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You should already have started to write your first/next paper, whether you know it or not!. Ethics committee applications, job applications, grant applications, protocol presentations etc allow you to rehearse in writing:context, background, literature reviewemergent hypothesesa sense of motivat
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1. How to Write a Scientific Paper Ed Bullmore
2. You should already have started to write your first/next paper, whether you know it or not! Ethics committee applications, job applications, grant applications, protocol presentations etc allow you to rehearse in writing:
context, background, literature review
emergent hypotheses
a sense of motivation for the study
major study design elements
3. Introduction (1): Context, background, literature review Make a short, simple opening statement of the context in a few, accessible sentences - avoiding over-ambitious vagueness or immediately impenetrable jargon
“Hitherto, the nature of consciousness has proved elusive.”
“AR models of residual autocorrelation will fail for 1/f noise”
Background, literature review
remember this is not a review - so be selective, play favourites
remember your paper will be peer-reviewed, by prior autors in the field, so don’t be too selective...
acknowledge history!
4. Introduction (2) Hypotheses
inevitable, refutable, empirically specific, statistically testable
written down a priori
Motivation
why should you bother writing this paper and why should I bother reading it?
5. MethodsMajor study design elements Sample
size, with respect to power
composition, with respect to population and stratification
Measurements
observational
experimental
Statistical models and testing
factorial structure
test statistics or outcome measures
distributions including priors
hypothesis testing, type 1 and type 2 error control
6. Results Use figures and tables with self-contained legends to convey your most important results “at a glance”
Let your readers see as much as possible of the data for themselves, without losing narrative coherence
use descriptive statistics/graphics as well as hypothesis tests
oragnise presentation so that logically or substantively related results are juxtaposed
7. Discussion It is OK to use a less constrained, more conversational style
Start positive, headlining key results in context
return to hypotheses
be thoughtful about any differences between your work and the existing literature
Do not simply rehearse results
interpretation, synthesis, predictive speculation
avoid blob-by-blob decompositions of complex function in fMRI papers
pay attention to unexpected/discrepant results
Explicitly consider the limitations of your work
8. Title, authors, abstract:The really important stuff
9. Title, authors, abstract:the really important stuff The title is the only part of your paper most people will read - make it clear, self-contained, descriptive
The abstract is vitally important - without doubt the most important 200+ words in the paper
tailor it to target journal
report results
use key words for literature searching
Authors - first, second, last and corresponding
seek guidance from your supervisor
10. How to publish a scientific paper (1) Think about target journals early on
high impact equals tight word count
impact is not always a six letter word
if you aim low you can’t subsequently move up the food chain
if you aim high you may have to allow for turnaround time (rejection) or “second album syndrome” (success)
Obey instructions to authors
use a bibliography manager
acknowledge grant support, conflict of interest
11. How to publish a scientific paper (2) Dealing with reviews
anticipate revision: it is almost inevitable and generally beneficial
organise the final version of the paper and all ancillary data carefully before submission
try not to take criticism personallyor as a reflection of incompetence on the part of reviewers
their failure to understand is your lack of clarity
be respectful, exact and direct in responding to the editor
if the reviews are too negative to justify acceptance, incorporate any helpful comments and resubmit
whatever you do - do it sooner rather than later!
Dealing with proofs
Dealing with fame!