "data" is plural, as in "the data were collected on 
January 21, 2001." 
 Direct quotes should be avoided, unless you are presenting 
another author's specific definition or original label. You can 
usually paraphrase the writing effectively and more concisely, 
taking care to properly attribute the sources of your statements. 
 Read and re-read your references. Consult a textbook or 
another reference to help you resolve any aspects of the paper 
you do not understand before you start writing. 
 You should review your writing to make sure that each sentence 
presents one or two clear ideas. This will also help you organize 
sentences within paragraphs in a logical order.
 In science, the word "significant" implies the result of a statistical 
test. You should analyze your results to determine whether they 
are statistically significant and report the test you used. 
 Do not use slang. Try to use precise, scientific terms where 
possible (without unnecessary jargon) and avoid colloquialisms 
and figures of speech: "somewhat" rather than "sort of," "many" or 
"a great deal" instead of "a lot." 
 Your word processor's spell-check and/or grammar-check 
function is not error-free. It cannot tell you when to use "it's" and 
"its," and it cannot tell you that a particular sentence does not 
make sense. Give yourself enough time to proofread and correct 
your paper.
 Tenses 
When describing methods and results, you should use the past 
tense. The present tense is appropriate for accepted facts, 
such as the background information presented in the 
Introduction. In addition, you may use the present tense when 
you discuss your results and conclusions. Looking over other 
scientific papers may help you answer questions you might 
have on this topic. 
 Units 
All units of measure must be metric or SI (international System).
End of Session one
3. Language 
 Three aspects of style seem to cause problems: 
 Division of the text into sentences and paragraphs. Sentences 
should have only one idea or concept. In general, sentences in 
scientific prose should be short, but full stops should not be added 
so liberally that the writing does not flow. The use of paragraphs 
helps the reader to appreciate the sense of the writing. 
 Superfluous phrases and words should be avoided. Do not write 
phrases such as "It is also important to bear in mind the following 
considerations". Most woolly phrases can be omitted or replaced 
by a single word. 
 Try to use familiar, precise words rather than far-fetched vague 
words. "Cheaper" may replace "More economically viable", and 
ongoing situation" doesn’t mean very much.
 Tense and mood 
 Write in past tense unless you are describing present or future 
situations. Use the active voice rather than the passive voice. 
 For example, instead of writing "The food was eaten by the pig", 
write "The pig ate the food". The active voice is easier to read 
and reduces the sentence length 
 It can be acceptable to write in more than one tense in the 
literature review e.g. "Brown (1995) showed that the brain is more 
fully developed at birth than other organs". In this case the 
present tense can be used for the second half of the sentence 
because its gives knowledge that is universally accepted. 
 Materials and methods should be written in the past tense. "The 
experiment was designed in the form of a 6 x 6 Latin square." 
Remarks about Results should mainly be in the past tense. "When 
a high protein diet was fed to rabbits they grew rapidly."
 Sentence construction 
 The purpose of any paper is to convey information and ideas. This 
cannot be done with long involved sentences. Keep sentences 
short, not more than 30 words in length. A sentence should 
contain one idea or two related ideas. A paragraph should 
contain a series of related ideas. 
 Choice of words 
 Words have precise meanings and to use them correctly adds 
clarity and precision to prose. Look at the following pairs of words 
that are often used in scientific texts. Learn how to use them 
correctly: Fewer, less; infer, imply; as, because; disinterested, 
uninterested ; alibi, excuse ; data, datum; later, latter; causal, 
casual; loose, lose; mute, moot; discrete, discreet. See, for 
example: Less active blood cells vs. 
Fewer active blood cells 
 Use a standard dictionary and Roget's Thesaurus of English Words 
and Phrases to find the correct meaning of words.
 Use of pronouns 
 When you write ‘it’, ‘this’, ‘which’ or ‘they’ are you sure that the 
meaning is plain? A pronoun usually deputizes for the nearest 
previous noun of the same number (singular or plural) - The cows 
ate the food; they were white. The cows ate the food; it was white. 
 Correct spelling, including the use of plurals 
 Some words have alternative spelling e.g. tyre, tire, grey, gray; 
draft, draught, often the difference is between the American and 
British spelling. In other cases an apparent misspelling is a misuse of 
a word e.g. practice, practise. 
 The plural of many words in English is achieved by adding an s (or 
es) to the single. However some words have the same form in both 
the singular and plural. Other words are already plural such as 
people and equipment, so don't use peoples (unless you are 
referring to different groups of people or different ethnic groups) 
and equipments. Adopted words sometimes take on the plural of 
the original language, for example datum becomes data and 
fungus become fungi.
 Use of abstract words 
 Use the concrete and not the abstract to achieve clarity and 
precision: "Cessation of plant growth operated in some of the plots." 
Obviously a cessation cannot operate (Some plots of plants did not 
grow during the trial) 
 The abstract noun basis is commonly overworked. "Measurement of 
storm intensity involves recording staff to be available both day and 
night on a 24 hour basis." "To measure storm intensity recording staff 
have to be in duty throughout the day and night." 
 Be careful with the use of the present participle(Gerund): 
 After standing in boiling water for an hour, examine the flask. 
 The gerund always ends in 'ing.' If the sentence is left without a subject 
(a hanging participle) then the action of the verb is transferred to the 
person taking the action.
 Misuse of emotional words (avoid) 
 One cannot develop a logical argument using emotional words: e.g. 
progressive, reckless, crank, sound, good, correct, improved, 
superior. 
 Superlatives 
 Very, more, much, have a place when used economically. As 
superlatives they are out of place in scientific writing. Superlatives 
such as gigantic, earth shattering or fantastic should never be used. 
 Qualifying the absolute 
 Some adjectives are absolute and cannot be modified such as: 
sterile or unique. Other adjectives, such as pregnacy, have to be 
qualified with care. A petri dish is either sterile or not sterile. It cannot 
be very sterile, quite sterile or fairly sterile; An object is unique, and 
although a woman can be recently pregnant, she can't be slightly 
pregnant.
 Loose expressions (avoid) 
 In each selected village 30 farmers were interviewed, namely 10 
large, average and small farmers. Is the reference here to the size 
of the farmers or to the size of their farms? 
 Grandiloquence 
 Avoid the use of scientific jargon. The aim in scientific writing is to 
inform using simple language not to confuse by the use of 
grandiose sounding words and phrases. 
 Grandiloquent phrase: The ideal fungicide ... must combine high 
fungitoxicity with low mammalian toxicity and phytotoxicity, and 
with an absence of tainting or other deleterious side effects when 
the fruit is processed. 
 Simple replacement: The ideal fungicide ... must kill fungus 
effectively, but must be harmless to animals and plants, and must 
cause no tainting or other harmful side effects when the fruit is 
processed.
 Genteelism 
 "I" is not immodest in a research worker and therefore use it (although 
not to excess), NOT "The present writer" or "The author of this 
communication". 
 The Misuse of the definite article "The" 
 Avoid overuse of the word "the" . Only use when it applies to a 
particular item that has been referred to before. All others could be 
omitted. 
 The excessive use of the pronoun "it" 
 Avoid excessive use of the indefinite pronoun "it". 
 "It would thus appear that" can be replaced by "apparently"; 
 "It is evident that" by "evidently"; 
 Other commonly used phrases such as: "It will be seen that"; "It is 
interesting to note that" and "It is thought that", can be left out without 
any meaning being lost.
 Avoid verbal obscurantisms and use simple words 
 Some phrases show sloppy thinking. For example the phrase 'It has 
long been known that' usually means that the writer has not 
bothered to look up the reference. 
 ‘Correct to an order of magnitude’ probably means that the 
answer was wrong. 
 ‘Almost reached significance at the 5% level’ usually means a 
selective interpretation of results. 
 Text is easier to understand if simple words and phrases can be 
used to replace more complex or foreign ones. For example 
analogous can be replaced by similar ; utilise by use; terminate 
by end.
 Punctuation 
 Colon (:) and semi colon (;) 
 A colon is used when a list or explanation follows, a semi colon is used 
to separate two or more related clauses provided each clause forms 
a full sentence. 
 Commas 
 A comma is put in a sentence to denote a brief pause between 
groups of words: 
 I will show you the paper about which I was speaking, but it is not as 
useful as I first thought. 
 Or to separate subclauses: 
 Professor Brown, who is in charge of recruiting for the University, said 
that the latest estimates were higher than those for this time last year. 
 Finally to separate all items in a list except for the last two; 
 The following items may be imported duty free into Azania: Animals, 
cereals, plants, fruit, trees, legumes and nuts.
 Other points concerning the use of English 
 A singular verb must always be associated with a singular noun. 
Similarly a plural verb with a plural noun. Difficulties arise especially 
with nouns like, for example, livestock and data, which are plural. 
 Numbers and Units 
 Quantities should be given only as many significant figures as can 
be justified. For example the metabolic rate of an animal should 
not be quoted as 326.18W if it can be measured to only within 
about 5%. It should be written as 330W. 
 The figures within a number should be grouped in threes (with a 
small space between each group) so that they are easier to read. 
Commas should be avoided. For example: 21 306.1 not 21,306.1 
 Concerning units, the Systeme International (SI) should be used 
where possible. 
 When incorporating statistical data into the text, the test used (eg 
chi squared) should be included.
 Common differences in spelling 
 AE BE AE BE 
 color colour center centre 
 organization organisation dialog dialogue 
 traveling travelling defence defense 
 recognize recognise analyze analyse 
 Tenses 
 AE BE 
 burned/was burned burnt/was burnt 
 learned/has learned learnt/has learnt 
 (see also: dream, kneel, lean, leap, spell, spill, spoil)
 http://www.ag.iastate.edu/aginfo/checklist.ph 
p 
 Word Usage in Scientific Writing 
 The following list includes some of the troublesome 
words, terms, and expressions most frequently found in 
Experiment Station journal paper and bulletin 
manuscripts. In reporting and recording research, try to 
be as accurate and precise in describing it as in doing 
it. Avoid the ambiguous and "faddish." For the benefit 
of international readers, especially, use standard words 
in their established meanings.
 Above ("the above method," "mentioned above," etc.) -- Often, 
you are referring to something preceding, but not necessarily 
above; a loose reference, convenient for writers, but not for 
readers. Be specific. You know exactly what and where, but your 
readers have to search. 
 Affect, effect -- Affect is a verb and means to influence. Effect, as 
a verb, means to bring about; as a noun, effect means result. 
 All of, both of -- Just "all" or "both" will serve in most instances. 
 Alternate, alternative -- Be sure which you mean. 
 And (to begin a sentence) -- You have been told not to do this in 
grade school. But teacher's purpose was to keep you from using 
fragmentary sentences; either "and" or "but" may be used to begin 
complete sentences. And both are useful transitional words 
between related or contrasting statements.
 Apparently (apparent) -- means obviously, clearly, plainly evident, 
but also means seemingly or ostensibly as well as observably. You 
know the meaning that you intend, but readers may not. 
Ambiguity results. Use obvious(ly), clear(ly), seeming(ly), 
evident(ly), observable or observably, etc., as needed to remove 
doubt. 
 Appear, appears -- Seem(s)? "He always appears on the scene, 
but never seems to know what to do." "Marley's ghost appeared 
but seemed harmless.“ 
 At the present time, at this point in time -- Say "at present" or "now" 
if necessary at all.
 Below -- See comment about above. 
 But (to begin a sentence) -- see "And" and "However". 
 By means of -- Most often, just "by" will serve and save words. 
 Case -- Can be ambiguous, misleading, or ludicrous because of 
different connotations; e.g., "In the case of Scotch whiskey,...." 
Case also is a frequent offender in padded, drawn-out sentences. 
For "in this case," try "in this instance.“ 
 Commas and punctuation -- The trend is toward less punctuation 
(particularly fewer commas), but that demands careful writing, 
without misplaced or dangling elements. Do not omit commas 
before the conjunctions in compound sentences. Most journals, 
but not all, use final commas before "and" or "or" in series; check 
the journal.
 Compare with, compare to -- Compare with means to examine 
differences and similarities; compare to means to represent as 
similar. One may conclude that the music of Brahms compares to 
that of Beethoven, but to do that, one must first compare the 
music of Brahms with that of Beethoven. 
 Comprise -- Before misuse, comprise meant to contain, include, or 
encompass (not to constitute or compose) and still does, despite 
two now opposite meanings. Use and meanings now are so 
confused and mixed that "comprise" is best avoided altogether. 
 Correlated with, correlated to -- Although things may be related to 
one another, things are correlated with one another. 
 Different from, different than -- Different from! Also, one thing differs 
from another, although you may differ with your colleagues.
 Due to -- Make sure that you don't mean because of. Due is an 
adjective modifier and must be directly related to a noun, not to a 
concept or series of ideas gleaned from the rest of a statement. 
"Due to the fact that..." is an attempt to weasel out. 
 During the course of, in the course of -- Just use "during" or "in.“ 
 Either....or, neither...nor -- Apply to no more than two items or 
categories. Similarly, former and latter refer only to the first and 
second of only two items or categories. 
 Etc. -- Use at least two items or illustrations before "and so forth" or 
"etc.“ 
 Experience(d) -- To experience something is sensory; inanimate, 
unsensing things (lakes, soils, enzymes, streambeds, farm fields, 
etc.) do not experience anything.
 Following -- "After" is more precise if "after" is the meaning 
intended. "After [not following] the procession, the leader 
announced that the ceremony was over.“ 
 High(er), low(er) -- Much too often used, frequently ambiguously 
or imprecisely, for other words such as greater, lesser, larger, 
smaller, more, fewer; e.g., "Occurrences of higher concentrations 
were lower at higher levels of effluent outflow." One interpretation 
is that greater concentrations were fewer or less frequent as 
effluent volume(s) increased, but others also are possible. 
 However -- Place it more often within a sentence or major element 
rather than at the beginning or end. "But" serves better at the 
beginning.
 Hyphening of compound or unit modifiers -- Often needed to 
clarify what is modifying what; e.g., a small-grain harvest (harvest 
of small grain) is different from a small grain harvest (small harvest 
of all grain), a batch of (say, 20) 10-liter containers is different from 
a batch of 10 [1-] liter containers, and a man eating fish is very 
different from a man-eating fish! 
 In order to -- For brevity, just use "to"; the full phrase may be used, 
however, [in order] to achieve useless padding. 
 Irregardless -- No, regardless. But irrespective might do. 
 It should be mentioned, noted, pointed out, emphasized, etc. -- 
Such preambles often add nothing but words. Just go ahead and 
say what is to be said.
 It was found, determined, decided, felt, etc. -- Are you being 
evasive? Why not put it frankly and directly? (And how about that 
subjective "felt"?) 
 Less(er), few(er) -- "Less" refers to quantity; "fewer" to number. 
 Majority, vast majority -- See if most will do as well or better. Look 
up "vast.“ 
 Myself -- Not a substitute for me. "This paper has been reviewed by 
Dr. Smith and myself" and "The report enclosed was prepared by 
Dr. Jones and myself" are incorrect; me would have been correct 
in all instances. (Use of I also would have been wrong in those 
examples.) Some correct uses of myself: I found the error myself. I 
myself saw it happen. I am not myself today. I cannot convince 
myself.
 Partially, partly -- Compare the meanings (see also impartially). 
Partly is the better, simpler, and more precise word when partly is 
meant. 
 Percent, percentage -- Not the same; use percent only with a 
number. 
 Predominate, predominant -- Predominate is a verb. Predominant 
is the adjective; as an adverb, predominantly (not 
"predominately"). 
 Prefixes -- (mid, non, pre, pro, re, semi, un, etc.) -- Usually not 
hyphened in U.S. usage except before a proper name (pro-Iowa) 
or numerals (mid-60s) or when lack of a hyphen makes a word 
ambiguous or awkward. Preengineered is better hyphened as pre-engineered, 
one of the few exceptions.
 Principle, principal -- They're different; make sure which you mean. 
 Prior to, previous to -- Use before, preceding, or ahead of. There 
are prior and subsequent events that occur before or after 
something else, but prior to is the same kind of atrocious use that 
attempts to substitute "subsequent to" for "after.“ 
 Proven -- Although a proven adjective, stick to proved for the past 
participle. "A proven guilty person must first have been proved 
guilty in court.“ 
 Provided, providing -- Provided (usually followed by "that") is the 
conjunction; providing is the participle. 
 Reason why -- Omit why if reason is used as a noun. The reason 
is...; or, the reason is that... (i.e., the reason is the why).
 Since -- has a time connotation; use "because" or "inasmuch as" 
when either is the intended meaning. 
 Small in size, rectangular in shape, blue in color, tenuous in nature, 
etc. -- Redundant. 
 That and which -- Two words that can help, when needed, to 
make intended meanings and relationships unmistakable, which is 
important in reporting scientific information. If the clause can be 
omitted without leaving the modified noun incomplete, use which 
and enclose the clause within commas or parentheses; otherwise, 
use that. Example: "The lawn mower, which is broken, is in the 
garage." But, "The lawn mower that is broken is in the garage; so is 
the lawn mower that works."
 To be -- Frequently unnecessary. "The differences were [found] [to 
be] significant.“ 
 Varying -- Be careful to distinguish from various or differing. In 
saying that you used varying amounts or varying conditions, you 
are implying individually changing amounts or conditions rather 
than a selection of various or different ones. 
 Where -- Use when you mean where, but not for "in which," "for 
which," etc. 
 Which is, that were, who are, etc. -- Often not needed. For 
example, "the data that were related to age were analyzed first" 
means that the data related to age were analyzed first. Similarly, 
for "the site, which is located near Ames," try "the site, located 
near Ames" or "the site, near Ames." Rephrasing sometimes can 
help. Instead of "a survey, which was conducted in 1974" or "a 
survey conducted in 1974," try "a 1974 survey."
 Beware of misplaced or dangling modifiers and pronoun 
antecedent problems. 
 The difficulty here is that you, as the author, know exactly to which 
each has reference even though not explicitly stated. Your 
reader, however, doesn't have this advantage, and the result may 
be confusing, misleading, or funny. 
 EXAMPLES: 
 "Using multiple-regression techniques, the animals in Experiment I 
were...„ 
 "In assessing the damage, the plants exhibited numerous lesions." 
 "The spiders were inadvertently discovered while repairing a faulty 
growth chamber."
 Ambiguous pronoun antecedents 
 "The flavor was evaluated by an experienced taste panel, and it 
was deemed obnoxious.“ 
 "All samples in Lot II were discarded when the authors found that 
they were contaminated with alcohol, rendering them unstable." 
[and unable to think clearly?] 
 "The guidelines were submitted to the deans, but they 
subsequently were ignored."
 Language Issues – Summary/Conclusion 
• Be more or less specific 
• Avoid clichés like the plague. They’re old hat. 
• Verbs has to agree with their subjects. 
• Prepositions are not words to end sentences with. 
• And don’t start a sentence with a conjunction 
• It is wrong to ever split an infinitive. 
• Parenthetical remarks (however relevant) are (usually) unnecessary. 
• Also, never, ever use repetitive redundancies. 
• No sentence fragments. 
• Contractions aren’t good style and shouldn’t be used in formal 
writing. 
• Do not be redundant; do not use more words than necessary. 
• One should never generalize. 
• One-word sentences? Eliminate. 
• Eliminate commas, that are, not necessary. 
• Never use a big word when a diminutive one would suffice.
 Language Issues – Summary/Conclusion 
• Kill all exclamation points !!! 
• Use words correctly, irregardless how others use them. 
• Understatement is always the absolutely best way to put forth 
earth-shaking ideas. 
• Use the apostrophe in it‘s proper place and omit it when ist not 
needed. 
• Who needs rhetorical questions? 
• Finally: 
• Proofread carefully to see if you any words out.
 2. Technicalities 
 Typesetting 
 WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) 
 Microsoft Word - versatile commercial document 
composing tool. Nevertheless it does have 1 very 
important inherent drawback: equations quality. 
 OpenOffice.org - ... 
 WYSIWYM (What You See Is What You Mean) 
 LaTeX - a macro package around TeX, which is a 
typesetting system capable of providing truly high-quality 
material of any kind
 Reference management software 
 Reference management software, citation management 
software or personal bibliographic management software is 
software for authors to use for recording and utilising 
bibliographic citations (references). Once a citation has been 
recorded, it can be used time and again in generating 
bibliographies, such as lists of references in articles. 
 These software packages normally consist of a database in 
which full bibliographic references can be entered, plus a 
system for generating selective lists or articles in the different 
formats required by publishers and learned journals. Modern 
reference management packages can usually be integrated 
with word processors so that a reference list in the appropriate 
format is produced automatically as an article is written, 
reducing the risk that a cited source is not included in the 
reference list. 
 Examples: Endnote, BibTeX ; 
 Internet source for literature: ISI/Web of Science
 Graphics software 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_writing 
 Computer algebra systems 
 Numerical software 
 Plotting programs (graphing programs) 
 Statistical software
 Practice of writing research papers 
 http://www.dentistry.leeds.ac.uk/elective/WRI 
TE%20UP.htm
 Writing a research paper 
 General points: 
 Give yourself enough time to work. Remember that writing is a 
process. A good paper doesn't come out perfect first time for 
anyone. Even the best scientists have to struggle to organize 
their papers and everyone, including you, needs to go through 
several revisions before they reach the final product... so don't 
feel bad, and don't skimp on revisions! 
 The quality of the writing reflects the quality of the research! 
Use clear, direct prose. Make every word count. Don't use extra 
words, or excessively long words when shorter ones will do. 
Write as you would speak. 
 Find a good (?) paper from a respected journal and use it as a 
model for your own writing.
 Start with an outline of the paper sketching out what's going 
to go in the introduction etc. Use subtopics and subject 
sentences to build your outline. 
 Then write a rough draft that includes the main ideas and 
fleshes out your topic sentences into paragraphs in rough 
form (don't worry about details like exact references, full 
sentences etc at this point). 
 Use the active voice when possible. There is a trend in 
scientific publishing toward writing "I measured 50ml..." rather 
than "50ml was measured". The active voice is usually less 
wordy and more interesting to read. However, there is a 
problem when writing in the active voice as a single author in 
that the incessant "I" in the materials and methods can 
become a distraction, and should be minimized. Multiple 
authored papers can duck this problem with the more 
acceptable "we".
 Once you have finished with your rough draft, take a break 
before rereading your paper. Then start to fiddle with the details 
(cleaning up the prose etc).. 
 Let a friend or colleague read your draft. Listen to what they 
say. 
 Write your second draft. 
 Spell check and check the grammar carefully. Make sure the 
ideas are outlined clearly and flow logically within the text. 
 Publish! (better: submit!)
 Check before submission that you: 
 Numbered the text pages consecutively, beginning with the 
first or title page. 
 Numbered your tables (typed separately from the text, not 
more than one on a page) consecutively in the order in which 
you want them to appear. 
 Read the title and headings of each table objectively to 
determine whether the table can be understood without 
reference to the text 
 Searched the text for references to tables to make certain 
that each table is referred to and that each of the references 
is to the appropriate table.
 Indicated by a marginal note a place for each table. 
 Examined your text, tables and legends to make certain that 
each reference cited is accurately represented in the 
reference list. 
 Examined your reference list to make certain that each work 
listed there is accurately referred to in the text, tables or 
legends. 
 Examined each item in the bibliography section for accuracy 
of dates, wording, spelling and other details. 
 Prepared adequate legends for all illustrations (double-spaced 
on a separate page)
 Made certain that illustrations are numbered consecutively in 
the order in which you want them to appear in your article, 
that each of them is referred to at least once in the text, and 
that each reference is to the appropriate illustration. 
 Indicated by a marginal note a place for the figure. 
 Reconsidered the appropriateness of your title and abstract 
and your index terms (if any). 
 Reviewed the special requirements of the journal to which 
you are submitting your manuscript and made certain that 
you have met them. 
 Carefully read your final typescript at least twice, the second 
time preferably on a different day.
 In case of submission by mail: prepared as many copies of your 
text, tables and illustrations as are required. 
 or 
 In case of online submission: prepared the files according to the 
instructions for authors, and provided the software you have 
used. 
 Kept for your files a complete copy of your manuscript and 
accompanying material. 
 Enclosed copies of releases for material requiring releases. 
 Included on the first page of the typescript the address to which 
letters, proofs and requests for reprints should be sent. 
Note: 
nowadays, tables and figures are usually inserted in the 
(electronic) manuscript at appropriate positions, 
with captions included. Refer to “author instructions“ in case!
 Letter to the editor 
 Example (AE): 
Dear Professor ….: 
Please find enclosed our manuscript “Cluster Formation and 
Rheology of Photoreactive Nanoparticles”. 
We studied the cluster formation of photoreactive nanoparticles 
upon irradiation, and the effect of this process on the rheological 
behavior of dilute colloidal dispersions. 
Since our work should be of interest to many readers of ………., 
we have decided to submit our paper to your journal, hoping you 
will find it acceptable for publication. 
Sincerely 
…………
 Ethical Policy 
 From: 
 “Best Practice Guidelines on Publication Ethics: A 
Publisher‘s Perspective“ 
 Wiley-Blackwell 
 see www.BlackwellPublishing.com/PublicationEthics
 Authors must disclose all sources of funding for their research 
and its publication. 
 Authors must disclose relevant competing interests (both 
financial and personal) 
 Credit for authorship should be based on: 
 - substantial contributions to research design, or the 
acquisition, analysis or interpretation of the data 
 - drafting the paper or revising it critically 
 - approval of the submitted and final version 
 Authors should meet all three criteria. 
 Authors must acknowledge individuals who do not qualify as 
authors but who contributed to the research
 Authors must acknowledge any assistance they have 
received (e.g. provision of writing assistance, literature 
searching, data analysis, administrative support, supply of 
materials). If/how this assistance was funded should be 
described and included with other funding informations. 
 The copyright form (see journals webpages) 
 Authors must declare that the submitted work is their own and 
that copyright has not been breached in seeking its 
publication. 
 Authors should declare that the submitted work has not 
previously been published in full, and is not being considered 
for publication elsewhere.
 Authors of manuscripts describing experiments involving 
human participants must give assurances that appropriate 
consent was obtained. 
 Authors of manuscripts describing experiments involving 
animals must give assurances that appropriate methods were 
used to minimize animal suffering. 
 For further instructions: 
see “guideline for authors“ on journals webpages
 Responding to the editor: 
 Acceptance without revision 
 You need take no further action untile the proofs reach you, 
except prehaps write a note thanking the editor. 
 Minor revisions requested (“accepted“) 
 Consider the suggestions carefully, and if you agree that they 
will improve the paper, modify or rewrite sentences or sections 
as necessary. Retype any heavily corrected pages before you 
return the paper to the editor, but enclose the original 
corrected paper as well as the retyped copies. In your 
covering letter sent with the revised version, thank the editor 
and referees for their help and enclose a list of the substantial 
changes made in response to their suggestions; if you have 
rejected one or more of the recommendations, explain why.
 Major revisions requested (“further consideration“) 
 You will have to think hard if the effort is worth while. You may 
eventually decide that the paper is better as it is, and 
proceed to try another editor (another journal) in the hope 
that he will agree with you. 
 Rejection 
 If the editor says the article is too specialized or outside the 
scope of the journal, your best course is to send it to another 
journal, first modifying the style to comply with the instructions 
of that journal. 
 If the article is rejected because is is said to be too long and in 
need of changes, consider shortening and modifying it 
according to the criticism – and then submit it to a different 
journal (if the editor had wanted to see a shorter version he 
would have offered to reconsider it after revision!).
 Rejection (continued) 
 If the editor thinks the findings reported are unsound or that 
the evidence is incomplete, put the paper aside until you 
have obtained more and better information, unless you are 
sure that the editor and his advisers are wrong. 
 Consider contesting the decision only if you honestly think, 
after considerable reflection and at least one night‘s sleep, 
that the editor and referees have made a superficial or wrong 
judgement. In this case write a polite letter explaining as 
briefly as possible why you think the editor should reconsider 
his decision.
 Summary: Steps in writing a paper 
 Assess your work: decide what, when and where to publish. 
Refrain from duplicate publication, and define your purpose in 
publishing. 
 Obtain and read the Instructions to Authors of the journal chosen 
 Decide who the authors will be 
 Draft a working title and abstract 
 Decide on the basic form of the paper 
 Collect the material under the major headings chosen
 Steps in writing a paper - continued 
 Design tables, including their titles and footnotes; design or select 
illustrations and write titles and legends for them 
 Write for permission to reproduce any previously published tables, 
illustrations or other material that will be used 
 Write a topic outline and perhaps a sentence outline 
 Write, type or dictate a preliminary draft of the text quickly (!), to 
give it unity. 
 Check completeness of the references assembled 
 Put the manuscript or typescript away for a few days
 Steps in writing a paper - continued 
 Re-examine the structure of the paper 
 Check the illustrations and tables and make the final versions 
 Re-read the references you cite and check your own accuracy in 
citing them; check for consistency, and reduce the number of 
abbreviations and footnotes 
 (Re)type the paper (= first draft) 
 Correct the grammar and polish the style 
 Type several copies of the corrected paper (= second draft)
 Steps in writing a paper - continued 
 Ask for criticism from co-authors and friends 
 Make any necessary alterations 
 Compose a now title and abstract suitable for information retrieval, 
list the index terms and assemble the manuscript 
 Compile the reference list, cross-check references against the text, 
and ensure that all bibliographical details are correct 
 Retype (= penultimate version) and check typescript 
 Obtain a final critical review from a senior colleague 
 Make any final corrections (final version)
 Steps in writing a paper - continued 
 Write a covering letter to the editor, enclosing copies of letters 
giving you permission to reproduce any previously published 
material or to cite unpublished work 
 Check that all parts of the paper are present, and post as many 
copies as specified to the editor 
 If the editor returns the paper, revise it as necessary, send it 
elsewhere, or abandon it 
 Correct the proofs
 Scientific ranking of journals – 
the impact factor 
 From: 
http://www.sciencegateway.org/rank/index.html
Journals Ranked by Impact: Mater.Sci. 
Rank 2007 Impact Factor Impact 2003-07 Impact 1981-2007 
1 Prog. Mater. Sci. 
(20.85) 
Nature Materials 
(37.04) 
Mat. Sci. Eng. R 
(69.87) 
2 Nature Materials 
(19.78) 
Mat. Sci. Eng. R 
(31.54) 
Prog. Mater. Sci. 
(65.57) 
3 Nature Nanotechnol. 
(14.96) 
Ann. Rev. Mater. Res. 
(18.77) 
Ann. Rev. Mater. Sci. 
(49.05) 
4 Mat. Sci. Eng. R 
(14.40) 
Prog. Mater. Sci. 
(17.76) 
Int. Mater. Reviews 
(40.38) 
5 Nano Letters 
(9.63) 
Nano Letters 
(17.48) 
Nature Materials 
(37.04) 
6 Advanced Materials 
(8.19) 
Advanced Materials 
(16.28) 
CR Solid St. Mater. Sci. 
(32.83) 
7 Adv. Funct. Mater. 
(7.50) 
CR Solid St. Mater. Sci. 
(12.48) 
Advanced Materials 
(32.36) 
8 Small 
(6.41) 
Adv. Funct. Mater. 
(10.53) 
Acta Metall. Mater. 
(26.54) 
9 MRS Bulletin 
(5.17) 
Curr. Op. Sol. St. Mat. 
(9.71) 
Ann. Rev. Mater. Res. 
(25.61) 
10 Chem. Materials 
(4.88) 
Chem. Materials 
(9.63) 
J. Mech. Phys. Solids 
(23.45)
Journals Ranked by Impact: Chemistry 
Rank 2002 
Impact Factor 
Impact 
1998-2002 
Impact 
1981-2002 
1 Chemical Reviews 
(20.99) 
Chemical Reviews 
(39.95) 
Chemical Reviews 
(119.37) 
2 Acc. Chemical Res. 
(15.90) 
Acc. Chemical Res. 
(27.70) 
Acc. Chemical Res. 
(72.84) 
3 Chem. Soc. Reviews 
(8.72) 
Chem. Soc. Reviews 
(23.49) 
Chem. Soc. Reviews 
(39.13) 
4 Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 
(7.67) 
J. Am. Chem. Soc. 
(11.98) 
J. Am. Chem. Soc. 
(36.25) 
5 J. Am. Chem. Soc. 
(6.20) 
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 
(10.78) 
J. Computat. Chem. 
(29.84) 
6 J. Combin. Chemistry 
(5.19) 
Topics Curr. Chem. 
(9.13) 
Topics Curr. Chem. 
(29.14) 
7 Nano Letters 
(5.03) 
Rev. Computat. Chem. 
(8.64) 
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 
(25.90) 
8 Topics Curr. Chem. 
(5.00) 
Chemistry-Europ. J. 
(7.83) 
J. Chem. Soc.- Chem. 
(19.87) 
9 Chemistry-Europ. J. 
(4.24) 
Liebigs Ann.-Recueil 
(7.07) 
Rev. Computat. Chem. 
(19.44) 
10 Chem. Communications 
(4.04) 
Chem. Communications 
(6.98) 
Marine Chemistry 
(18.31)
Recent Impact Factors 
The Ten Most-Cited Journals of 2006 
Ranked by total citations tallied in 2006 (the most recent year covered by 
Thomson Scientific Journal Citation Reports) to previously published articles 
in each journal. 
Rank Journal Citations 
in 2006 
Rank for 
2005 
1 Journal of Biological Chemistry 410,903 1 
2 Nature 390,690 2 
3 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA (PNAS) 371,057 3 
4 Science 361,389 4 
5 J. American Chemical Society 275,769 5 
6 Physical Review Letters 268,454 6 
7 Physical Review B 212,714 7 
8 New England Journal of Medicine 177,505 8 
9 Astrophysical Journal 162,136 9 
10 Journal of Chemical Physics 157,334 10
Science Output – Top Ten Countries 
Rank Country Papers 
1998-2008 
1 United States 2,798,448 
2 Japan 757,586 
3 Germany 723,804 
4 England 641,768 
5 France 517,096 
6 People's Republic of China 511,216 
7 Canada 388,471 
8 Italy 370,053 
9 Spain 271,753 
10 Russia 262,982 
SOURCE: Essential Science IndicatorsSM from Thomson Reuters
Science Impact – Top Ten Countries 
Rank Country Papers 
1993-2003 
Avg. citations 
per paper 
1 Switzerland 142,982 13.24 
2 United States 2,799,593 12.63 
3 Netherlands 202,184 11.33 
4 Denmark 79,929 11.14 
5 Sweden 158,136 10.85 
6 Scotland 96,571 10.75 
7 England 619,707 10.74 
8 Canada 370,928 10.25 
9 Finland 74,106 10.17 
10 Belgium 103,181 9.74 
SOURCE: Essential Science IndicatorsSM from Thomson Reuters 
The top ten countries ranked according to average citations per paper in all fields 
(that is, 22 main subject areas, (including general social sciences))
The end 
 Questions/comments ??? 
 Next: 
 1. Present your own figures (evtl. with legends) 
 2. “Write a paper (first draft)“ based on selected sets 
of figures with legends/captions 
(title, abstract, (introduction), (materials/methods), 
(results and discussion), conclusions)

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Writing good scientific_papers_v2

  • 1. Writing good scientific papers Reza Assadi MD, HSCR, MPH, Mphil, PhD candidate
  • 3.  Aspects of writing a paper:  Contents  Language  Figures and Tables  Literature (introduction, discussion)  Choosing a Journal  First draft  Submitting draft to supervisor
  • 4. 1. Nineteen Suggestions for Writing Good Scientific Papers: from:  http://course1.winona.edu/mdelong/EcoL ab/21%20Suggestions.html
  • 5.  1. Know your audience and write for that specific audience.  Scientific and technical writing is never a 'general purpose‘, but written for a specific audience, i.e. the community who read a particular journal or study a particular subject.  You must adopt the style and level of writing that is appropriate for your audience. Study them as they are manifested in a selection of highly regarded papers and in the "Instructions for Authors" for key journals.
  • 6.  2. Your supervisor/professor is not here to teach you basic grammar and spelling.  The more time and emotional energy she or he spends on correcting basic English usage, the less remains for issues of content or fine-tuning. You are responsible for mastering the basics of the language. With word processors and spellcheckers having become standard writing tools, typos or other spelling errors should be very rare.
  • 7.  3. Do Not Turn in a First Draft!  Ever! Most people's first drafts are terrible. "Good writing is rewriting," and you should make a serious effort at editing, rewriting, and fine-tuning before you give the manuscript to anyone else to read. If you need to put a piece of writing away for a few days before you can approach it dispassionately enough to rework it, do so.
  • 8.  4. Get and use stylebooks.  Distinguish between those that are primarily manuals of accepted rules, those that address how to create a draft (e.g., disconnecting the creative from the critical voice, etc.), and those that focus on rewriting.
  • 9.  5. Avoid abusing word forms.  Use words in the form that conveys your meaning as clearly and simply as possible.  For example, consider the sentence, "The low rate of encounters was a reflection of population density reductions." versus: "The low rate of encounters reflects a reduced population density."
  • 10.  6. Do not use more words where fewer will do.  Do not use long words where short ones will do.  For example:  "utilization" vs. "use"  "in order to" vs. "to"  Do not use special words to make your writing seem more technical, scientific, or academic when the message is more clearly presented otherwise.
  • 11.  7. Use an outline to organize your ideas and writing.  When you first start a writing project, make an outline of the major headings. List the key ideas to be covered under each heading. Organize your thinking logic and the logic of your arguments at this level, not when you are trying to write complete, grammatical, and elegant sentences.  Separate out the three tasks of: (1) figuring out what you want to say, (2) planning the order and logic of your arguments, and (3) crafting the exact language in which you will express your ideas.
  • 12.  8. Think about the structure of paragraphs.  Though most students can write reasonable sentences, a surprising number have difficulty organizing sentences into effective paragraphs. A paragraph should begin with a topic sentence that sets the stage clearly for what will follow. Make topic sentences short and direct. Build the paragraph from the ideas introduced in your topic sentence and make the flow of individual sentences follow a logical sequence.
  • 13. ساختار یک پاراگراف استاندارد جمله :پیشرو حاوی پیام اصلی پاراگراف. مابقی جملت پیرامون همان موضوع بحث می .کنند
  • 14.  9. Pay attention to tenses.  Problems of inappropriate or inconsistent tenses are common in student writing. What you, or others, did in the past should be stated in the past tense (e.g. data were collected...."). Events or objects that continue to happen or exist can be described in the present tense (e.g., "in this paper, I examine....... The data reject the hypothesis that......). Whatever tense you choose, be consistent.  Be careful in using "might," "may," and "would" (as in "this might indicate that..."). They are frequently used as ways of weaseling out of making a clear statement.
  • 15.  10. Captions should not merely name a table or figure, they should explain how to read it.  A caption (figure or table heading) should contain sufficient information so that a reader can understand a table or figure, in most cases, without reference to the text. Very simple tables and figures may require only a title for clarity, and exceptionally complex ones may require reference to the text for explanation.  Do not leave caption writing to the end of the project; write captions when you organize your Results section and it will help you write the text.
  • 16.  11. When citing a reference, focus on the ideas, not the authors.  Unless the person who reported a result is an important point in a statement, literature citations should be parenthetical, rather than in the body of the sentence: “… growth rates of > 80 cm are common in populations in Alberta (Marx 1982)." rather than “…, Marx (1982) found growth rates of >80 cm to be common in populations in Alberta.'
  • 17.  12. Show us don't tell us.  Rather than telling the reader that a result is interesting or significant, show them how it is interesting or significant. For instance, rather than 'The large difference in mean size between population C and population D is particularly interesting," write 'Mean size generally varied among populations by only a few centimeters, but mean size in populations C and D differed by 25 cm.“.
  • 18.  13. Write about your results, not your tables, figures, and statistics.  Confusing and disjointed Results sections often arise because the writer does not have a clear idea of the story she/he intends to tell. When preparing to write your results, decide on the elements of the story you wish to tell, then choose the subset of text, figures, and tables that most effectively and concisely coveys your message. Organize this subset of tables and figures in a logical sequence; then write your story around them.
  • 19.  14. Develop a strategy for your Discussion.  Many novice paper writers begin their Discussion section with a statement about problems with their methods or the items in their results about which they feel most insecure. Unless these really are the most important thing about your research (in which case you have problems), save them for later. Begin a Discussion with a short restatement of the most important points from your results. Use this statement to set up the ideas you want to focus on in interpreting your results and relating them to the literature. Use sub-headings that structure the discussion around these ideas.  Note: Often 1 “results and discussion” section!
  • 20.  15. Introductions and conclusions are the hardest parts.  Many technical writers prefer to write their introductions last because it is too difficult to craft that balance of general context and specific focus required for a good introduction. If you need to write the introduction first to set the stage for your own thinking, resist the temptation to perfect it. The introduction will likely need substantial modification by the time you have finished the rest of the paper. The same concerns apply to conclusions, abstracts, and summaries. These components of the paper are all that many people will read, and you must get your message across in as direct, crisp, and enticing a manner as possible.
  • 21.  16. Break up large projects into small pieces and work on the pieces.  Writing and analysis for any given paper is often an iterative process. Writing the results section of a paper is often the best way to discover the analyses and figures that still need to be done.
  • 22.  17. Make your writing flow and resonate.  Papers written so well that they 'flow and resonate' are much more likely to influence your readers than the equivalent message presented in a form that is merely clear. When you find a paper that succeeds in this, study carefully how the authors constructed their augments and used language; try to identify what makes the paper work so well.
  • 23.  18. Use word processors effectively and back up your work religiously.  You need not learn how to use all the more exotic features of your word processor, but learn the options that are available and how to find out the details when you need them. Minimally, be familiar with basic requirements for document formatting and basic operating system requirements. The same comments apply to the use of statistical packages, graphics programs, and spreadsheets.
  • 24.  19. Take editorial comments seriously.  It may be clear from an editor's comments that they did not understand the point you were making. If so, that is a clear indication that you need to improve your writing. Also, an editor, no matter who they might be, has invested their time to help improve the quality of your writing. Respect their investment.
  • 25.  The structure of a journal paper  http://classweb.gmu.edu/biologyresources/ writingguide/ScientificPaper.htm
  • 26. ساختار استاندارد یک مقاله Introduction Method Results Discussions Conclucion از دانسته های عمومی شروع و به جزییات کار حاضر خاتمه می یابد. این دو بخش باید هماهنگ و هم اندازه باشند از مهمترین یافته های کار حاضر شروع و به تعمیم و مقایسه با کارهای مشابه و مرتبط سایر محققین بسط داده می شود
  • 27.  The Scientific Paper  A well-written scientific paper explains the scientist's motivation for doing an experiment, the experimental design and execution, and the meaning of the results. Scientific papers are written in a style that is exceedingly clear and concise. Their purpose is to inform an audience of other scientists about an important issue and to document the particular approach they used to investigate that issue.  Please do not think that good English is not critical in science writing. In fact, scientists try to be so concise that their English should be better than that of workers in other disciplines! If English is not your first language, then proofreading by a native-speaker might be helpful.  If you have read scientific papers, you will have noticed that a standard format is frequently used. This format allows a researcher to present information clearly and concisely.
  • 28.  Types of title that can be used for scientific papers  Indicative titles indicate the subject matter of a paper but give no indication of any results obtained or conclusions drawn e.g. The effectiveness of bed nets in controlling mosquitoes at different seasons of the year.  Informative titles give an indication of results achieved and conclusions drawn as well as the subject matter of the paper e.g. Bed nets control mosquitoes most effectively when used in the rainy season.  Question-type titles  This type of title obviously asks a question. e.g. When are bed nets most effective when used to control mosquitoes?  Main-subtitle (series) type  This approach is not liked by editors of scientific journals because if they accept the first paper they will be duty bound to accept sequels. e.g. The effect of bed nets on mosquitoes: 1.Their effectiveness when used only in the rainy season.
  • 29. 2. General organization and order of writing:  (6) Abstract  (3) Introduction  (1) Methods  (2) Results / Results and Discussion  (4) Discussion / Conclusion  (5) Literature Cited
  • 30.  The Scientific Paper: Abstract  An abstract is a shortened version of the paper and should contain all information necessary for the reader to determine:  (1) what the objectives of the study were;  (2) how the study was done;  (3) what results were obtained;  (4) and the significance of the results.  Frequently, readers of a scientific journal will only read the abstract, choosing to read at length those papers that are most interesting to them. For this reason, and because abstracts are frequently made available to scientists by various computer abstracting services, this section should be written carefully and succinctly to have the greatest impact in as few words as possible.  Although it appears as the first section in a paper, most scientists write the abstract section last.
  • 31. How to Write an Introduction
  • 32. Purpose: Main job: Why the study is done.
  • 33. Practical importance: • Introduction is a transition from the world outside the article to the world within it. • Most referees make up their minds within 15 minutes of reading a paper, i.e. while reading the introduction. • The editor may choose the referees from those referenced in Introduction. • The type of terminology, logic and evidence the reader should expect in the body is shown in Introduction.
  • 34. So, Devote half the writing time to introduction and conclusion
  • 35. When to write: Some prefer to do it first, Some, last.
  • 36. Questions to answer before writing: • What do I have to say? • Is it worth saying? • What’s the right format for the message? • Who is the audience? • Which journal?
  • 37. Answer what really interested you 1. A patient was anaesthetized for an operation to repair his hernia and asked whether the fact that he used Ecstasy four nights a week would cause problems. We were unable to find an answer in published medical reports, and so we designed a study to answer the question. 2. Because of pressure to reduce night work for junior doctors we wondered if it would be safe to delay operating on patients with appendicitis until the morning after they were admitted.
  • 38. Content First line: • Hook the readers. • Say something the reader doesn’t know. Bad: It is widely accepted that X is important Bad: Metal foams are a new class of material attracting interest world-wide and with great potential….. X, Y, Z have measured their strength properties … P, Q, and R have developed theoretical models … Comparison of the experiments with the models suggests that the measured strength are less than those predicted …..
  • 39. Better: Metal foams are not as strong as they should be. Models, which describe polymer foams well, overestimate the strength of metal foams by factor of 2 to 5. This research explores the reasons. To be more specific… (details of literature X, Y, Z, P, Q, R here).
  • 40. You can start the first sentence by: • A question • An opposite opinion • A very short relevant narrative or anecdote • An interesting fact • An irony or a paradox • An original analogy • Definition or explanation of a term
  • 41. Use quotations cautiously: “God created solids, but Devil created surfaces”. (suitable as the first sentence for a review-article on friction and wear)
  • 42. First paragraph: • You can use journalistic devices sparingly (arresting story, interesting facts, describing a scene vividly). • Don’t go straight to what you did in the article. • But, use some key words from the title in the first few sentences.
  • 43. Later on… • Make clear how your work adds importantly to what gone before. • Discuss real world examples. • A systematic review of all previous works and explaining that the new work is needed. If difficult, a brief account is enough. • Don’t forget the ELPS rule (electronic long, paper short) and focus on works directly related to your study.
  • 44. Important: • Try hard to clarify the relevance of cited works to your study. • Unsatisfactory explanation of this relevance is a common problem. • Try to make generalizations from literature, rather than just naming them.
  • 45. The rule of inverted triangle • Start by general considerations. • Then, slowly focus on your specific work. • You can first write it in reverse and then invert everything. • Use the rule even for your literature review.
  • 46. • Mention the cited authors with publication dates while giving the exact source in the References. • Cite original articles in primary research journals, not textbooks and encyclopedias. • Mention works of the potential referees in the first page (Introduction).
  • 47. • Explain about how the works of potential referees is related to your study. • Use quotations from well known people but not from dead ones too often.
  • 48. Last paragraph: • The best place for statement of purpose is the topic sentence of the last paragraph. • Look for the match between the research problem and title. • It is the place for the merits of the new technique or methodology (if applied to your article).
  • 49. Last sentence: • You can explain the study’s design briefly, but not the conclusion We therefore conducted a double blind randomized study with 10 year follow up to determine whether teetotalers drinking 3 glasses of whisky a week can reduce their chances of dying of coronary artery disease.
  • 50. Important Don’t s • Don’t compare strengths and weaknesses of your study with others. • Don’t put detailed critique of other studies. • Don’t repeat consistently textbook materials that everybody knows. Either, • Don’t write so vague that nobody knows. • Don’t say what the paper does not do.
  • 51. • Don’t impress the readers by summarizing everything gone before. • Don’t use references only to show you’ve done a lot of study. • Don’t cite your own works predominantly. • Don’t use others’ statements without using quotation marks.
  • 52. • Don’t attack previous studies rudely. • Don’t use negative words to criticize previous works: The deficiency of Smith’s approach is… Or The problem of these papers…
  • 53. Length: • Introduction should be short. • It should be 2 pages or 1/6 of the paper at most (whichever is less).
  • 54. Vocabulary: • Don’t use meaningless abbreviations. • Don,t use the words “hypothesis” and “null hypothesis” if possible. • Don’t use “I”. Referees hate it. • Don’t use your keywords repeatedly. • “The purpose of this study is that…” has become very common. Try not to use the exact phrase.
  • 55. Most common problems: • Not answering the question of “why”. • Not citing relevant references. • Describing studies only tangentially related to your article. • Ignoring the theoretical framework underlying your work. • Omitting a clear statement of purpose.
  • 56.  The Scientific Paper: Introduction  Why is this study of scientific interest and what is your objective?  This section discusses the results and conclusions of previously published studies, to help explain why the current study is of scientific interest.  The Introduction is organized to move from general information to specific information. The background must be summarized succinctly, but it should not be itemized. Limit the introduction to studies that relate directly to the present study. Emphasize your specific contribution to the topic.  The last sentences of the introduction should be a statement of objectives and a statement of hypotheses. This will be a good transition to the next section, Methods, in which you will explain how you proceeded to meet your objectives and test your hypotheses.
  • 57.  How to Cite Sources in the Introduction Section  It is important to cite sources in the introduction section of your paper as evidence of the claims you are making. There are ways of citing sources in the text so that the reader can find the full reference in the literature cited section at the end of the paper, yet the flow of the reading is not badly interrupted.  Note that articles by one or two authors are always cited in the text using their last names. However, if there are more than two authors, the last name of the 1st author is given followed by the abbreviation et al.. It is acceptable, and encouraged, to cite more than one source for a particular statement. This gives the statement more validity in its context and suggests that your research was thorough.
  • 58. Material & Methods How did we do the research
  • 59.  Function  Subjects  Design (experimental of sampling)  Protocol of collecting data  analysis  Style
  • 60.  Area, population, sampling, gathering data, analysis.  Organism: source, size, handling,  Site: physical & biological, map  Design: hypothesis, controls, treatments, variables, data, …  Protocols: how much, how long when,…  Others should be able to repeat it.  Probability & Power, analysing
  • 61.  Analysis:  Summarized & measures of variability  Data transformation (normalize)  Statistical tests  Other techniques
  • 62. Common problems  Avoid repeatedly a single sentence to relate a single action.
  • 63. Problematic Example: "The petri dish was placed on the turntable. The lid was then raised slightly. An inoculating loop was used to transfer culture to the agar surface. The turntable was rotated 90 degrees by hand. The loop was moved lightly back and forth over the agar to spread the culture. The bacteria were then incubated at 37 C for 24 hr." Improved Example: "Each plate was placed on a turntable and streaked at opposing angles with fresh overnight E. coli culture using an inoculating loop. The bacteria were then incubated at 37 C for 24 hr." Best: . "Each plate was streaked with fresh overnight E. coli culture and incubated at 37 C for 24 hr."
  • 64. Common problems  Avoid using ambiguous terms Problematic example: "A Spec 20 was used to measure A600 of Tubes 1,2, and 3 immediately after chloroplasts were added (Time 0) and every 2 min. thereafter until the DCIP was completely reduced. Tube 4's A600 was measured only at Time 0 and at the end of the experiment." Improved example: "A Spec 20 was used to measure A600 of the reaction mixtures exposed to light intensities of 1500, 750, and 350 uE/m2/sec immediately after chloroplasts were added (Time 0) and every 2 min. thereafter until the DCIP was completely reduced. The A600 of the no light control was measured only at Time 0 and at the end of the experiment."
  • 65. انواع مطالعات مطالعه اولیه  مطالعه ثانویه 
  • 66. Primary studies مطالعات تجربی  مطالعات کارآزمایی بالینی  مطالعات توصیفی 
  • 67. مطالعات ثانویه مرورها  مرور غیرنظام مند  مرور نظام مند همراه با متاآنالیز 
  • 68. انواع مقالت پزشکی  Original Article  Review Article  Case Reports  Editorial  Short Communication (short papers)  Letter to Editor  Personal Views
  • 69. Letter اشاره یک مساله  بیان یک مشکل یا ارایه یک فرضیه  توصیف بستر یک مساله  تمرکز بر پیشنهادات، نظرات و راه حل های نویسنده  ارایه یک نتیجه گیری قوی  توجه به محدودیت ها 
  • 70. Editorial نگارش برای خوانندگان یک مجله خاص  توجه به نظرات و ابعاد مختلف مساله  کلی گویی و عدم قطعی صحبت کردن بهتر است 
  • 71. Short communication این نوع مقالت در حال بیشتر شدن است  دارای مقدمه مشخص  ارایه داده ها و بحث درباره آن  تعداد جداول و نمودار اندک  محدودیت تعداد کلمه 
  • 72. مزایای این سه نوع مقاله کوتاه؟ چاپ آسان تر و سریع تر  ورود سریع تر نام نویسنده به پایگاه ها و مجلت  مناسب برای کارهای کوچک، داده های اندک و نتایج  contraversy
  • 74. Methods  Study design  Participants  Ethical approval  Sample size Design (experimental of sampling) Protocol of collecting data  Questionnaires  Interventions  Clinical assessments  Statistical methods
  • 75.  Area, population, sampling, gathering data, analysis.  Organism: source, size, handling,  Site: physical & biological, map  Design: hypothesis, controls, treatments, variables, data, …  Protocols: how much, how long when,…  Others should be able to repeat it.  Probability & Power, analysing
  • 76.  Analysis: Summarized & measures of variability Data transformation (normalize) Statistical tests Other techniques
  • 77. Problematic Example: "The petri dish was placed on the turntable. The lid was then raised slightly. An inoculating loop was used to transfer culture to the agar surface. The turntable was rotated 90 degrees by hand. The loop was moved lightly back and forth over the agar to spread the culture. The bacteria were then incubated at 37 C for 24 hr." Improved Example: "Each plate was placed on a turntable and streaked at opposing angles with fresh overnight E. coli culture using an inoculating loop. The bacteria were then incubated at 37 C for 24 hr." Best: . "Each plate was streaked with fresh overnight E. coli culture and incubated at 37 C for 24 hr."
  • 78. Common problems  Avoid using ambiguous terms Problematic example: "A Spec 20 was used to measure A600 of Tubes 1,2, and 3 immediately after chloroplasts were added (Time 0) and every 2 min. thereafter until the DCIP was completely reduced. Tube 4's A600 was measured only at Time 0 and at the end of the experiment." Improved example: "A Spec 20 was used to measure A600 of the reaction mixtures exposed to light intensities of 1500, 750, and 350 uE/m2/sec immediately after chloroplasts were added (Time 0) and every 2 min. thereafter until the DCIP was completely reduced. The A600 of the no light control was measured only at Time 0 and at the end of the experiment."
  • 79. What to include in the methods section (1)  How the study was designed:  Keep the description brief  Say how randomization was done  Use names to identify parts of study sequence
  • 80. What to include in the methods section (2)  How the study was carried out:  How the participants were recruited and chosen  Give reasons for excluding participants  Consider mentioning ethical features  Give accurate details of materials used  Give exact drug dosages  Give exact form of treatments
  • 81. What to include in the methods section (3)  How the data were analysed:  Use a P value to disprove the null hypothesis  Give an estimate of power of the study  Give the exact tests used for statistical analysis
  • 83. Results Simple complex  Describe the population  Start with positive findings  Establish how comparable your groups were  Use a mixture of text, tables and figures  Mention units of measurement  Mention what numbers, brackets, etc. refer to  9+4, 854 (12.3)  Bring the P values
  • 84. Sample  "Males (180.5 ± 5.1 cm; n=34) averaged 12.5 cm taller than females (168 ± 7.6 cm; n=34) in the AY 1995 pool of Biology majors (two-sample t-test, t = 5.78, 33 d.f., p < 0.001)." 84
  • 85. Results Provide only enough interpretation to lead the reader from one experiment to the other Avoid lengthy analysis and comparison to the work of others  No need to follow chronology of study Rather, provide a logical progression and tell a story
  • 86. Results 1. Start with positive findings. 2. Do not compare the present data with previously published results. 3. Write the text of the Results section concisely and objectively. 4. The passive voice will likely dominate here, but use the active voice as much as possible 86
  • 87. Tables and Figures  Consider using a table to present large amounts of data/results. 87 Must refer to all tables in text.  Use figures to graphically represent significant results.
  • 88. Results  Use the “Stand alone” tables  Make sure totals add to 100%  Do not repeat the Tables and Figures in text Summarize: e.g., there were no significant associations… Describe: e.g. there was a three fold increase in the risk of ..
  • 89. Tables and Figures  Each Table or Figure must include a brief description of the results being presented and other necessary information in a legend.  Table legends go above the Table; tables are read from top to bottom.  Figure legends go below the figure; figures are usually viewed from bottom to top 89
  • 90. Tables and Figures  Tables and Figures are assigned numbers separately and in the sequence that you will refer to them from the text. 90 The first Table you refer to is Table 1, the next Table 2 and so forth. Similarly, the first Figure is Figure 1, the next Figure 2, etc.
  • 91. Tables and Figures  When referring to a table from the text, "Figure" is abbreviated as Fig.,e.g., Fig. 1.  Table is never abbreviated, e.g., Table 1. 91
  • 92. Example 1: Courtesy of Shelley Ball. Example 2: Courtesy of Shelley Ball. 92
  • 93. 93
  • 94. Figures  Used when we want to distinguish a result & make it prominent into readers view  Figures are visual presentations of results, including graphs, diagrams, photos, drawings, schematics, maps, etc.  Graphs are the most common type of figure.  Graphs show trends or patterns of relationship. 94
  • 95. Figures Avoid clutter (too many numbers or symbols)  Should provide a clear statistical message Vertical (“Y”) axis: outcome/dependent variable Horizontal (“X”) axis: exposure/independent variable Name & define each axis Give the measurement unit of each axis 95
  • 96. 96
  • 97. 97
  • 98. Results Common mistakes Raw data Redundancy Discussion and interpretation of data No figures or tables Methods/materials reported
  • 99. Figure 1. Effect of total alkaloid fraction of methanolic extract on mean survival time
  • 100. Figure 1. Effect of total alkaloid fraction of methanolic extract of unripe fruit of Solanum pseudocapsicum on mean survival time (MST) in tumor bearing mice.
  • 101.
  • 102. Something to avoid !  Do not present the same data in both a Table and Figure - this is considered redundant and a waste of space and energy.  Decide which format best shows the result and go through it.  Do not report raw data values when they can be summarized as means, percents, etc. 102
  • 103. Do NOT ! 103  Use big words that you do not really mean Attributable Causality Preferential Significant (without statistical evidence) Validity  Mix incidence and prevalence  Mix frequency, rate, proportion, ratio
  • 104.
  • 105. گزارش نتايج آماري نوشتن تعداد فراواني همراه با درصدها وقتي  تعداد نمونه اندك است. عدم نياز به نوشتن فرمول های حجم نمونه و  آزمون های آماری ارائه پارامترهاي یكه آزمون شده اند مانند ميانگين,  نسبت يا درصد, ضريب همبستگي, حتي اگر آزمون ها معن يدار نشده باشند. نوشتن شاخص آزمون و مقدار آن همراه با درجه  آزادي و
  • 106. گزارش نتايج آماري تعريف كردن علئمي كه براي نتايج معن يدار ب هكار  م يرود (مانند ستاره) و ب هكار بردن علئم مشابه نوشتن اعداد ب هصورت گرد شده با درنظرگرفتن  دقت داد ههاي اوليه (ميانگين تا يك رقم اعشار و انحراف معيار و خطاي معيار تا دو رقم اعشار بيشتر از داد ههاي خام) درج درصدها تا يك رقم اعشار (گاهي حتي نياز به  ارقام اعشاري هم نيست). تا دو رقم اعشار t ,r نوشتن شاخص هايي مانند 
  • 107. The p-value in a nutshell Could the result have occurred by chance? The result is unlikely to be due to chance 0 1 p < 0.05 a statistically significant result p = 0.05 or 1 in 20 result fairly unlikely to be due to chance The result is likely to be due to chance 1 20 p > 0.05 not a statistically significant result p = 0.5 1 2 or 1 in 2 result quite likely to be due to chance
  • 108. Confidence Interval (CI) Is the range within which the true size of effect (never exactly known) lies, with a given degree of assurance (usually 95%)
  • 109. Check list for Results  Baseline data provided?  Primary and other endpoints clear and complete?  Does the text complement figures and tables?  Are measures of uncertainty mentioned? (SD, SE, CI)
  • 110. Mechanics of Writing-Results  Tell a story  Use the most logical sequence to present the data (not necessarily the order in which you did the experiments)  Just report the data - do not include interpretation or comparison to literature  No duplication of data
  • 111. Guidelines for Writing Results - The Study as it was Conducted  Specify the dates of the study  Provide a schematic summary  Describe the characteristics of each group  Indicate if the sample is representative  Indicate if randomization was successful  Describe duration and nature of follow up
  • 112. Guidelines for Writing Results: The Study Outcomes  Report statistical findings in detail  Report actual p values , 95% CI , etc.  Report the main findings in figures or tables, you don’t need to also report them in the text  Report confounders
  • 113. A Few Rules  The first time you use an abbreviation, define it  When you give the commercial source for a reagent, the first time you cite the source include the location of the company (city and state)  Make sure the subject and verb agree in every sentence  No contract. or exclamation points!
  • 114. A Few Rules - continued  Look for redundancy within the manuscript  Try not to use “it” or “they” - be specific!  No jargon  Two shorter sentences are frequently much more effective than a long, complex sentence  “Data” is plural not singular, i.e., “the data are…” NOT “ the data is…”
  • 115. A Few Rules - continued  Capitalize people’s names, i.e., Golgi apparatus  Never, ever plagiarize! (even from yourself!)  Use numbers when expressing measurements, except when the number would begin a sentence
  • 117. Discusion • When most people read paper, they read the title and abstract first, then the introduction, some graphs or tables and then the discussion. THEREFORE: the discussion should begin by summarizing the main findings .Then interpret the findings in relation to the introduction and finally draw conclusion.Keep the discussion to the results; don`t go beyond the data
  • 118. Discussion • The least formalized part of an article • The most difficult part of an article • The structure is the the same for every experiment • It`s practice of logic and discipline • It`s not repeating the results • Since sometimes results are self-explanatory,many students find it difficult to know what material to add in this last section
  • 119. Discussion • Simply: Discussion is where you REFER to your results … EXPLAIN your results … INTERPRET your results in light of other work in field … (Don`t repeat or reformulate or recapitulate results!)
  • 120. A n s w e r r e s e a r c h q u e s t i o n S u p p o r t a n d d e f e n d a n s w e r s w i t h r e s u l t s E X P L A I N - C o n f l i c t i n g r e s u l t s y o u g o t o - U n e x p e c t e d f i n d i n g s - D i s c r e p a n c i e s w i t h o t e h r r e s e a r c h S t a t e l i m i t a t i o n o f t h e s t u d y E s t a b l i s h n e w n e s A n n o u n c e f u r t h e r r e s e a r c h
  • 121. Discussion • Answer research question • Support and defend answers with results • EXPLAIN: - conflicting results you got - unexpected findings - discrepancies with other research • State limitations of the study • Establish newness • Announce further research
  • 122. Discussion • Why the research was done? • Interpretation • Findings in association with hypothesis • Findings in association with other researches • Evaluation of scientific validity • Comments about meaningful results • Explanation of negative opinions • Association of topic with current sitiuation • Future studies
  • 123. Discussion First paragraph ** Summarize main findings ** Start by presenting the essential conclusions of your specific study
  • 125. Discussion • Remember inverted triangle at Introduction…! • There is a triangle at Discussion too, but is not inverted..! Basically discussion contains several parts in no particular order but roughly moving from specific (related to your experiment only) to general (how your finding fit in the larger scientific community)
  • 126. Discussion • General structure of an article
  • 127. Discussion • Explain whether data support your hypothesis • Acknowledge any anomalous data or deviations from what you expected (next slide) • Derive conclusions based on your findings and about the process you`re studing • Relate your findings to earlier work in the same area (if you can) • Explore the theoritical and practical implications of your findings
  • 128. Discussion • Explain whether the data support your hypothesis You should begin this part of discussion by explicitly stating the relationships or correlations your data indicate between the independent and dependent variables. Example
  • 129. Discussion • Make sure you are very explicit about the relationship between the evidence and the conclusions you draw from it. • Tell your readers exactly how you got from point A (was the hypothesis supported) to point B (yes or no) • You should defend your claim !
  • 130. Discusion • Occasionally it is appropriate to introduce new data in the discussion section.Give this only as a description of unpublished results, and make it very clear that `s only a preliminary evidence.This should not be used as a means to publish your new materials, and should only be included to make a point,perhaps confirming your major conclusions or to show the direction your work is going.
  • 131. Discussion • Abstract >>> Past tense • Theory >>> Past tense • Methods & Materials >>> Past tense • Discussion >>> Alternates! :
  • 132. Discussion Past tense Your current results Other studies that are preliminary or cast into doubt by your studies Present tense Results of previous studies that are well-known and confirmed Interpretation of your results
  • 133. Discussion • Last paragraph - Draw conclusion - Mention to theoritical implications - Mention to practical implications - Extend your findings to other species - Point to broader topics and need to further researches - Show that you`ll continue research on it
  • 134. Some advices • Emphasize the new and important aspects of the study • Compare and contrast the results with other relevant studies • State the limitation of study • If your method is new and strange,explain more and try to defend it • In randomized clinical trials mention to: - sources of potential bias - imprecisions - dangers associated with multiplicity of analysis and outcome
  • 135. Some advices(continued) • Be sure that all conclusions are supported by results(give evidence for each conclusion) • Make it clear that are major hypotheses in the field supported by your research or contradicted? • Although there may be some repetition of information in the results and discussion section, it should kept to minimum • Point out any exception or any lack of correlation • Discussion is often far too long
  • 136. Don`t…! 1) Don`t write an unabridged and long criticism on previous researches 2) Avoid making statements on economic benefits and costs unless their manuscript includes the appropriate economic data and analysis 3) Avoid claiming priority and alluding to work that has not been completed
  • 137. Don`t…!(continued) 3) Don`t omit other previous good evidences to show your study is unique …don`t magnify it! 4) Don`t explain the concepts more than what is necessary 5) Discussion part is not for review of literature 6) Don`t be shy! Discuss the theoritical implications & practical applications of your work
  • 138. Don`t…!(continued) 7) Don`t hide unexpected results…they`re useful 8) Keep the discussion to the results,don`t go beyond data 9) Don`t ignore or bury the major issue 10) don`t over generalize 11) Don`t ignore deviations in your data 12) Avoid speculation that can`t be tested in the foreseeable future
  • 139. Don`t…!(continued) 13) Be direct; avoid qualifying phrases such as “it appears that…” or “our data suggest that…” 14) Labs are not as practical tests of undeniable scientific truths, so don`t say that the hypothesis was “proved” or “disproved” or that it was “correct” or “incorrect”. words like “supported”, “indicated” and “suggested” are more acceptable ways to evaluate your hypothesis
  • 140. AA ssmmiillee iiss tthhee sshhoorrtteesstt ddiissttaannccee bbeettwweeeenn hhuummaann--bbeeiinnggss
  • 141.  The Scientific Paper: Discussion  In this section, you are free to explain what the results mean or why they differ from what other workers have found.  You should interpret your results in light of other published results, by adding additional information from sources you cited in the Introduction section as well as by introducing new sources. Make sure you provide accurate citations.  Relate your discussion back to the objectives and questions you raised in the Introduction section. However, do not simply re-state the objectives. Make statements that synthesize all the evidence (including previous work and the current work).  Limit your conclusions to those that your data can actually support. You can then proceed to speculate on why this occurred and whether you expected this to occur, based on other workers' findings.  Suggest future directions for research, new methods, explanations for deviations from previously published results, etc.
  • 142.  How to Cite Sources in the Discussion Section  It is important to cite sources in the discussion section of your paper as evidence of the claims you are making. There are ways of citing sources in the text so that the reader can find the full reference in the literature cited section at the end of the paper, yet the flow of the reading is not badly interrupted (see also Introduction).  Make sure you give a full citation in the Literature Cited section (“references”) for all sources mentioned in the text.
  • 143.  The Scientific Paper: Literature Cited  This is the last section of the paper. Here you should provide an alphabetical (or numbered according to the occurrence in your paper) listing of all the published work you cited in the text of the paper. Note: in most journals, listed and numbered according to sequential appearance in text!  A standard format is used both to cite literature in the text and to list these studies in the Literature Cited section. Consult a recent issue of the respective journal for guidance.  For papers published in journals you must provide the date, title, journal name, volume number, and page numbers. For books you need the publication date, title, publisher, and place of publication.
  • 144.  Practical Tips for Scientific Writing  PROOFREAD!!! You should check your paper to catch and correct these and other common errors:  You should avoid abbreviations by writing out the full word (minimum, October, first, temperature, ...). Exceptions include common terms like ATP and DNA, units of measure (m, g, cm, °C), and mathematical or chemical formulas. Sentences should never begin with an abbreviation or an acronym.  You may wish to introduce an acronym for a term that is repeated often: if your paper deals with soybeans, Glycine max, you may use the full scientific name once and substitute G. max thereafter.  Chemical elements are not proper nouns, so do not capitalize them. Only the first letter of the symbol is a capital letter: nitrogen (N), carbon (C), calcium (Ca).  Reference:  V.E. McMillan's Writing Papers in the Biological Sciences , a highly recommended resource for scientific writing).
  • 145.  In formal writing, you should never use contractions (didn't, can't, haven't...).  The word "data" is plural, as in "the data were collected on January 21, 2001."  Direct quotes should be avoided, unless you are presenting another author's specific definition or original label. You can usually paraphrase the writing effectively and more concisely, taking care to properly attribute the sources of your statements.  Read and re-read your references. Consult a textbook or another reference to help you resolve any aspects of the paper you do not understand before you start writing.  You should review your writing to make sure that each sentence presents one or two clear ideas. This will also help you organize sentences within paragraphs in a logical order.
  • 146.  In science, the word "significant" implies the result of a statistical test. You should analyze your results to determine whether they are statistically significant and report the test you used.  Do not use slang. Try to use precise, scientific terms where possible (without unnecessary jargon) and avoid colloquialisms and figures of speech: "somewhat" rather than "sort of," "many" or "a great deal" instead of "a lot."  Your word processor's spell-check and/or grammar-check function is not error-free. It cannot tell you when to use "it's" and "its," and it cannot tell you that a particular sentence does not make sense. Give yourself enough time to proofread and correct your paper.
  • 147.  Tenses When describing methods and results, you should use the past tense. The present tense is appropriate for accepted facts, such as the background information presented in the Introduction. In addition, you may use the present tense when you discuss your results and conclusions. Looking over other scientific papers may help you answer questions you might have on this topic.  Units All units of measure must be metric or SI (international System).
  • 149. 3. Language  Three aspects of style seem to cause problems:  Division of the text into sentences and paragraphs. Sentences should have only one idea or concept. In general, sentences in scientific prose should be short, but full stops should not be added so liberally that the writing does not flow. The use of paragraphs helps the reader to appreciate the sense of the writing.  Superfluous phrases and words should be avoided. Do not write phrases such as "It is also important to bear in mind the following considerations". Most woolly phrases can be omitted or replaced by a single word.  Try to use familiar, precise words rather than far-fetched vague words. "Cheaper" may replace "More economically viable", and ongoing situation" doesn’t mean very much.
  • 150.  Tense and mood  Write in past tense unless you are describing present or future situations. Use the active voice rather than the passive voice.  For example, instead of writing "The food was eaten by the pig", write "The pig ate the food". The active voice is easier to read and reduces the sentence length  It can be acceptable to write in more than one tense in the literature review e.g. "Brown (1995) showed that the brain is more fully developed at birth than other organs". In this case the present tense can be used for the second half of the sentence because its gives knowledge that is universally accepted.  Materials and methods should be written in the past tense. "The experiment was designed in the form of a 6 x 6 Latin square." Remarks about Results should mainly be in the past tense. "When a high protein diet was fed to rabbits they grew rapidly."
  • 151.  Sentence construction  The purpose of any paper is to convey information and ideas. This cannot be done with long involved sentences. Keep sentences short, not more than 30 words in length. A sentence should contain one idea or two related ideas. A paragraph should contain a series of related ideas.  Choice of words  Words have precise meanings and to use them correctly adds clarity and precision to prose. Look at the following pairs of words that are often used in scientific texts. Learn how to use them correctly: Fewer, less; infer, imply; as, because; disinterested, uninterested ; alibi, excuse ; data, datum; later, latter; causal, casual; loose, lose; mute, moot; discrete, discreet. See, for example: Less active blood cells vs. Fewer active blood cells  Use a standard dictionary and Roget's Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases to find the correct meaning of words.
  • 152.  Use of pronouns  When you write ‘it’, ‘this’, ‘which’ or ‘they’ are you sure that the meaning is plain? A pronoun usually deputizes for the nearest previous noun of the same number (singular or plural) - The cows ate the food; they were white. The cows ate the food; it was white.  Correct spelling, including the use of plurals  Some words have alternative spelling e.g. tyre, tire, grey, gray; draft, draught, often the difference is between the American and British spelling. In other cases an apparent misspelling is a misuse of a word e.g. practice, practise.  The plural of many words in English is achieved by adding an s (or es) to the single. However some words have the same form in both the singular and plural. Other words are already plural such as people and equipment, so don't use peoples (unless you are referring to different groups of people or different ethnic groups) and equipments. Adopted words sometimes take on the plural of the original language, for example datum becomes data and fungus become fungi.
  • 153.  Use of abstract words  Use the concrete and not the abstract to achieve clarity and precision: "Cessation of plant growth operated in some of the plots." Obviously a cessation cannot operate (Some plots of plants did not grow during the trial)  The abstract noun basis is commonly overworked. "Measurement of storm intensity involves recording staff to be available both day and night on a 24 hour basis." "To measure storm intensity recording staff have to be in duty throughout the day and night."  Be careful with the use of the present participle(Gerund):  After standing in boiling water for an hour, examine the flask.  The gerund always ends in 'ing.' If the sentence is left without a subject (a hanging participle) then the action of the verb is transferred to the person taking the action.
  • 154.  Misuse of emotional words (avoid)  One cannot develop a logical argument using emotional words: e.g. progressive, reckless, crank, sound, good, correct, improved, superior.  Superlatives  Very, more, much, have a place when used economically. As superlatives they are out of place in scientific writing. Superlatives such as gigantic, earth shattering or fantastic should never be used.  Qualifying the absolute  Some adjectives are absolute and cannot be modified such as: sterile or unique. Other adjectives, such as pregnacy, have to be qualified with care. A petri dish is either sterile or not sterile. It cannot be very sterile, quite sterile or fairly sterile; An object is unique, and although a woman can be recently pregnant, she can't be slightly pregnant.
  • 155.  Loose expressions (avoid)  In each selected village 30 farmers were interviewed, namely 10 large, average and small farmers. Is the reference here to the size of the farmers or to the size of their farms?  Grandiloquence  Avoid the use of scientific jargon. The aim in scientific writing is to inform using simple language not to confuse by the use of grandiose sounding words and phrases.  Grandiloquent phrase: The ideal fungicide ... must combine high fungitoxicity with low mammalian toxicity and phytotoxicity, and with an absence of tainting or other deleterious side effects when the fruit is processed.  Simple replacement: The ideal fungicide ... must kill fungus effectively, but must be harmless to animals and plants, and must cause no tainting or other harmful side effects when the fruit is processed.
  • 156.  Genteelism  "I" is not immodest in a research worker and therefore use it (although not to excess), NOT "The present writer" or "The author of this communication".  The Misuse of the definite article "The"  Avoid overuse of the word "the" . Only use when it applies to a particular item that has been referred to before. All others could be omitted.  The excessive use of the pronoun "it"  Avoid excessive use of the indefinite pronoun "it".  "It would thus appear that" can be replaced by "apparently";  "It is evident that" by "evidently";  Other commonly used phrases such as: "It will be seen that"; "It is interesting to note that" and "It is thought that", can be left out without any meaning being lost.
  • 157.  Avoid verbal obscurantisms and use simple words  Some phrases show sloppy thinking. For example the phrase 'It has long been known that' usually means that the writer has not bothered to look up the reference.  ‘Correct to an order of magnitude’ probably means that the answer was wrong.  ‘Almost reached significance at the 5% level’ usually means a selective interpretation of results.  Text is easier to understand if simple words and phrases can be used to replace more complex or foreign ones. For example analogous can be replaced by similar ; utilise by use; terminate by end.
  • 158.  Punctuation  Colon (:) and semi colon (;)  A colon is used when a list or explanation follows, a semi colon is used to separate two or more related clauses provided each clause forms a full sentence.  Commas  A comma is put in a sentence to denote a brief pause between groups of words:  I will show you the paper about which I was speaking, but it is not as useful as I first thought.  Or to separate subclauses:  Professor Brown, who is in charge of recruiting for the University, said that the latest estimates were higher than those for this time last year.  Finally to separate all items in a list except for the last two;  The following items may be imported duty free into Azania: Animals, cereals, plants, fruit, trees, legumes and nuts.
  • 159.  Other points concerning the use of English  A singular verb must always be associated with a singular noun. Similarly a plural verb with a plural noun. Difficulties arise especially with nouns like, for example, livestock and data, which are plural.  Numbers and Units  Quantities should be given only as many significant figures as can be justified. For example the metabolic rate of an animal should not be quoted as 326.18W if it can be measured to only within about 5%. It should be written as 330W.  The figures within a number should be grouped in threes (with a small space between each group) so that they are easier to read. Commas should be avoided. For example: 21 306.1 not 21,306.1  Concerning units, the Systeme International (SI) should be used where possible.  When incorporating statistical data into the text, the test used (eg chi squared) should be included.
  • 160.  Common differences in spelling  AE BE AE BE  color colour center centre  organization organisation dialog dialogue  traveling travelling defence defense  recognize recognise analyze analyse  Tenses  AE BE  burned/was burned burnt/was burnt  learned/has learned learnt/has learnt  (see also: dream, kneel, lean, leap, spell, spill, spoil)
  • 161.  http://www.ag.iastate.edu/aginfo/checklist.ph p  Word Usage in Scientific Writing  The following list includes some of the troublesome words, terms, and expressions most frequently found in Experiment Station journal paper and bulletin manuscripts. In reporting and recording research, try to be as accurate and precise in describing it as in doing it. Avoid the ambiguous and "faddish." For the benefit of international readers, especially, use standard words in their established meanings.
  • 162.  Above ("the above method," "mentioned above," etc.) -- Often, you are referring to something preceding, but not necessarily above; a loose reference, convenient for writers, but not for readers. Be specific. You know exactly what and where, but your readers have to search.  Affect, effect -- Affect is a verb and means to influence. Effect, as a verb, means to bring about; as a noun, effect means result.  All of, both of -- Just "all" or "both" will serve in most instances.  Alternate, alternative -- Be sure which you mean.  And (to begin a sentence) -- You have been told not to do this in grade school. But teacher's purpose was to keep you from using fragmentary sentences; either "and" or "but" may be used to begin complete sentences. And both are useful transitional words between related or contrasting statements.
  • 163.  Apparently (apparent) -- means obviously, clearly, plainly evident, but also means seemingly or ostensibly as well as observably. You know the meaning that you intend, but readers may not. Ambiguity results. Use obvious(ly), clear(ly), seeming(ly), evident(ly), observable or observably, etc., as needed to remove doubt.  Appear, appears -- Seem(s)? "He always appears on the scene, but never seems to know what to do." "Marley's ghost appeared but seemed harmless.“  At the present time, at this point in time -- Say "at present" or "now" if necessary at all.
  • 164.  Below -- See comment about above.  But (to begin a sentence) -- see "And" and "However".  By means of -- Most often, just "by" will serve and save words.  Case -- Can be ambiguous, misleading, or ludicrous because of different connotations; e.g., "In the case of Scotch whiskey,...." Case also is a frequent offender in padded, drawn-out sentences. For "in this case," try "in this instance.“  Commas and punctuation -- The trend is toward less punctuation (particularly fewer commas), but that demands careful writing, without misplaced or dangling elements. Do not omit commas before the conjunctions in compound sentences. Most journals, but not all, use final commas before "and" or "or" in series; check the journal.
  • 165.  Compare with, compare to -- Compare with means to examine differences and similarities; compare to means to represent as similar. One may conclude that the music of Brahms compares to that of Beethoven, but to do that, one must first compare the music of Brahms with that of Beethoven.  Comprise -- Before misuse, comprise meant to contain, include, or encompass (not to constitute or compose) and still does, despite two now opposite meanings. Use and meanings now are so confused and mixed that "comprise" is best avoided altogether.  Correlated with, correlated to -- Although things may be related to one another, things are correlated with one another.  Different from, different than -- Different from! Also, one thing differs from another, although you may differ with your colleagues.
  • 166.  Due to -- Make sure that you don't mean because of. Due is an adjective modifier and must be directly related to a noun, not to a concept or series of ideas gleaned from the rest of a statement. "Due to the fact that..." is an attempt to weasel out.  During the course of, in the course of -- Just use "during" or "in.“  Either....or, neither...nor -- Apply to no more than two items or categories. Similarly, former and latter refer only to the first and second of only two items or categories.  Etc. -- Use at least two items or illustrations before "and so forth" or "etc.“  Experience(d) -- To experience something is sensory; inanimate, unsensing things (lakes, soils, enzymes, streambeds, farm fields, etc.) do not experience anything.
  • 167.  Following -- "After" is more precise if "after" is the meaning intended. "After [not following] the procession, the leader announced that the ceremony was over.“  High(er), low(er) -- Much too often used, frequently ambiguously or imprecisely, for other words such as greater, lesser, larger, smaller, more, fewer; e.g., "Occurrences of higher concentrations were lower at higher levels of effluent outflow." One interpretation is that greater concentrations were fewer or less frequent as effluent volume(s) increased, but others also are possible.  However -- Place it more often within a sentence or major element rather than at the beginning or end. "But" serves better at the beginning.
  • 168.  Hyphening of compound or unit modifiers -- Often needed to clarify what is modifying what; e.g., a small-grain harvest (harvest of small grain) is different from a small grain harvest (small harvest of all grain), a batch of (say, 20) 10-liter containers is different from a batch of 10 [1-] liter containers, and a man eating fish is very different from a man-eating fish!  In order to -- For brevity, just use "to"; the full phrase may be used, however, [in order] to achieve useless padding.  Irregardless -- No, regardless. But irrespective might do.  It should be mentioned, noted, pointed out, emphasized, etc. -- Such preambles often add nothing but words. Just go ahead and say what is to be said.
  • 169.  It was found, determined, decided, felt, etc. -- Are you being evasive? Why not put it frankly and directly? (And how about that subjective "felt"?)  Less(er), few(er) -- "Less" refers to quantity; "fewer" to number.  Majority, vast majority -- See if most will do as well or better. Look up "vast.“  Myself -- Not a substitute for me. "This paper has been reviewed by Dr. Smith and myself" and "The report enclosed was prepared by Dr. Jones and myself" are incorrect; me would have been correct in all instances. (Use of I also would have been wrong in those examples.) Some correct uses of myself: I found the error myself. I myself saw it happen. I am not myself today. I cannot convince myself.
  • 170.  Partially, partly -- Compare the meanings (see also impartially). Partly is the better, simpler, and more precise word when partly is meant.  Percent, percentage -- Not the same; use percent only with a number.  Predominate, predominant -- Predominate is a verb. Predominant is the adjective; as an adverb, predominantly (not "predominately").  Prefixes -- (mid, non, pre, pro, re, semi, un, etc.) -- Usually not hyphened in U.S. usage except before a proper name (pro-Iowa) or numerals (mid-60s) or when lack of a hyphen makes a word ambiguous or awkward. Preengineered is better hyphened as pre-engineered, one of the few exceptions.
  • 171.  Principle, principal -- They're different; make sure which you mean.  Prior to, previous to -- Use before, preceding, or ahead of. There are prior and subsequent events that occur before or after something else, but prior to is the same kind of atrocious use that attempts to substitute "subsequent to" for "after.“  Proven -- Although a proven adjective, stick to proved for the past participle. "A proven guilty person must first have been proved guilty in court.“  Provided, providing -- Provided (usually followed by "that") is the conjunction; providing is the participle.  Reason why -- Omit why if reason is used as a noun. The reason is...; or, the reason is that... (i.e., the reason is the why).
  • 172.  Since -- has a time connotation; use "because" or "inasmuch as" when either is the intended meaning.  Small in size, rectangular in shape, blue in color, tenuous in nature, etc. -- Redundant.  That and which -- Two words that can help, when needed, to make intended meanings and relationships unmistakable, which is important in reporting scientific information. If the clause can be omitted without leaving the modified noun incomplete, use which and enclose the clause within commas or parentheses; otherwise, use that. Example: "The lawn mower, which is broken, is in the garage." But, "The lawn mower that is broken is in the garage; so is the lawn mower that works."
  • 173.  To be -- Frequently unnecessary. "The differences were [found] [to be] significant.“  Varying -- Be careful to distinguish from various or differing. In saying that you used varying amounts or varying conditions, you are implying individually changing amounts or conditions rather than a selection of various or different ones.  Where -- Use when you mean where, but not for "in which," "for which," etc.  Which is, that were, who are, etc. -- Often not needed. For example, "the data that were related to age were analyzed first" means that the data related to age were analyzed first. Similarly, for "the site, which is located near Ames," try "the site, located near Ames" or "the site, near Ames." Rephrasing sometimes can help. Instead of "a survey, which was conducted in 1974" or "a survey conducted in 1974," try "a 1974 survey."
  • 174.  Beware of misplaced or dangling modifiers and pronoun antecedent problems.  The difficulty here is that you, as the author, know exactly to which each has reference even though not explicitly stated. Your reader, however, doesn't have this advantage, and the result may be confusing, misleading, or funny.  EXAMPLES:  "Using multiple-regression techniques, the animals in Experiment I were...„  "In assessing the damage, the plants exhibited numerous lesions."  "The spiders were inadvertently discovered while repairing a faulty growth chamber."
  • 175.  Ambiguous pronoun antecedents  "The flavor was evaluated by an experienced taste panel, and it was deemed obnoxious.“  "All samples in Lot II were discarded when the authors found that they were contaminated with alcohol, rendering them unstable." [and unable to think clearly?]  "The guidelines were submitted to the deans, but they subsequently were ignored."
  • 176.  Language Issues – Summary/Conclusion • Be more or less specific • Avoid clichés like the plague. They’re old hat. • Verbs has to agree with their subjects. • Prepositions are not words to end sentences with. • And don’t start a sentence with a conjunction • It is wrong to ever split an infinitive. • Parenthetical remarks (however relevant) are (usually) unnecessary. • Also, never, ever use repetitive redundancies. • No sentence fragments. • Contractions aren’t good style and shouldn’t be used in formal writing. • Do not be redundant; do not use more words than necessary. • One should never generalize. • One-word sentences? Eliminate. • Eliminate commas, that are, not necessary. • Never use a big word when a diminutive one would suffice.
  • 177.  Language Issues – Summary/Conclusion • Kill all exclamation points !!! • Use words correctly, irregardless how others use them. • Understatement is always the absolutely best way to put forth earth-shaking ideas. • Use the apostrophe in it‘s proper place and omit it when ist not needed. • Who needs rhetorical questions? • Finally: • Proofread carefully to see if you any words out.
  • 178.  2. Technicalities  Typesetting  WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get)  Microsoft Word - versatile commercial document composing tool. Nevertheless it does have 1 very important inherent drawback: equations quality.  OpenOffice.org - ...  WYSIWYM (What You See Is What You Mean)  LaTeX - a macro package around TeX, which is a typesetting system capable of providing truly high-quality material of any kind
  • 179.  Reference management software  Reference management software, citation management software or personal bibliographic management software is software for authors to use for recording and utilising bibliographic citations (references). Once a citation has been recorded, it can be used time and again in generating bibliographies, such as lists of references in articles.  These software packages normally consist of a database in which full bibliographic references can be entered, plus a system for generating selective lists or articles in the different formats required by publishers and learned journals. Modern reference management packages can usually be integrated with word processors so that a reference list in the appropriate format is produced automatically as an article is written, reducing the risk that a cited source is not included in the reference list.  Examples: Endnote, BibTeX ;  Internet source for literature: ISI/Web of Science
  • 180.  Graphics software  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_writing  Computer algebra systems  Numerical software  Plotting programs (graphing programs)  Statistical software
  • 181.  Practice of writing research papers  http://www.dentistry.leeds.ac.uk/elective/WRI TE%20UP.htm
  • 182.  Writing a research paper  General points:  Give yourself enough time to work. Remember that writing is a process. A good paper doesn't come out perfect first time for anyone. Even the best scientists have to struggle to organize their papers and everyone, including you, needs to go through several revisions before they reach the final product... so don't feel bad, and don't skimp on revisions!  The quality of the writing reflects the quality of the research! Use clear, direct prose. Make every word count. Don't use extra words, or excessively long words when shorter ones will do. Write as you would speak.  Find a good (?) paper from a respected journal and use it as a model for your own writing.
  • 183.  Start with an outline of the paper sketching out what's going to go in the introduction etc. Use subtopics and subject sentences to build your outline.  Then write a rough draft that includes the main ideas and fleshes out your topic sentences into paragraphs in rough form (don't worry about details like exact references, full sentences etc at this point).  Use the active voice when possible. There is a trend in scientific publishing toward writing "I measured 50ml..." rather than "50ml was measured". The active voice is usually less wordy and more interesting to read. However, there is a problem when writing in the active voice as a single author in that the incessant "I" in the materials and methods can become a distraction, and should be minimized. Multiple authored papers can duck this problem with the more acceptable "we".
  • 184.  Once you have finished with your rough draft, take a break before rereading your paper. Then start to fiddle with the details (cleaning up the prose etc)..  Let a friend or colleague read your draft. Listen to what they say.  Write your second draft.  Spell check and check the grammar carefully. Make sure the ideas are outlined clearly and flow logically within the text.  Publish! (better: submit!)
  • 185.  Check before submission that you:  Numbered the text pages consecutively, beginning with the first or title page.  Numbered your tables (typed separately from the text, not more than one on a page) consecutively in the order in which you want them to appear.  Read the title and headings of each table objectively to determine whether the table can be understood without reference to the text  Searched the text for references to tables to make certain that each table is referred to and that each of the references is to the appropriate table.
  • 186.  Indicated by a marginal note a place for each table.  Examined your text, tables and legends to make certain that each reference cited is accurately represented in the reference list.  Examined your reference list to make certain that each work listed there is accurately referred to in the text, tables or legends.  Examined each item in the bibliography section for accuracy of dates, wording, spelling and other details.  Prepared adequate legends for all illustrations (double-spaced on a separate page)
  • 187.  Made certain that illustrations are numbered consecutively in the order in which you want them to appear in your article, that each of them is referred to at least once in the text, and that each reference is to the appropriate illustration.  Indicated by a marginal note a place for the figure.  Reconsidered the appropriateness of your title and abstract and your index terms (if any).  Reviewed the special requirements of the journal to which you are submitting your manuscript and made certain that you have met them.  Carefully read your final typescript at least twice, the second time preferably on a different day.
  • 188.  In case of submission by mail: prepared as many copies of your text, tables and illustrations as are required.  or  In case of online submission: prepared the files according to the instructions for authors, and provided the software you have used.  Kept for your files a complete copy of your manuscript and accompanying material.  Enclosed copies of releases for material requiring releases.  Included on the first page of the typescript the address to which letters, proofs and requests for reprints should be sent. Note: nowadays, tables and figures are usually inserted in the (electronic) manuscript at appropriate positions, with captions included. Refer to “author instructions“ in case!
  • 189.  Letter to the editor  Example (AE): Dear Professor ….: Please find enclosed our manuscript “Cluster Formation and Rheology of Photoreactive Nanoparticles”. We studied the cluster formation of photoreactive nanoparticles upon irradiation, and the effect of this process on the rheological behavior of dilute colloidal dispersions. Since our work should be of interest to many readers of ………., we have decided to submit our paper to your journal, hoping you will find it acceptable for publication. Sincerely …………
  • 190.  Ethical Policy  From:  “Best Practice Guidelines on Publication Ethics: A Publisher‘s Perspective“  Wiley-Blackwell  see www.BlackwellPublishing.com/PublicationEthics
  • 191.  Authors must disclose all sources of funding for their research and its publication.  Authors must disclose relevant competing interests (both financial and personal)  Credit for authorship should be based on:  - substantial contributions to research design, or the acquisition, analysis or interpretation of the data  - drafting the paper or revising it critically  - approval of the submitted and final version  Authors should meet all three criteria.  Authors must acknowledge individuals who do not qualify as authors but who contributed to the research
  • 192.  Authors must acknowledge any assistance they have received (e.g. provision of writing assistance, literature searching, data analysis, administrative support, supply of materials). If/how this assistance was funded should be described and included with other funding informations.  The copyright form (see journals webpages)  Authors must declare that the submitted work is their own and that copyright has not been breached in seeking its publication.  Authors should declare that the submitted work has not previously been published in full, and is not being considered for publication elsewhere.
  • 193.  Authors of manuscripts describing experiments involving human participants must give assurances that appropriate consent was obtained.  Authors of manuscripts describing experiments involving animals must give assurances that appropriate methods were used to minimize animal suffering.  For further instructions: see “guideline for authors“ on journals webpages
  • 194.  Responding to the editor:  Acceptance without revision  You need take no further action untile the proofs reach you, except prehaps write a note thanking the editor.  Minor revisions requested (“accepted“)  Consider the suggestions carefully, and if you agree that they will improve the paper, modify or rewrite sentences or sections as necessary. Retype any heavily corrected pages before you return the paper to the editor, but enclose the original corrected paper as well as the retyped copies. In your covering letter sent with the revised version, thank the editor and referees for their help and enclose a list of the substantial changes made in response to their suggestions; if you have rejected one or more of the recommendations, explain why.
  • 195.  Major revisions requested (“further consideration“)  You will have to think hard if the effort is worth while. You may eventually decide that the paper is better as it is, and proceed to try another editor (another journal) in the hope that he will agree with you.  Rejection  If the editor says the article is too specialized or outside the scope of the journal, your best course is to send it to another journal, first modifying the style to comply with the instructions of that journal.  If the article is rejected because is is said to be too long and in need of changes, consider shortening and modifying it according to the criticism – and then submit it to a different journal (if the editor had wanted to see a shorter version he would have offered to reconsider it after revision!).
  • 196.  Rejection (continued)  If the editor thinks the findings reported are unsound or that the evidence is incomplete, put the paper aside until you have obtained more and better information, unless you are sure that the editor and his advisers are wrong.  Consider contesting the decision only if you honestly think, after considerable reflection and at least one night‘s sleep, that the editor and referees have made a superficial or wrong judgement. In this case write a polite letter explaining as briefly as possible why you think the editor should reconsider his decision.
  • 197.  Summary: Steps in writing a paper  Assess your work: decide what, when and where to publish. Refrain from duplicate publication, and define your purpose in publishing.  Obtain and read the Instructions to Authors of the journal chosen  Decide who the authors will be  Draft a working title and abstract  Decide on the basic form of the paper  Collect the material under the major headings chosen
  • 198.  Steps in writing a paper - continued  Design tables, including their titles and footnotes; design or select illustrations and write titles and legends for them  Write for permission to reproduce any previously published tables, illustrations or other material that will be used  Write a topic outline and perhaps a sentence outline  Write, type or dictate a preliminary draft of the text quickly (!), to give it unity.  Check completeness of the references assembled  Put the manuscript or typescript away for a few days
  • 199.  Steps in writing a paper - continued  Re-examine the structure of the paper  Check the illustrations and tables and make the final versions  Re-read the references you cite and check your own accuracy in citing them; check for consistency, and reduce the number of abbreviations and footnotes  (Re)type the paper (= first draft)  Correct the grammar and polish the style  Type several copies of the corrected paper (= second draft)
  • 200.  Steps in writing a paper - continued  Ask for criticism from co-authors and friends  Make any necessary alterations  Compose a now title and abstract suitable for information retrieval, list the index terms and assemble the manuscript  Compile the reference list, cross-check references against the text, and ensure that all bibliographical details are correct  Retype (= penultimate version) and check typescript  Obtain a final critical review from a senior colleague  Make any final corrections (final version)
  • 201.  Steps in writing a paper - continued  Write a covering letter to the editor, enclosing copies of letters giving you permission to reproduce any previously published material or to cite unpublished work  Check that all parts of the paper are present, and post as many copies as specified to the editor  If the editor returns the paper, revise it as necessary, send it elsewhere, or abandon it  Correct the proofs
  • 202.  Scientific ranking of journals – the impact factor  From: http://www.sciencegateway.org/rank/index.html
  • 203. Journals Ranked by Impact: Mater.Sci. Rank 2007 Impact Factor Impact 2003-07 Impact 1981-2007 1 Prog. Mater. Sci. (20.85) Nature Materials (37.04) Mat. Sci. Eng. R (69.87) 2 Nature Materials (19.78) Mat. Sci. Eng. R (31.54) Prog. Mater. Sci. (65.57) 3 Nature Nanotechnol. (14.96) Ann. Rev. Mater. Res. (18.77) Ann. Rev. Mater. Sci. (49.05) 4 Mat. Sci. Eng. R (14.40) Prog. Mater. Sci. (17.76) Int. Mater. Reviews (40.38) 5 Nano Letters (9.63) Nano Letters (17.48) Nature Materials (37.04) 6 Advanced Materials (8.19) Advanced Materials (16.28) CR Solid St. Mater. Sci. (32.83) 7 Adv. Funct. Mater. (7.50) CR Solid St. Mater. Sci. (12.48) Advanced Materials (32.36) 8 Small (6.41) Adv. Funct. Mater. (10.53) Acta Metall. Mater. (26.54) 9 MRS Bulletin (5.17) Curr. Op. Sol. St. Mat. (9.71) Ann. Rev. Mater. Res. (25.61) 10 Chem. Materials (4.88) Chem. Materials (9.63) J. Mech. Phys. Solids (23.45)
  • 204. Journals Ranked by Impact: Chemistry Rank 2002 Impact Factor Impact 1998-2002 Impact 1981-2002 1 Chemical Reviews (20.99) Chemical Reviews (39.95) Chemical Reviews (119.37) 2 Acc. Chemical Res. (15.90) Acc. Chemical Res. (27.70) Acc. Chemical Res. (72.84) 3 Chem. Soc. Reviews (8.72) Chem. Soc. Reviews (23.49) Chem. Soc. Reviews (39.13) 4 Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. (7.67) J. Am. Chem. Soc. (11.98) J. Am. Chem. Soc. (36.25) 5 J. Am. Chem. Soc. (6.20) Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. (10.78) J. Computat. Chem. (29.84) 6 J. Combin. Chemistry (5.19) Topics Curr. Chem. (9.13) Topics Curr. Chem. (29.14) 7 Nano Letters (5.03) Rev. Computat. Chem. (8.64) Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. (25.90) 8 Topics Curr. Chem. (5.00) Chemistry-Europ. J. (7.83) J. Chem. Soc.- Chem. (19.87) 9 Chemistry-Europ. J. (4.24) Liebigs Ann.-Recueil (7.07) Rev. Computat. Chem. (19.44) 10 Chem. Communications (4.04) Chem. Communications (6.98) Marine Chemistry (18.31)
  • 205. Recent Impact Factors The Ten Most-Cited Journals of 2006 Ranked by total citations tallied in 2006 (the most recent year covered by Thomson Scientific Journal Citation Reports) to previously published articles in each journal. Rank Journal Citations in 2006 Rank for 2005 1 Journal of Biological Chemistry 410,903 1 2 Nature 390,690 2 3 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA (PNAS) 371,057 3 4 Science 361,389 4 5 J. American Chemical Society 275,769 5 6 Physical Review Letters 268,454 6 7 Physical Review B 212,714 7 8 New England Journal of Medicine 177,505 8 9 Astrophysical Journal 162,136 9 10 Journal of Chemical Physics 157,334 10
  • 206. Science Output – Top Ten Countries Rank Country Papers 1998-2008 1 United States 2,798,448 2 Japan 757,586 3 Germany 723,804 4 England 641,768 5 France 517,096 6 People's Republic of China 511,216 7 Canada 388,471 8 Italy 370,053 9 Spain 271,753 10 Russia 262,982 SOURCE: Essential Science IndicatorsSM from Thomson Reuters
  • 207. Science Impact – Top Ten Countries Rank Country Papers 1993-2003 Avg. citations per paper 1 Switzerland 142,982 13.24 2 United States 2,799,593 12.63 3 Netherlands 202,184 11.33 4 Denmark 79,929 11.14 5 Sweden 158,136 10.85 6 Scotland 96,571 10.75 7 England 619,707 10.74 8 Canada 370,928 10.25 9 Finland 74,106 10.17 10 Belgium 103,181 9.74 SOURCE: Essential Science IndicatorsSM from Thomson Reuters The top ten countries ranked according to average citations per paper in all fields (that is, 22 main subject areas, (including general social sciences))
  • 208. The end  Questions/comments ???  Next:  1. Present your own figures (evtl. with legends)  2. “Write a paper (first draft)“ based on selected sets of figures with legends/captions (title, abstract, (introduction), (materials/methods), (results and discussion), conclusions)