Title: Scientific Writing, HRP 214
1Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Cream and chocolate comprise chocolate sauce.
- B. Cream and chocolate compose chocolate sauce.
2Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Cream and chocolate comprise chocolate sauce.
- B. Cream and chocolate compose chocolate sauce.
- composer putting notes together to make music
3Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. The dessert was comprised of cream and
chocolate. - B. The dessert was composed of cream and
chocolate.
4Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. The dessert was comprised of cream and
chocolate. - B. The dessert was composed of cream and
chocolate.
5Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Chocolate sauce composes cream and chocolate.
- B. Chocolate sauce comprises cream and chocolate.
6Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Chocolate sauce composes cream and chocolate.
- B. Chocolate sauce comprises cream and chocolate.
- think includes (but exhaustive list)
- compare composed of (generally exhaustive)
7Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Cream and chocolate are comprised in chocolate
sauce. - B. Cream and chocolate are composed of
- chocolate sauce.
8Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Cream and chocolate are comprised in chocolate
sauce. - B. Cream and chocolate are composed of
- chocolate sauce.
9Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. I hope that my sister and I will reconcile.
- B. I hope that my sister and me will reconcile.
10Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. I hope that my sister and I will reconcile.
- B. I hope that my sister and me will reconcile.
11Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. He told Dan and me that they would meet us at
noon. - B. He told Dan and I that they would meet us at
noon.
12Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. He told Dan and me that they would meet us at
noon. - B. He told Dan and I that they would meet us at
noon.
13Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. I always thought it was further to the moon.
- B. I always thought it was farther to the moon.
14Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. I always thought it was further to the moon.
- B. I always thought it was farther to the moon.
15Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Between you and I, we should have it done in
no time. - B. Between you and me, we should have it done in
no time.
16Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Between you and I, we should have it done in
no time. - B. Between you and me, we should have it done in
no time.
17Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. He died of unknown causes.
- B. He died from unknown causes.
18Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. He died of unknown causes.
- B. He died from unknown causes.
19Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. She could have made it further in life.
- B. She could have made it farther in life.
20Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. She could have made it further in life.
- B. She could have made it farther in life.
21Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Its the nuts, sir. Theyre complimentary.
- B. Its the nuts, sir. Theyre complementary.
- C. Its the nuts, sir. Theyre complimentary.
- D. Its the nuts, sir. Theyre complementary.
22Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. Its the nuts, sir. Theyre complimentary.
- B. Its the nuts, sir. Theyre complementary.
- C. Its the nuts, sir. Theyre complimentary.
- D. Its the nuts, sir. Theyre complementary.
23Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. The medical students heard seventeen lectures
about the compliment cascade. - B. The medical students heard seventeen lectures
about the complement cascade.
24Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A. The medical students heard seventeen lectures
about the compliment cascade. - B. The medical students heard seventeen lectures
about the complement cascade.
25Scientific Writing, HRP 214WARM UP from a
textbook
The fear expressed by some teachers that
students would not learn statistics well if they
were permitted to use canned computer programs
has not been realized in our experience. A
careful monitoring of achievement levels before
and after the introduction of computers in the
teaching of our course revealed no appreciable
change in students performances.
26Scientific Writing, HRP 214WARM UP from a
textbook
The fear expressed by some teachers that
students would not learn statistics well if they
were permitted to use canned computer programs
has not been realized in our experience. A
careful monitoring of achievement levels before
and after the introduction of computers in the
teaching of our course revealed no appreciable
change in students performances.
27Scientific Writing, HRP 214WARM UP
? Many teachers feared that the use of canned
computer programs would prevent students from
learning statistics. We monitored student
achievement levels before and after the
introduction of computers in our course and found
no detriments in performance.
28Scientific Writing, HRP 214WARM UP 2
- Anti-inflammatory agents may be protective for
the occurrence of Alzheimers Disease and may
reduce the progression of the disease. - Identify the problems
- -- to be is a weak verb (may be protective)
- --you dont protect for, you protect against
(word choice) - --occurrence is a vague, weak noun
- --can you reduce progression? (word choice)
- --progression of disease? disease progression
29Scientific Writing, HRP 214WARM UP 2
- Anti-inflammatory agents may be protective for
the occurrence of Alzheimers Disease and may
reduce the progression of the disease. - ?
- Anti-inflammatory agents may protect against
Alzheimers Disease and retard disease
progression.
30Scientific Writing, HRP 214WARM UP 3
- Important studies to examine the descriptive
epidemiology of autism, including the prevalence
and changes in the characteristics of the
population over time, have begun. - Identify the problems
- --wheres the verb?
- --watch fluff words like important
- --can changes occur without being over time?
- -- changes in the characteristics of the
population is vague and wordy
31Scientific Writing, HRP 214WARM UP 3
- Important studies to examine the descriptive
epidemiology of autism, including the prevalence
and changes in the characteristics of the
population over time, have begun. - ?
- Studies have begun to describe the epidemiology
of autism, including recent changes in the
disorders prevalence and characteristics.
32Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- Lecture Four, July 13th, 2005 Writing Basics II
- Paragraphs, logic, and organization
33Scientific Writing, HRP 214paragraphs
Although the methodological approaches are
similar, the questions posed in classic
epidemiology and clinical epidemiology are
different. In classic epidemiology,
epidemiologists pose a question about the
etiology of a disease in a population of people.
Causal associations are important to identify
because, if the causal factor identified can be
manipulated or modified, prevention of disease is
possible. On the other hand, in clinical
epidemiology, clinicians pose a question about
the prognosis of a disease in a population of
patients. Prognosis can be regarded as a set of
outcomes and their associated probabilities
following the occurrence of some defining event
or diagnosis that can be a symptom, sign, test
result or disease.
34Scientific Writing, HRP 214What are you trying
to say? Idea flow chart (outline)
35Scientific Writing, HRP 214sentence-level editing
Although the methodological approaches are
similar, the questions posed in classic
epidemiology and clinical epidemiology are
different.
36Scientific Writing, HRP 214
Despite methodologic similarities, classic
epidemiology and clinical epidemiology differ in
aim.
37Scientific Writing, HRP 214paragraph parallelism
In classic epidemiology, epidemiologists pose a
question about the etiology of a disease in a
population of people. Causal associations are
important to identify because, if the causal
factor identified can be manipulated or modified,
prevention of disease is possible. On the other
hand, in clinical epidemiology, clinicians pose a
question about the prognosis of a disease in a
population of patients.
Whats the structure of the comparison/contrast? H
ere In discipline 1, group 1 poses a question
about XX in a population of XX. In discipline
2, group 2 poses a question about YY in a
population of YY.
38Scientific Writing, HRP 214
Classic epidemiologists pose a question about the
etiology of a disease in a population of people.
Clinical epidemiologists pose a question about
the prognosis of a disease in a population of
patients.
39Scientific Writing, HRP 214sentence-level editing
Prognosis can be regarded as a set of outcomes
and their associated probabilities following the
occurrence of some defining event or diagnosis
that can be a symptom, sign, test result or
disease. ? Prognosis is the probability that an
event or diagnosis will result in a particular
outcome.
40Scientific Writing, HRP 214Altogether
Despite methodologic similarities, classic
epidemiology and clinical epidemiology differ in
aim. Classic epidemiologists pose a question
about the etiology of disease in a population of
people etiologic factors can be manipulated to
prevent disease. Clinical epidemiologists pose a
question about the prognosis of a disease in a
population of patients prognosis is the
probability that an event or diagnosis will
result in a particular outcome.
41Scientific Writing, HRP 214compare to outline
42Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- Before you start writing, ask
- What am I trying to say?
- When you finish writing, ask
- Have I said it?
43Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- Paragraph organization tips
- 1. Avoid a succession of loose sentences
(monotonous). - 2. Paragraph flow is helped by
- parallel sentence structures
- logical flow of ideas
- if necessary, transition words
- 3. Your reader remembers the first sentence and
the last sentence best. Make the last sentence
memorable. Emphasis at the end!
44Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- Paragraph organization tips
- Avoid a succession of loose sentences
(monotonous). - --Outlining and organizing can help arrange
ideas. - --But, when stringing together a series of
ideas, dont forget to vary sentence structure
for readability.
45Scientific Writing, HRP 214
Example from Strunk and White The third concert
of the subscription series was given last
evening, and a large audience was in attendance.
Mr. Edward Appleton was the soloist, and the
Boston Symphony Orchestra furnished the
instrumental music. The former showed himself to
be an artist of the first rank, while the latter
proved itself fully deserving of its high
reputation. The interest aroused by the series
has been very gratifying to the Committee, and it
is planned to give a similar series annually
hereafter. The fourth concert will be given on
Tuesday, May 10, when an equally attractive
program will be presented.
46Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- 2. Paragraph flow is helped by
- parallel sentence structures
- logical flow of ideas
- if necessary, transition words
47Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- logical flow of ideas
- Sequential in time
- General? specific
- Logical arguments (if a then b a therefore b)
48Scientific Writing, HRP 214example
Usually, when a defendant absconds, a bondsman
hires a bounty hunter to find and arrest him
within the grace period (which, in California, is
six months). If that fails, the bondman tries to
seize any collateral that the defendant put down
to secure the bond, or sues the defendants
indemnitors, who signed the bail application as
guarantors. But Zabala hadnt put down any
collateral, and so far Greenone of the few
bondsmen who always do their own bounty
huntinghad found neither him nor his
indemnitors. The grace period was nearly up.
Soon, Green would have to pay the court
thirty-one thousand dollars.
49Scientific Writing, HRP 214organized by time
sequence and general? specific
1. First, a bondsman hires a bounty hunter to
find and arrest the defendant within the grace
period. 2. Then, if that fails, the bondman
seizes collateral or sues indemnitors. 3. Now,
in this specific case, the defendant (Zabala) is
AWOL and has no collateral or available
indemnitors 4. Conclusion the bondswoman
(Green) is out of options. Notice how the
author didnt need to write first, then, in
this specific case, or conclusion? the
organization of sentences and context gives
readers these clues without spelling them out
50Scientific Writing, HRP 214examine the logical
structure
- A bondsman has these and only these options
- Hire a bounty hunter to find and arrest the guy
within a grace period. - If (1) fails, seize collateral or sue indemnitor.
- Pay the money herself.
- In this case,
- Grace period nearly done without arrest.
- No collaterol, no indemnitors.
- ? Green (the bondswoman) will be responsible for
the 31,000.
51Scientific Writing, HRP 214transitions used
Usually, when a defendant absconds, a bondsman
hires a bounty hunter to find and arrest him
within the grace period (which, in California, is
six months). If that fails, the bondman tries to
seize any collateral that the defendant put down
to secure the bond, or sues the defendants
indemnitors, who signed the bail application as
guarantors. But Zabala hadnt put down any
collateral, and so far Greenone of the few
bondsmen who always do their own bounty
huntinghad found neither him nor his
indemnitors. The grace period was nearly up.
Soon, Green would have to pay the court
thirty-one thousand dollars.
52Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- 3. Your reader remembers the first sentence and
the last sentence best. Make the last sentence
memorable.
53Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- But Zabala hadnt put down any collateral, and
so far Greenone of the few bondsmen who always
do their own bounty huntinghad found neither him
nor his indemnitors. The grace period was nearly
up. Soon, Green would have to pay the court
thirty-one thousand dollars. - Long, short, long.
-
54Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- But Zabala hadnt put down any collateral, and
so far Greenone of the few bondsmen who always
do their own bounty huntinghad found neither him
nor his indemnitors. The grace period was nearly
up. Soon, Green would have to pay the court
thirty-one thousand dollars. - Long, short, long.
- Nice sentence variety and build-up to the
conclusion. -
55Scientific Writing, HRP 214Paragraph exercise
- Headache is an extraordinarily common pain
symptom that virtually everyone experiences at
one time or another. As a pain symptom,
headaches have many causes. The full range of
these causes were categorized by the
International Headache Society (IHS) in 1988. The
IHS distinguishes two broad groups of headache
disorders primary headache disorders and
secondary headache disorders. Secondary headache
disorders are a consequence of an underlying
condition, such as a brain tumor, a systemic
infection or a head injury. In primary headache
disorders, the headache disorder is the
fundamental problem it is not symptomatic of
another cause. The two most common types of
primary headache disorders are episodic
tension-type headache (ETTH) and migraine.
Although IHS is the most broadly used/recognized
classification system used, a brief comment on
others would be appropriate especially if there
are uses that have epidemiologic advantages.
56Scientific Writing, HRP 214verb-tally
to be 8 to have 2 passive verbs 1 Others?
experiences, distinguishes
- Headache is an extraordinarily common pain
symptom that virtually everyone experiences at
one time or another. As a pain symptom,
headaches have many causes. The full range of
these causes were categorized by the
International Headache Society (IHS) in 1988. The
IHS distinguishes two broad groups of headache
disorders primary headache disorders and
secondary headache disorders. Secondary headache
disorders are a consequence of an underlying
condition, such as a brain tumor, a systemic
infection or a head injury. In primary headache
disorders, the headache disorder is the
fundamental problem it is not symptomatic of
another cause. The two most common types of
primary headache disorders are episodic
tension-type headache (ETTH) and migraine.
Although IHS is the most broadly used/recognized
classification system used, a brief comment on
others would be appropriate especially if there
are uses that have epidemiologic advantages.
57Scientific Writing, HRP 214wordiness tally
- Headache is an extraordinarily common pain
symptom that virtually everyone experiences at
one time or another. As a pain symptom,
headaches have many causes. The full range of
these causes were categorized by the
International Headache Society (IHS) in 1988. The
IHS distinguishes two broad groups of headache
disorders primary headache disorders and
secondary headache disorders. Secondary headache
disorders are a consequence of an underlying
condition, such as a brain tumor, a systemic
infection or a head injury. In primary headache
disorders, the headache disorder is the
fundamental problem it is not symptomatic of
another cause. The two most common types of
primary headache disorders are episodic
tension-type headache (ETTH) and migraine.
Although IHS is the most broadly used/recognized
classification system used, a brief comment on
others would be appropriate especially if there
are uses that have epidemiologic advantages.
58Scientific Writing, HRP 214avoid meta-comment
- Headache is an extraordinarily common pain
symptom that virtually everyone experiences at
one time or another. As a pain symptom,
headaches have many causes. The full range of
these causes were categorized by the
International Headache Society (IHS) in 1988. The
IHS distinguishes two broad groups of headache
disorders primary headache disorders and
secondary headache disorders. Secondary headache
disorders are a consequence of an underlying
condition, such as a brain tumor, a systemic
infection or a head injury. In primary headache
disorders, the headache disorder is the
fundamental problem it is not symptomatic of
another cause. The two most common types of
primary headache disorders are episodic
tension-type headache (ETTH) and migraine.
Although IHS is the most broadly used/recognized
classification system used, a brief comment on
others would be appropriate especially if there
are uses that have epidemiologic advantages.
59Scientific Writing, HRP 214outline ideas
- Headache is an extraordinarily common pain
symptom that virtually everyone experiences at
one time or another. As a pain symptom,
headaches have many causes. The full range of
these causes were categorized by the
International Headache Society (IHS) in 1988. The
IHS distinguishes two broad groups of headache
disorders primary headache disorders and
secondary headache disorders. Secondary headache
disorders are a consequence of an underlying
condition, such as a brain tumor, a systemic
infection or a head injury. In primary headache
disorders, the headache disorder is the
fundamental problem it is not symptomatic of
another cause. The two most common types of
primary headache disorders are episodic
tension-type headache (ETTH) and migraine.
Although IHS is the most broadly used/recognized
classification system used, a brief comment on
others would be appropriate especially if there
are uses that have epidemiologic advantages.
60Scientific Writing, HRP 214Idea flow chart
(outline)
61Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- Headache is an extraordinarily common pain
symptom that virtually everyone experiences at
one time or another. As a pain symptom,
headaches have many causes. The full range of
these causes were categorized by the
International Headache Society (IHS) in 1988. The
IHS distinguishes two broad groups of headache
disorders primary headache disorders and
secondary headache disorders.
Repetition can sometimes help transitions, but
here its just repetitive!
62Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- ?
- Headache is a pain symptom that almost everyone
experiences. The International Headache Society
(IHS) groups headaches into two types based on
cause primary headache disorders and secondary
headache disorders.
63Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- Secondary headache disorders are a consequence
of an underlying condition, such as a brain
tumor, a systemic infection or a head injury. In
primary headache disorders, the headache disorder
is the fundamental problem it is not symptomatic
of another cause. The two most common types of
primary headache disorders are episodic
tension-type headache (ETTH) and migraine.
Also, consider ordering first (primary), then
second (secondary)
64Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- ?
- In primary headache disorders, the headache
itself is the main complaint. The two most
common types of primary headache disorder are
episodic tension-type headache (ETTH) and
migraine. Secondary headache disorders result
from an underlying condition, such as a brain
tumor, a systemic infection, or a head injury.
65Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- ?
- In primary headache disorders, the headache
itself is the main complaint. The two most
common types of primary headache disorder are
episodic tension-type headache (ETTH) and
migraine. Secondary headache disorders result
from an underlying condition, such as a brain
tumor, a systemic infection, or a head injury.
66Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- ?
- In primary headache disorders, the headache
itself is the main complaint. The two most
common types of primary headache disorder are
episodic tension-type headache (ETTH) and
migraine. Secondary headache disorders result
from an underlying condition, such as a brain
tumor, a systemic infection, or a head injury.
67Scientific Writing, HRP 214together
- Headache is a pain symptom that almost everyone
experiences. The International Headache Society
(IHS) groups headaches into two types based on
cause primary headache disorders and secondary
headache disorders. In primary headache
disorders, the headache itself is the main
complaint. The two most common types of primary
headache disorder are episodic tension-type
headache (ETTH) and migraine. Secondary headache
disorders result from an underlying condition,
such as a brain tumor, a systemic infection, or a
head injury.
68Scientific Writing, HRP 214Compare to outline
69Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- Finally, organizing the whole story
70Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- Compositional organization
- Like ideas should be grouped.
- Like paragraphs should be grouped.
- Dont Bait-and-Switch your reader too many
times. - When discussing a controversy, follow
- arguments (all)
- counter-arguments (all)
- rebuttals (all)
71Scientific Writing, HRP 214
Organizing your thoughts Do you have a
system? If you dont, get one. Spend more time
organizing and less time writing. Its just
plain less painful! The 101 feature-story
ratio 10 parts organization/research 1 part
writing.
72Scientific Writing, HRP 214
Develop a road-map. Think in paragraphs and
sections
73Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A note paraphrasing and plagiarism
74Scientific Writing, HRP 214a few notes on
paraphrasing
- Use your own words
- Work from memory
- Draw your own conclusions
- Do not simply re-arrange the original authors
words - Do not mimic the original authors sentence
structure
75Scientific Writing, HRP 214paraphrasing
- Original
- If the existence of a signing ape was
unsettling for linguists, it was also startling
news for animal behaviorists.
- Unacceptable
- An ape who knew sign language unsettled
linguists and startled animal behaviorists. - Unacceptable
- If the presence of a sign-language-using chimp
was disturbing for scientists studying language,
it was also surprising to scientists studying
animal behavior. - Fine
- When they learned of an ape's ability to use
sign language, both linguists and animal
behaviorists were taken by surprise.
76Scientific Writing, HRP 214REVISING
77Scientific Writing, HRP 214REVISING
- Dont be afraid to cut.
- Experiment with re-arranging your words and
paragraphs (try alternative permutations). (zoom
in) - Give your work an organizational review. (zoom
out) - Read your work out loud.
- Work with a good editor.
78Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- A final note on writing
- Save often and back up your files!
79Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- And finally
- This weeks Top 5 countdown
80Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- 1. Do not use they or their when the
antecedent is singular (but can vary gender
references) - Every one of us knows they are fallible.
- Every one of us knows she is fallible.
- Each student pulled out their notebook.
- Each student pulled out his notebook.
81Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- 2. Prevalence v. Incidence
- Incidence is a RATE
- ? how many new cases develop per unit of
population per unit of time? - Prevalence is a PROPORTION
- ? how widespread is a given disease?
82Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- principle v. principal
- Principle is a fundamental truth or law
- Principal is a leader
- The schools principal declared it a holiday.
(mnemonic your pal) - Her principles were impeccable.
83Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- rational v. rationale
- Rational is an adjective, meaning sane or
logical. - Rationale is a noun, meaning justification.
- She was a rational human being.
- Their rationale for the move was that it would
save a great deal of money.
84Scientific Writing, HRP 214
- 5. To hyphenate or not to hyphenate, that is the
questionunits - Hyphenate multiple adjectives that modify a noun.
- The ball was 21 feet in diameter. (noun)
- The ball had a 21-foot diameter. (adjective)
- The machine carried a 44-pound scientific
payload. - The machine carried 44 pounds in science
equipment.
85Scientific Writing, HRP 214Homework
- Read chapters 13-16 of Sin and Syntax (pp.
197-finish) - 3-4 unit students
- Continue work on your chosen manuscript, paper,
thesis, or grant proposal in preparation for the
2nd half of the course. - First due date
- DUE JULY 20th
- Outline your methods and results sections. Bring
hard copy to class next week.
86Scientific Writing, HRP 214Preview to next time
- For next time
- Overview of grant writing and scientific
manuscripts