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WRITING CHEMICAL RESEARCH PAPERS. GENERAL SUMMARY. Types of Scientific Publications. Research journals (full papers, letters, technical notes)Review journalsConference proceedingsBooks and chapters in booksInternet journals. Why Publish?. Expected activity of researchersTo gain experience in
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1. CH450 CHEMICAL WRITING AND PRESENTATION
2. WRITING CHEMICAL RESEARCH PAPERS
GENERAL SUMMARY
3. Types of Scientific Publications Research journals (full papers, letters, technical notes)
Review journals
Conference proceedings
Books and chapters in books
Internet journals
4. Why Publish? Expected activity of researchers
To gain experience in writing papers
To get yourself known in the broader academic community
Increase chances of funding for further projects
5. Why Publish? Increase publication record
Responsibility to scientific
community/grant giving
body/society to disseminate
information
Professional development and
advancement
Personal satisfaction
6. Whose Responsibility is it to Publish? Student’s or supervisor’s?
No hard or fast rules.
Depends upon circumstances.
In general both the student and supervisor will work together on a publication.
7. Authorship Co-authors – people who have made significant contributions
writing
practical work
interpretation of results
planning project
8. Authorship Most scientific papers are multi-authored
Student and supervisor(s) normally co-authors - varies between disciplines
Acknowledge other contributions
9. Order of Authors Order of contribution
Alphabetical
First author usually considered to be ‘lead author’
Kudos of ‘name et al’
If leading author not first, indicated by e.g. *
10. Selecting a Journal Very important – one of first things to do
Match subject of paper to interests of journal
Status of journal (impact factors)
Read “Instructions for Authors”
Familiarize yourself with journal style
11. Impact Factors These vary from year to year!
A = no. of times articles published in 2008-2009 were cited in 2010
B = no. of articles published in 2008
Impact factor for 2010 = A/B
12. Process of Writing
Who writes it?
student, supervisor, both
Iterative process of redrafting and revising
Seeking advice from others
13. Structure of Papers Title
Authors and affiliations
Abstract
Introduction
Methods/Experimental Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References
14. Title
Read more than any other section
Needs to be informative but as short as possible
Abstract
Short summary of aims, methods, main findings – no references
Very important: used by on-line searches and abstracting journals
Key words
15. Introduction
Background to project
Places project in context
Rationale and aims
Fully referenced
Methods/Experimental
Precise account of how results were obtained so can be repeated by others
Style depends upon discipline and journal
May come after Results and Discussion
16. Results and Discussion
May be in one or two sections
Clear presentation of results (tabular, graphic)
Discussion of relevance in light of published work
Fully referenced
Limitations of method, accuracy of data etc
17.
18.
19. Acknowledgements Thank people (other than co-authors) who have helped you in the project: for technical support, for provision of materials, for help with spectra or statistics, etc.
Thank financial supporters
Thank reviewer for useful comments
20. Some things to watch for in the reference section: · Methods of citing references in text e.g. using numbers or Harvard System
· Order of surnames and initials
· Use of stops
· Use of brackets for year of publication
· Style to indicate volume number
· Style for referencing papers in edited volumes and books
· Citing web sites
21. Matters of Style Clarity (lack of ambiguity)
Importance of correct punctuation
The student says his supervisor is useless. The student, says his supervisor, is useless.
Succinctness
Interesting to read
Active or passive?
22. Some Golden Rules Be as brief as possible but include all essential information
Use clarity of expression and avoid ambiguities
Ensure conclusions follow logically from the evidence
23. Some More Golden Rules Make it as interesting to read as
possible
Ensure that you cite the relevant
literature and that your list of
references are all in the required
style, free of errors, and agree with
citations in text.
Set out according to the
Instructions for Authors.