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How to Read a Scientific Research Paper : an overview

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Title: How to Read a Scientific Research Paper : an overview


1
How to Read a Scientific Research Paper an
overview
  • Asst.Prof.K.Chinnasarn, Ph.D.
  • krisana_at_buu.ac.th

2
Outline of session
  • Identifying the literature - where do you start?
  • Searching the literature
  • Sourcing the documents
  • Reading getting the gist
  • Evaluating what you read
  • A good literature review
  • More help and guidance
  • Exercise

3
Identifying the literature where do you start?
  • Define your research area
  • Essay/dissertation title
  • Break this down into key areas
  • Choose search terms (keywords) that express those
    areas
  • This will be your search strategy
  • Example
  • Dissertation Adaptive Binarization Document
  • Key areas Adaptive, Binarization, Histogram,
    Threshold
  • Search terms Adaptive, Binarization, Histogram,
    Threshold

4
Identifying the literature where do you start?
  • 2. What sort of literature will there be?
  • Journal articles print and online
  • Conference papers print and online
  • Monographs (books)
  • Dictionaries/encyclopaedia entries print and
    online
  • Reports print and online
  • Theses and dissertations at Bath and elsewhere
  • Statistics print and online
  • Grey literature print and online
  • Email discussion lists/online forums
  • The type of literature will dictate to some
    extent which sources of information you will need
    to search.

5
Identifying the literature where do you start?
  • Choose your sources of information
  • Sources of information for social sciences
  • Resources for your subject
  • Examples
  • For journal articles
  • Web of Knowledge SSCI
  • International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
  • For books COPAC
  • For theses Library catalogue Index to Theses
  • For reports and grey literature SOSIG
  • For statistics UK statistics site, Eurostat,
    Library statistics collection, ESDS

6
Searching the literature
  • Sample searches
  • Web of Knowledge
  • COPAC
  • UK Statistics
  • SOSIG

7
Source your documents
  • From an online index
  • Available online? click on Links button
  • Available in Library? click on Links button
  • OR if your online index doesnt have the Links
    button
  • Available online? check the A-Z of e-journals
  • Available in Library? check the Library
    catalogue
  • IF your document is not online or in the Library
  • Use Inter-Library Loans to get a photocopy or
    borrow a book from the British Library

8
Reading - getting the gist
  • Read the authors' names.
  • Read and digest the title.
  • Check the abstract or executive summary and
    conclusion for the main points
  • Picture time
  • Read the Introduction and be sure the author
    knows the field
  • Check to see if the Results adequately and
    accurately describe the data presented in the
    paper.
  • Now re-read the Discussion.

9
Reading - getting the gist
  • Title
  • Short,
  • succinct,
  • eye-catching,
  • all-encompassing
  • Abstract
  • Summary of Methods,
  • Results, and
  • Discussion starting off with a statement of why
    the research was done and with emphasis on why
    the results are significant.

10
Reading - getting the gist
  • Introduction
  • What is the overall purpose of the research?
  • How does the research fit into the context of its
    field?
  • When was past work done, by whom, why was their
    work important,
  • what you plan to do in your paper, and
  • why what you did is important.
  • Do you agree with the author's rationale for
    studying the question in this way?

11
Reading - getting the gist
  • Materials and Methods
  • How you did what you did,
  • Where you did it--nothing more. and
  • Were the measurements appropriate for the
    questions the researcher was approaching?

12
Reading - getting the gist
  • Results
  • What the data show you--nothing more.
  • What is the one major finding?
  • Were enough of the data presented so that you
    feel you can judge for yourself how the
    experiment turned out?
  • Did you see patterns or trends in the data that
    the author did not mention? Were there problems
    that were not addressed?

13
Reading - getting the gist
  • Discussion
  • Why the data show what they show, and
  • how your analysis relates back to your objectives
    from the Introduction.
  • Do you agree with the conclusions drawn from the
    data?
  • Are these conclusions over-generalized or
    appropriately careful?
  • Are there other factors that could have
    influenced, or accounted for, the results?
  • What further experiments would you think of, to
    continue the research or to answer remaining
    questions?

14
Evaluating what you read
  • Think about
  • Relevance to your topic
  • Intended audience
  • Currency of the information
  • Coverage of the topic that the information
    provides
  • Accuracy of the information
  • Authority of the author or information source
  • Level of objectivity of the author

15
Record your sources
  • Download references from online indexes
  • Keep systematic notes of the full records use A
    guide to citing references
  • This will form the basis of your bibliography for
    your dissertation
  • A good method is bibliographic software the
    SORTED programme offers training in
  • Reference manager
  • Endnote
  • Keep a note of the content of each document
  • e.g. Includes discussion of the idea of
    originality in postgraduate research projects.

16
A good literature review
  • Goes beyond simply listing relevant literature
  • Is a critical essay
  • Refers to the bibliography at the end of your
    dissertation
  • Assesses the range of literature available
  • Is a critical summary of the literature
  • Examines the background against which your own
    research is set
  • Forms a significant section of your dissertation

17
A good literature review
  • Offers opinions and personal response to the
    different writings
  • Relates different writings to each other,
    compares and contrasts
  • Does not take the literature at face value
  • Shows an awareness of the theories and values
    that underpin the research
  • Uses particular language authors assert, argue,
    state, conclude, contend

18
Have fun even if you fail sometimes
  • It is easy to burn out on research
  • Both triumphs and tragedies are a part of the
    process
  • Risk taking
  • Do successful people fail?
  • What can you do with a stack of failures?
  • Research takes more time than you thought.
  • Make research a part of your everyday life.
  • Rate of progress varies radically.
  • Set goals. Tell someone!

19
Reading to Different Depths
  • Some work is central to your concerns, some less
    so.
  • Need to vary reading depth.
  • Some need only skim.
  • Some read in depth.
  • Some in between.
  • Could be 20 papers in total,
  • but only 3 or 4 in depth.

20
?
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