public:rem4:rem4-16:writing_papers
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
public:rem4:rem4-16:writing_papers [2016/08/19 11:43] – thorisson2 | public:rem4:rem4-16:writing_papers [2024/04/29 13:33] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1 | ||
---|---|---|---|
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
- | ===== Writing A Comparative Experiment Paper ===== | + | [[public: |
+ | ---------- | ||
- | Index | + | ===== Writing |
- | + | ||
- | * Typical structure for a paper describing an experiment | + | |
- | * Audience: Who will be reading your paper? | + | |
- | * Writing | + | |
- | * The Five Key Points in Your Scientific | + | |
- | * How the Five Points Map Into your Paper Structure | + | |
- | * Common Mistakes | + | |
- | * Reviewing Scientific Papers: Key Roles of a Reviewer | + | |
- | * More Information for Getting the Details Right | + | |
- | * Next Project: Review an Introduction | + | |
\\ | \\ | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
+ | |||
+ | ====First 2 Questions: What is My Point & Who Do I Want to Read it?==== | ||
+ | | Ask this before you write your paper | Because a scientific paper has a title and a conclusion, they always have a **key point**. The answer to these two questions will determine the main message that your paper carries, which in turn determines the experimental paradigm, the methods, the presentation style, and your suggested future work. | | ||
+ | | What Is My Point? | Your paper has a title which either states your point explicitly or conveys it implicitly. //Example title with explicit point: Best-Case Cubesort is Better Than Best-Case Comb Sort. / Evidence for Robot Uprising is Meager at Best. Example title with implicit point: Challenges to Piaget' | ||
+ | |||
\\ | \\ | ||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | \\ | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
- | ====Typical Structure for a Paper Describing an Experiment==== | + | ====Audience: Who Will be Reading My Paper?==== |
- | | Abstract | + | | Ask this question before you start your research |
- | | Introduction | Overall | + | | Ask again before |
- | | Related work | Relatively dry discussion of prior work and how it is inadequate | + | |
- | | Contribution | Your idea. This is the topic of the paper. Describe it as clearly as you can. | | + | |
- | | Evaluation | + | |
- | | Results | + | |
- | | Discussion | + | |
- | | Conclusion | + | |
\\ | \\ | ||
Line 32: | Line 27: | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
- | ===Audience: Who will be reading your paper?=== | + | |
- | | Ask before you start your research | + | ====Typical Structure of an Empirical Paper==== |
- | | Ask again before | + | | |
+ | | Abstract | ||
+ | | Introduction | ||
+ | | Related work | Relatively dry discussion and summary of prior work that is relevant to the present work, and how it is inadequate | ||
+ | | Questions | ||
+ | | | ||
+ | | Results | ||
+ | | Discussion | ||
+ | | Conclusion | ||
+ | | Acknowledgments | ||
+ | | Citations | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
Line 41: | Line 46: | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
- | ===Writing Style=== | + | ====Writing Style==== |
- | | Pick your style - be consistent ! | | | + | | Pick your style |- be consistent ! | |
- | | The fewer words the better | Occam' | + | | The fewer words the better | Occam' |
- | | Clear sentence structure | Shorter sentences are better than long ones. Shorter = better; longer = worse. **Short = good!** \\ A paper that is hard to read is a bad paper! | + | | Clear sentence structure | Shorter sentences are better than long ones. Shorter = better; longer = worse. **Short = good!** \\ A paper that is hard to read is a bad paper! |
- | | First person vs. third person | Pick your style - be consistent! | | + | | First person vs. third person | Pick your style - be consistent! |
- | | A scientific paper is an argument | A paper presents arguments for a certain state of the world being true. This goes for all papers, including exploratory ones. **There is always an argument.** Try to make that argument as strong as possible and you will be on your way to a good paper. | | + | | A scientific paper is an argument | A paper presents arguments for a certain state of the world being true. This goes for all papers, including exploratory ones. **There is always an argument.** Try to make that argument as strong as possible and you will be on your way to a good paper. |
- | | A scientific paper tells a story | A story requires that the things described in it are connected: One thing leads to another. The same goes for scientific papers. The human mind has an easier time grasping things that follow logically. If you can't fit everything in the same paper (without making it disconnected or too long) write two papers - or a book. | | + | | A scientific paper tells a story | A story requires that the things described in it are connected: One thing leads to another. The same goes for scientific papers. The human mind has an easier time grasping things that follow logically. If you can't fit everything in the same paper (without making it disconnected or too long) write two papers - or a book. | |
- | | Acronyms | Avoid them as much as possible. Don't forget to explain what acronyms mean: NASA (National Aeronautics & Space Administration). | | + | | Acronyms | Avoid them like the plague. Some are necessary, of course (e.g. " |
\\ | \\ | ||
Line 55: | Line 60: | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
- | ===The Five Key Points in Your Scientific | + | ====The Five Key Points in Your Paper Exercise==== |
- | | What is your topic and why is the topic worth studying? | Present the context and motivation for your work. | | + | | What is your topic and why is the topic worth studying? | Present the context and motivation for your work. | |
- | | What's your contribution? | + | | What's your contribution? |
| Why is your contribution important? | To understand your ideas they will need some background (context in the form of motivations, | | Why is your contribution important? | To understand your ideas they will need some background (context in the form of motivations, | ||
- | | Can it be believed? | To evaluate and understand your ideas they want to see results of evaluations (results). | | + | | Can it be believed? | To evaluate and understand your ideas they want to see results of evaluations (results). |
- | | Can your results be trusted? | To understand the results you need to explain how you got them (experimental setup). | | + | | Can your results be trusted? | To understand the results you need to explain how you got them (experimental setup). |
Line 68: | Line 73: | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
- | ===How the Five Points Map Into your Paper Structure=== | + | ====How the Five Points Map Into your Paper Structure==== |
- | | Topic and motivation | Abstract (1-2 sentences) \\ Introduction | | + | | Topic and motivation | Abstract (1-2 sentences) \\ Introduction |
- | | What's your contribution? | + | | What's your contribution? |
- | | Why is your contribution important? | Abstract (1 sentence) \\ Motivation paragraph/ | + | | Why is your contribution important? | Abstract (1 sentence) \\ Motivation paragraph/ |
- | | Can it be believed? | Results section | | + | | Can it be believed? | Results section |
- | | Can your results be trusted? | Experimental setup / Evaluation sections | | + | | Can your results be trusted? | Experimental setup / Evaluation sections |
\\ | \\ | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
Line 80: | Line 85: | ||
- | ===Common Mistakes=== | + | ====Common Mistakes==== |
- | | Writing to a particular person (e.g. your instructor) |If you are a fiction writer, it may work to write to your mother or lover, but scientific papers are always addressed to a group. | | + | | Writing to a particular person (e.g. your instructor) |If you are a fiction writer, it may work to write to your mother or lover, but scientific papers are always addressed to a group. |
- | | Not following standard templates or guidelines | Most conferences and journals have a standard format and provide templates. Follow the templates! | | + | | Not following standard templates or guidelines | Most conferences and journals have a standard format and provide templates. Follow the templates! |
- | | Formatting the references wrong | Before you decide that your reference style is the most convenient/ | + | | Formatting the references wrong | Before you decide that your reference style is the most convenient/ |
- | | Not letting the material drive the layout and flow of the paper | If you have answered the question about what your contribution is up front, your material will suggest a certain layout and flow. (Remember, a scientific paper is an argument - it's almost like a lawyer arguing in court.) Try to follow that flow as much as possible. If you try to cram material into a format where it won't fit you will end up with a paper that is difficult to read (i.e. a bad paper). | | + | | Not letting the material drive the layout and flow of the paper | If you have answered the question about what your contribution is up front, your material will suggest a certain layout and flow. (Remember, a scientific paper is an argument - it's almost like a lawyer arguing in court.) Try to follow that flow as much as possible. If you try to cram material into a format where it won't fit you will end up with a paper that is difficult to read (i.e. a bad paper). |
- | | Not connecting the major points in your paper by a the necessary A-follows-B logic | The only way the human mind can comprehend things is when there is a logical relationship between phenomena and events. Make sure there is a story in your paper. | | + | | Not connecting the major points in your paper by a the necessary A-follows-B logic | The only way the human mind can comprehend things is when there is a logical relationship between phenomena and events. Make sure there is a story in your paper. |
\\ | \\ | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
Line 91: | Line 97: | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
- | ===Reviewing Scientific Papers: Key Roles of a Reviewer=== | + | ====Reviewing Scientific Papers: Key Roles of a Reviewer==== |
- | | Highlight the paper' | + | | Highlight the paper' |
- | | The author often forgets the big picture | This happens because it is easy to forget oneself in all the details that have to be right. \\ Point out how the paper could be organized differently to better convey its topic. | | + | | The author often forgets the big picture | This happens because it is easy to forget oneself in all the details that have to be right. \\ Point out how the paper could be organized differently to better convey its topic. |
- | | Select well what you criticize | Make sure the comments you write are about things that really make a diffierence. | | + | | Select well what you criticize | Make sure the comments you write are about things that really make a diffierence. |
| Think like an advisor | Try to turn negative comments into helpful comments. | | | Think like an advisor | Try to turn negative comments into helpful comments. | | ||
- | \\ | ||
- | \\ | ||
- | \\ | ||
- | \\ | ||
- | ===More Information for Getting the Details Right=== | ||
- | | SPORTSCIENCE sportsci.org | http:// | ||
- | | Writing for journals | http:// | ||
+ | \\ | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
\\ | \\ | ||
- | \\ | + | //EOF// |
/var/www/cadia.ru.is/wiki/data/attic/public/rem4/rem4-16/writing_papers.1471607039.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/04/29 13:32 (external edit)