| Literature DB >> 31497043 |
Asghar Ghasemi1, Zahra Bahadoran2, Parvin Mirmiran3, Farhad Hosseinpanah4, Niloofar Shiva5, Azita Zadeh-Vakili6.
Abstract
The discussion section of a scientific paper is supposed to interpret and elucidate the significance of the study findings, highlight current knowledge available on the research problem being investigated, and explain the novel aspects emerging from the findings of the study in moving the field forward. A well-written discussion should provide clear "statements of the main findings", "possible explanations and implications", "strengths and weaknesses of the study and other studies", "unanswered questions", and "suggestions for future research". The authors also need to clarify the external validity of the findings and show how the findings can be generalized. In this review, we focus on the function, content, and organization of the "discussion section" of a hypothesis-testing paper. Beyond providing the most important principles and common strategies for organizing the discussion section, we also discuss metadiscourse, scientific explanation (reasoning and contextualization), and models of scientific explanation.Entities:
Keywords: Discussion; Medical Scientific Journals; Scientific Writing
Year: 2019 PMID: 31497043 PMCID: PMC6679622 DOI: 10.5812/ijem.95415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Endocrinol Metab ISSN: 1726-913X
Main Functions of the Discussion Section (5, 6, 12, 16)
| Function | Explanation |
|---|---|
|
| Use the same words and key terms in the introduction |
|
| State the relevant results after stating answers |
|
| Present the meaning of the results and contributions of the study in the field |
Figure 1.Organization of the discussion section in a hypothesis-testing paper illustrating step-by-step and overview techniques in the middle part of the discussion
Useful Phrases and Clauses to Organize Paragraphs in the Discussion Section
| Aim | Phrases/Clauses |
|---|---|
|
| In order to (to introduce an explanation) |
| In other words/to put in another way (to state something in a different way), that is/that is to say (to add further details) | |
|
| Moreover, furthermore, what’s more, likewise, similarly, another key point/fact to remember, as well as (instead of also/and), not only but also (to highlight one piece of information more than the first one), coupled with (to state two or more issues simultaneously), first, .../second, .../third, ... (to organize in a logical order), |
|
| However, on the other hand, by contrast/in comparison, then again (to cast doubt on an assertion), yet |
|
| Despite this/in spite of this (to outline a point that stands regardless of a defect in evidence), provided that/on condition that, in view of/in light of (to refer to a new revelation or a piece of information that affects some situation), nonetheless/nevertheless |
|
| For instance, to give an illustration |
|
| Interestingly, curiously, remarkably, inexplicably, crucially, critically |
|
| As expected, anticipated, predicted, hypothesized |
|
| Our findings failed to account for/justify/explain/give an explanation for/give a reason for |
| Contrary to expectations, unlike other research | |
| Surprisingly, unfortunately, disappointingly, regrettably | |
|
| To the best of our knowledge, as far as we know, we believe, in our opinion |
| It would seem/appear | |
| It would lend itself well to, it may be useful for | |
|
| Our findings suggests/would seem to suggest/imply/highlight/underline/indicate/support the idea/point towards the idea/investigate/give an account of |
|
| In conclusion, to sum up, in summary, taken together, altogether, obviously, overall, ultimately |
|
| It is desirable for future work, it warrants further investigation |
| It should be addressed/considered/investigated in future work |
Figure 2.The cone shaped discussion section and its contents in a hypothesis-testing paper
Do’s and Don’ts of Writing the Discussion Section (14, 48, 49)
| Do’s |
|---|
| Underline the significance of the findings |
| Clarify contributions of the study to filling the gap of knowledge |
| Provide related literature to show how the findings can be supported (or rejected) |
| Be creative to offer alternative explanations to illuminate unexpected findings |
| Discuss in the context provided in the introduction |
| Clarify distinguished facts from speculations |
| Generate new hypothesis rather than providing simple descriptions |
| Deal appropriately with the complex bias issues (e.g. external validity, selection bias, potential misclassifications) |
| Close the discussion with a brief revisiting of the most important findings in terms of their implications and impact along with a new perspective |
|
|
| Reiterate or over-interpret the findings |
| Make one-sided or biased interpretations |
| Discuss findings without supporting data (in results, tables, or figures) |
| Ignore any unexpected findings |
| Misinterpret non-significant findings as true null results |
| Ignore data available in the literature negating/counteracting the findings |
| Distort the magnitude or direction of available literature to confirm the findings |
| Provide ambiguous comments for future studies, e.g., “there is a need for further research” |
| Generalize implications excessively |
| Close the last paragraph using over assertive statements |