1 / 46

HOW TO WRITE A SCIENTIFIC PAPER

HOW TO WRITE A SCIENTIFIC PAPER. Walter A. Zin, MD, DSc. Laboratory of Respiration Physiology Carlos Chagas Filho Institute of Biophysics Federal University of Rio de Janeiro. What is a Scientific Paper ?.

maina
Download Presentation

HOW TO WRITE A SCIENTIFIC PAPER

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HOW TO WRITE A SCIENTIFIC PAPER Walter A. Zin, MD, DSc Laboratory of Respiration Physiology Carlos Chagas Filho Institute of Biophysics Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

  2. What is a Scientific Paper ? A scientific paper is a written and published report describing original research results

  3. Writing a Research Paper • No single best way • Varies from paper to paper • Wait till data analyzed • Background reading • not too extensive • make notes; make notes of notes • write down sentences or parts of them • not during “writing time”

  4. Whom Writing For? • To please yourself? • Referees - to persuade the toughest one • Journal • - Choose before writing • - General vs. subespecialty journal

  5. Whom Writing For? • Strategies to choose the journal: • Where many of the papers cited were published? • Where do cited scientists publish their work? • Read the avertising statements of journals • Read the “scope” paragraph in the “I for A” • Read the table of contents of potential journals • Examine several articles in potential journals

  6. Sequence • Fix realistic schedule (moderate) • Decision is final • Adherence foresees a good outcome • Figures, tracings, tables • Methods and Results • Discussion and Introduction • Abstract and Title

  7. Structure • A good article has a definite structure, makes its point, and does not was space and time • The most difficult part in writing a scientific paper is planning its structure

  8. Structure • Biggest problems come first • A scaffold of headings and subheadings • IMRAD: each on a separate sheet • - In the first draft: random order, telegraphic style • - Afterwards: the ideas must be numbered and an order generated

  9. Subheadings • Signposts to reader • Every paragraph in early drafts • Final version: never over single paragraph • Hierarchy of sub-subs • Max of 3 for typographical distinction

  10. Writing Tools • Dictionary, well-thumbed • Thesaurus • Synonyms, shades of meaning • Check every word • Pencil, pen, computer • Paper bin

  11. Methods Section • Enough information for an experienced investigator to repeat your work • Avoid tiresome detail • Cut-and-paste from previous work of the author(s), not somebody else’s • It is the first section of the paper in which subheadings should be used

  12. Results Section • Refer to data (Fig. X, Table Y) • Don’t repeat numbers in Tables • Can state numbers from Figures if precision is required • A lot of numbers, make Table

  13. Introduction • 2-3 paragraphs, <450 words • First paragraph • Introduce broad area • Second paragraph • Explicit rationale • • Last paragraph • - Hypothesis

  14. Discussion Section • First paragraph • State major findings • Paraphrase abstract • Last paragraph • “In summary…” (2-3 sentences) • “In conclusion…” (biggest mensage, return to Intro, avoid speculation, avoid “need more work”

  15. Discussion Section • Middle paragraphs • Base each on a major result • Always focus on your results • Never discuss prior work without reference to your work • Refer Tables and Figures

  16. Abstract • Précis writing • Informative, not descriptive • Some numbers, but not in excess • Determines if paper will be read • Is distributed freely in databases

  17. Title • Max info in least words • <12 words • <100 characters • The title is a label • Should almost never contain abbreviations • Question: easier to understand, more impact • State results

  18. Figures • Do before writing • Redraw, redraw, prune clutter • Least non-data-ink • Max 4 lines, all solid • No caption • Reduce to 1 column in journal • Reduced xerox copy to check out • Original should be <3x final

  19. Figures • Axes • Minimize tick marks • Don’t number each tick • Lettering • Uniform, lower case • Minimize, avoid bold • After reduction, 2-3 mm high • Legend • Gives message

  20. Tables • Single unit, understood without text • Prune, prune: columns, lines • Exceed 1 sheet: redraw • Avoid narrow/broad; rotate all 90o • No added vertical/horizontal lines • If small: move data to text

  21. Of Writing • At assigned time: write (not read) • Don’t wait for the muses • A craft, not an art: practice • Ideas come while writing • Read good writers, especially non-medical

  22. Momentum • Fix a schedule • Monitor progress • Write by a biological clock • One page a week: torture • Skip trouble spots • Writer’s block: unacceptable

  23. Concentration • Need stretch of several hours • When time is short: prepare, revise • Avoid distractions: phone, beeper • Location • -Very boring area • - Nothing to distract

  24. First Draft • Write as quickly as possible • As if thinking out loud • Get everything down • Ignore spelling, grammar, style • Skip troublesome words • Correct and rewrite only when the whole text is on paper • Do not split the manuscript among the co-authors

  25. Good Writing • Content, accuracy • Clarity • Precision • Logic • Order of presentation

  26. Clarity • Clear • Exact • Ambiguity, inconsistency • Wooly words • Concise • Least words • Short words • One word vs many

  27. Simplify • a majority of = most • at the present time = now • give rise to = cause • in some cases = sometimes • is defined as = is • it is believed that = I think • on the basis of = by • pooled together = pooled • subsequent to = after • with the result that = so that

  28. Use and Misuse of English • Tense • Previously published work: present tense • Your own work: past tense • Voice • Active more precise and less wordy than passive • Name the agent, even “I” or “we” • Singulars and plurals

  29. Use and Misuse of English • Punctuation • Hyphens • Pile-ups of nouns or phrases • Numbers

  30. Bad Writing • Words don’t do justice to your ideas • If multiple mistakes in spelling and syntax, reviewer suspects similar sloppiness in the lab

  31. Style • Clear, orderly presentation • Reads comfortably • Science vs literature

  32. Writing • Reshape, refine, tighten up • Juggle words, change sentences around • Strengthen transition between sentences • Check narrative flow • After several drafts ask for a second opinion

  33. Writing: Clutter • All first drafs have too many words • Successive drafts: prune vigorously • Strip every sentence • Look for excessive adverbs, adjectives • Writing improves in proportion to deletion of unnecessary words

  34. Writing:Abbreviations and Acronyms • Liked by authors, hated by readers • Reading should not require a glossary • Unwieldy word occurring > 10 times

  35. Writing: Sentences • Only one idea in a sentence • Keep short: <20 words • Vary length • Long sentences: greater risk of grammatical error

  36. Writing: Paragraph • The unit of thought in a group of sentences • Subheading over each one in early drafts • Not too long solid block of printing (<125 words) • Long paragraph: bad

  37. Writing: Narrative Flow • Telling a story • Reader follows from start to end • Writing is sequential: logic is the glue • Sentences hold hands • Smooth transitions • Every step is inevitable

  38. Rewriting • Secret of writing is rewriting • Secret of rewriting is re-thinking

  39. Typing • Clean • Wide margins (2.5 cm) • On one side of the sheet only • Adherence to the style of the journal • Proofread, proofread, proofread

  40. Authorship • Decided as early as possible • Should include persons who: • Can defend the intellectual content, including data and conclusions • Must be willing to concede publicly any errors • In the case of fraud be willing to state publicly the nature and extent, and account for its occurrence

  41. Authorship: Criteria • All the following criteria should be met: • Generate at least part of the intellectual content (conception or design, data analysis and interpretation) • Drafting, reviewing or revising critically for important intellectual content • Final approval of the version to be published

  42. Authorship: Order • Some journals use the alphabetical order • Most of them assume an order based on each author’s importance to the study • The first author is primarily responsible for collecting and analyzing data, and writing • The last one, an established investigator, assumes the overall responsibility for the study • The middle authors are listed according to their order of importance to the study

  43. Authorship: Responsibilities • The authors must comply with the following rules when submitting the manuscript for publication: • The manuscript is not under consideration elsewhere and the research will not be submitted elsewhere until a final decision has been made by the journal • The manuscript is a trustful, original work without fabrication, fraud or plagiarism • The authors have made an important scientific contribution and are familiar with the primary data • The authors have read the manuscript and take responsibility for its content, and understand that if the paper, or part of it, is found to be faulty or fraudulent, they share responsibility

  44. Authorship: Conflict of Interest • All funding sources supporting the work and all institutional or corporate affiliations of the authors must be acknowledged • The authors must certify that they have no commercial association that might pose a conflict of interest in connection with the submitted paper

  45. Benefits of Writing • Benefit greater to author than reader • Invaluable mental discipline • Enhances clear thinking • Making a subject intelligible to others means you understand it • Improve your reading skills • Satisfies a creative instinct

More Related