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You are here: Home / Latest Posts / Effective science writing: quick tips

May 15, 2017 by Teresa Nolan

Effective science writing: quick tips

  1. Focus on the “take-home” message
    What is the core message of your paper?
    What is the most important thing you want readers to remember after reading your paper?
    Can you describe the core message of your paper to a colleague in one minute?
    Can you condense the paper into 3 to 5 highlights?
    Can you summarize the paper in one sentence?
    Can you express the core message in graphical form?
  1. Use clear, concise writing
    Keep sentences short and simple.
    Make one point per sentence.
    Avoid unnecessary repetition.
    Use the active voice rather than the passive voice.
    “The expression of X was determined …” = Passive voice ✘
    “We determined the expression of X …” = Active voice ✓
    Keep the subject and verb of the sentence close together.
    “Glucose [subject], which is made during photosynthesis from … , is [verb] a simple sugar.” ✘
    “Glucose [subject] is [verb] a simple sugar that is made during photosynthesis from … ” ✓
    Avoid noun strings.
    “XX hospital established a medical services efficiency evaluation index system.” ✘
    “XX hospital established an index system that evaluated the efficiency of their medical services.” ✓
  1. Tell a story
    Tell the story of your paper
    Why did you decide to do the experiment? → How did you do it? → What did you find? → What do your findings mean?
    Use signposts to help the reader navigate through the story.
    “In experiment 1, we showed that XXX. To elucidate the mechanism for this, we then … “
    Do not leave the reader wondering how you arrived at a hypothesis/conclusion.
    Example: Sodium suppresses podocyte apoptosis; therefore, since X and sodium have similar chemical structures, the purpose of this study was to investigate the anti-apoptotic activity of X in podocytes.
    Revision: Sodium suppresses podocyte apoptosis. X has a similar chemical structure to sodium. Therefore, we hypothesised that X would also suppress apoptosis in podocytes. The revised text gives a logical step-by-step account of how the authors arrived at the hypothesis.

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Filed Under: Latest Posts, Submitting an Article, Writing Tips Tagged With: concise writing, grammar, readability, science writing, science writing tips, scientific writing, take home message, writing tips

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Image showing study limitations

Discussing your study’s limitations

Why include a limitations section? Including a section on the limitations of your findings will demonstrate command over your research. A reviewer may look negatively upon your study if they spot a limitation that you failed to acknowledge. If you discuss each limitation in the context of future research—i.e., suggest ways to improve the validity […]

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