| Literature DB >> 32730251 |
Maureen A Carey1, Kevin L Steiner1, William A Petri1.
Abstract
Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32730251 PMCID: PMC7392212 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1008032
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Comput Biol ISSN: 1553-734X Impact factor: 4.475
Reading intentions and how it might influence your approach.
| Examples | Intention | Priorities |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | You are new to reading scientific papers. | For each panel of each figure, focus particularly on the questions outlined in Rule 3. |
| 2 | You are entering a new field and want to learn what is important in that field. | Focus on the beginning (motivation presented in the introduction) and the end (next steps presented in the conclusion). |
| 3 | You receive automated alerts to notify you of the latest publication from a particular author whose work inspires you; you are hoping to work with them for the next phase of your research career and want to know what they are involved in. | Skim the entire work, thinking about how it fits into the author’s broader publication history. |
| 4 | You receive automated alerts to notify you of the latest publication containing a set of keywords because you want to be aware of new ways a technique is being applied or the new developments in a particular topic or research area. | Focus on what was done in the methods and the motivation for the approach taken; this is often presented in the introduction. |
| 5 | You were asked to review an article prior to publication to evaluate the quality of work or to present in a journal club. | Same as example 1. Also, do the data support the interpretations? What alternative explanations exist? Are the data presented in a logical way so that many researchers would be able to understand? If the research is about a controversial topic, do the author(s) appropriately present the conflict and avoid letting their own biases influence the interpretation? |
1 Yay! Welcome!
2 A journal club is when a group of scientists get together to discuss a paper. Usually one person leads the discussion and presents all of the data. The group discusses their own interpretations and the authors’ interpretation.
The structure of a primary research article.
| Section | Content |
|---|---|
| Title | The “take home” message of the entire project, according to the authors. |
| Author list | These people made significant scientific contributions to the project. Fields differ in the standard practice for ordering authors. For example, as a general rule for biomedical sciences, the first author led the project’s implementation, and the last author was the primary supervisor to the project. |
| Abstract | A brief overview of the research question, approach, results, and interpretation. This is the road map or elevator pitch for an article. |
| Introduction | Several paragraphs (or less) to present the research question and why it is important. A newcomer to the field should get a crash course in the field from this section. |
| Methods | What was done? How was it done? Ideally, one should be able to recreate a project by reading the methods. In reality, the methods are often overly condensed. Sometimes greater detail is provided within a “Supplemental” section available online (see below). |
| Results | What was found? Paragraphs often begin with a statement like this: “To do X, we used approach Y to measure Z.” The results should be objective observations. |
| Figures, tables, legends, and captions | The data are presented in figures and tables. Legends and captions provide necessary information like abbreviations, summaries of methods, and clarifications. |
| Discussion | What do the results mean and how do they relate to previous findings in the literature? This is the perspective of the author(s) on the results and their ideas on what might be appropriate next steps. Often it may describe some (often not all!) strengths and limitations of the study: Pay attention to this self-reflection of the author(s) and consider whether you agree or would add to their ideas. |
| Conclusion | A brief summary of the implications of the results. |
| References | A list of previously published papers, datasets, or databases that were essential for the implementation of this project or interpretation of data. This section may be a valuable resource listing important papers within the field that are worth reading as well. |
| Supplemental material | Any additional methods, results, or information necessary to support the results or interpretations presented in the discussion. |
| Supplemental data | Essential datasets that are too large or cumbersome to include in the paper. Especially for papers that include “big data” (like sequencing or modeling results), this is often where the real, raw data is presented. |
Research articles typically contain each of these sections, although sometimes the “results” and “discussion” sections (or “discussion” and “conclusion” sections) are merged into one section. Additional sections may be included, based on request of the journal or the author(s). Keep in mind: If it was included, someone thought it was important for you to read.