Title: How to Write Successful ResearchJournal Papers
1How to Write Successful Research/Journal Papers
- Ahmad Fauzi Ismail, PhD.
- Membrane Research Unit, FKKKSA, UTM.
2Content
- Course Introduction
- What is a Research/Journal Paper?
- Why We Need to Write and Publish a Journal Paper?
- What is a Referred Journal Paper?
- Can I Write a Paper?
- Type of Academic Papers
- Type of Referred Journal Papers
- Types of Journal
- Journal Citation Rating
- Which is the Suitable Journals?
- Example of Relevance Journals
- Author Guidelines
- The Structure of a Typical Journal
- How to Start Writing the Papers
- Now Write !!
- The Title
3Content
- Abstract
- Writing an Abstract
- Extended Abstract
- Introduction
- Materials and Methodology
- Writing Materials and Methods Section
- Results and Discussion
- Tables and Figures
- Writing Results and Discussion Section
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgement
- Literature Cited
- Appendices
- What Do Editors Look For?
- Formatting
- Rewards of Writing
- Summary
4Course Introduction
- Writing Research Paper ????
- Publish in Journal ???
- Why bother ???
- Too difficult!!!
- I have No time !!!
- I have No research !!!
5What is a Research/Journal Paper??
- A research/journal paper is an organized
description of hypotheses, objectives and scopes,
methodology, results, discussion and conclusion
of our systematic works. - The paper is based on our own thoughts and the
facts and ideas we have gathered from a variety
of sources, and it is a creation that is uniquely
yours. - The experience of gathering, interpreting, and
documenting information, developing, discussing
and organizing ideas and conclusions, and
communicating them clearly will prove to be an
important and satisfying part of your education. - A paper is also representing a structure for
planning our research in progress - If we clearly understand the purpose and form of
a paper, it can be useful in organizing and
conducting our research
6Why we need to Write and Publish a Journal Paper?
- Dissemination of research output
- Knowledge contribution
- Enhance author prestige - This may attract
recognition and networking and promotion - Enhance University recognition and
reputation-This may affect ranking, student
intake and research funding - Demonstrate continued technical leadership- This
technical knowledge demonstrating the level of
our research. - Critical reviewing by subject specialists
- Practical and industrial exposure is enhanced by
attributed publications. - Decimates our knowledge.
- Developing an international profile
- Enlarging Networking
- Job requirement
- Personal satisfaction
7Can I Write a Paper??
Kena tulis setiap hari
Yes U Can !!
- Since we write all the time, it is obvious that
we possess the basic skill required - No need to learn a new skill in order to be able
to write for publication, we simply have to
translate the skill we already possess into a
different context and level. - Only require adaptation to different styles based
on different aims and settings. - Writing for publication in many ways, minor
adaptation. In addition, it is not as difficult
as is commonly supposed, and the rewards are
great. - Writing and publishing are practice effect skills
the more you do them the better you get at them.
8Types of Academic Papers
- Referred journal paper
- Journal Citation Rating (JCR)
- Referred conference papers
- Conference papers
- Non-referred papers
- Proceeding of abstracts
- Books and book chapters
Conference just to develop confidentcs
9Types of Referred Journal Papers
- Research papers
- Reviews
- Short communications
- Technical notes
Kalau nak publish cept pergi ke short
communication sbb mungkin ada result yg bagus
considered juga paper. Idea ialah kita dah jumpe
satu finding yang interesting.
10Types of Journal
- Research journals
- Review journals
- Rapid communication journals
- Methodology journals
11Journal Citation Rating
- Or Impact Factor
- Provide a way to evaluate and compare journal
relative to other journals in the same field - berapa org rujuk/ cite tesis dia. Kita boleh
monitor paper kita. - drpd situ kita akan dapat promotion.
12Which is The Suitable Journal?
- Quality of research output
- decide on subject area
- Decide on type of journal paper
- Read papers from that journal if your not
familiar with the journal
13Example of Relevance Journals
- Subject area Membrane Technology
- Journals
- J. Membrane Science
- Separation Science and Technology
- Carbon
- J. Applied Membrane Science and Technology
- Chemical Engineering Science
- J. Power Sources
- Polymer
- J. Applied Polymer Science
- Desalination
14Authors Guidelines
- Most journals have specific guidelines for
manuscript preparation - General approach
- text double spaced
- tables, figure and figure captions separate after
text - reference format style
- Number of copies or electronic submission
15The Structure of a Typical Journal Paper
Introduction
Literature Review
Problem statement
Objective
Experimentation
Methodology
Simulation
Results Discussion
Conclusion
16How to Start Writing the Paper?? Organize Your
thoughts
- Decide on a title
- Organize your paper content
- Outline some objectives and conclusions
- Prepare materials and methodology
- Prepare data
- Decide on types of data presentation
- Tables
- Figures
- Statistical analysis
- Prepare some reference to start with
- Prepare an introduction (Review of Literature)
- Draft your results, discussion and conclusions
- Preparation of a draft abstract
17 18The Title
- Should reflect the content of your paper
- Should be
- Short, if possible
- Include some keywords
- Critical that you have precise title that relates
the objective of you paper, not to general
19Abstract
- It is a short summary of the paper. A reader can
learn the rationale behind the study, general
approach to the problem, pertinent results, and
important conclusions or new questions. - This is a complete and very concise summary of
the whole paper. - Should summarise or include
- Objectives of the study
- Methodology or brief description of experiments
- Results including specific data if the results
are quantitative in nature, report quantitative
data results of any statistical analysis should
be reported - Important conclusions
- Most often the only text that is written
20Keywords
- Usually included under the title or abstract.
- Should be three to six words, which headline the
subject matter. - There are very important but often added as after
thought - Must get them right if we want our paper to be
found in searches, read and cited. - When writing keywords, think about the subject
matter and categories we might use in a
literature search of this topic.
21Writing an Abstract
- This is the last section to be written.
- Be concise, however, use complete sentences and
do not sacrifice readability for brevity. This
can be done by writing sentences so that they
serve more than one purpose. For example, "The
objective of this study is to develop high
performance membranes through the combine
optimization of phase inversion parameters and
rheological factors, to provide a membrane with
selectivity surpasses intrinsic selectivity for
CO2/CH4 separation." -
- This sentence provides the objective, methods,
and type of separation, all in one sentence. The
writer can now go directly to summarizing the
results. - Style
- Single paragraph and concise. As literature
review, it is always written in past tense - An abstract should stand on its own, and not
refer to any other part of the paper such as a
figure or table - Focus on summarizing results - limit background
information to a sentence or two, if absolutely
necessary - What you report in an abstract must be consistent
with what you reported.
22Extended Abstract
- What is an Extended Abstract?
- An extended abstract is not simply a long
abstract. An extended abstract should contain
references, comparisons to related work, proofs
of key theorems and other details expected in a
research paper but not in an abstract. - An extended abstract is a research paper whose
ideas and significance can be understood in less
than an hour. Writing an extended abstract can be
more demanding than writing a research paper. - Some things that can be omitted from an extended
abstract future work, details of proofs or
implementation that should seem plausible to
reviewers, ramifications not relevant to the key
ideas of the abstract.
23Introduction
- Should introduce the subject area generally
- Should include
- Background of the study
- Bring the reader from what is commonly
understood to the point - of appreciating the questions your research
attempts to answer. - Literature review
- Provide detailed background knowledge of
earlier work - Covering the latest development in the field.
- Provide an critical evaluation of
methodologies used. - Introduce the ideas that led to the present
work. -
- Objectives or scope
- Normally at the end of this section and
rationale that lead you to do - this research.
Tnpa saya baca jurnal lain dah ckup jurnal ini
24Materials and Methodology (1)
- Should outline all methodologies used to perform
experimental or simulation work - previous methodologies -should use references to
summarise - Include schematic instead of lengthy text
- Include data gathering and analysis techniques
(instrumentation and materials)
Boleh copy and paste drpd yg lama
25Materials and Methodology (2)
- This should be the easiest section to write, but
many peoples misunderstand the purpose. So, write
this section first. - The objective is to document all specialized
materials and general procedures, so that another
individual may use some or all of the methods in
another study or judge the scientific merit of
your work. - It is not to be a step by step description of
everything you did, nor is a methods section a
set of instructions. - Your notebook should contain all of the
information that you need for this section. - There is no specific page limit, but a key
concept is to keep this section as concise as you
possibly can. - People will want to read this material
selectively. - Materials and methods may be reported under
separate subheadings within this section or can
be incorporated together.
26Writing Materials and Methods Section (1)
- Materials
- Describe materials separately only if the study
is so complicated that it saves space this way. - Include specialized chemicals, biological
materials, and any equipment or supplies that are
not commonly found in laboratories. - If use of a specific type of equipment, a
specific enzyme, or a culture from a particular
supplier is critical to the success of the
experiment, then it and the source should be
singled out, otherwise no. - Materials may be reported in a separate paragraph
or else they may be identified along with your
procedures.
27Writing Materials and Methods Section (2)
- Methods
- Report the methodology (not details of each
procedure that employed the same methodology) - Describe the methodology completely, including
such specifics as temperatures, pressure, flow
rate, etc. - For Numerical work, include software used, model
development, computation procedure, limitation
and problems. - To be concise, present methods under headings
devoted to specific procedures or groups of
procedures - Generalize - report how procedures were done, not
how they were specifically performed on a
particular day. For example, report 100 gram
polymer solutions were prepared from a mixture of
polymers with different solvent concentration
ranges from 10 to 50 concentration" don't
report that 100 gram of polymer solution was
mixed with 10 to 50 solvents to make the final
polymer concentration." - If well documented procedures were used, report
the procedure by name, perhaps with reference,
and that's all.
28Results and Discussion
- The purpose of a results and discussion section
is to present, illustrate and provide critical
interpretation of our results or findings. - Support all of our results using evidence from
our experiment and generally accepted knowledge,
if appropriate. The significance of findings or
specific trend should be clearly described or
highlighted. - The page length of this section is set by the
amount and types of data to be reported. Continue
to be concise, using figures and tables, if
appropriate, to present results most effectively.
29Tables and Figures Captions
- List all the Tables and Figures Titles on a
separate page - Each Tables and Figures is on a separate page
- Presents results of research
- Should be independent of text
- Titles should be specific
- Should be clear and include all units
- Should include some statistical understanding
- Decimal places
- Statistical analysis i.e. SD
30Writing Results and Discussion Section (1)
- We must clearly distinguish material that would
normally be included in a research article from
any raw data or other appendix material that
would not be published. - Such material should not be submitted at all
unless requested by the editor or reviewer. - Interpret your data in the results discussion in
appropriate depth. When you explain a phenomenon,
you must describe mechanisms that may account for
the observation. Provide critical comparison.
Dont just repeat introduction - If your results differ from your expectations,
explain why that may have happened. If your
results agree, then describe the theory that the
evidence supported. It is never appropriate to
simply state that the data agreed with
expectations, and let it hanging there. - Relate your results to previous published data
and provide supporting statement from literature.
Always make cross referencing.
31Writing Results and Discussion Section (2)
- Summarize your findings in text and illustrate
them, if appropriate, with figures and tables. - In text, describe each of your results, pointing
the reader to observations that are most
relevant. - Describe and analyze your results of control
experiments and include observations that are not
presented in a formal figure or table. - Decide if each hypothesis is supported, rejected,
or if you cannot make a decision with confidence.
Do not simply dismiss a study or part of a study
as "inconclusive. - Research papers are not accepted if the work is
incomplete. Draw what conclusions you can based
upon the results that you have, and treat the
study as a finished work. - You may suggest future directions, such as how
the experiment might be modified to accomplish
another objective.
32Writing Results and Discussion Section (3)
- Never include raw data or intermediate
calculations in a research paper. - Do not present the same data more than once.
- Text should complement any figures or tables, not
repeat the same information. - Please do not confuse figures with tables - there
is a difference. - In text, refer to each figure as Figure 1,"
Figure 2," etc. number your tables as well. - Place figures and tables, properly numbered, in
order at the end of the report (clearly
distinguish them from any other material such as
raw data, standard curves, etc.)
33Writing Results and Discussion Section (4)
- Regardless of placement, each table must be
titled, numbered consecutively and complete with
heading (title with description goes above the
table) - Each figure and table must be sufficiently
complete that it could stand on its own, separate
from text - When you refer to information, distinguish data
generated by your own studies from published
information or from information obtained from
other sources - Refer to work done by specific individuals
(including yourself) in past tense.
34Writing Results and Discussion Section (5)
- Refer to generally accepted facts and principles
in past present tense. For example, Ismail et
al. (2004) found that the oriented polymer
molecules were frozen in the membrane structure
during rapid coagulation process in the hollow
fiber spinning - The biggest mistake that normally make in Results
and - Discussion section is to present a superficial
- interpretation that more or less re-states the
results. It is - necessary to suggest why results came out as they
did, - focusing on the mechanisms behind the
observations.
35Conclusions
- Should summary the principle outcomes of your
experimental or simulation work - Different to the abstract
- Consider use point form
36Nomenclature
- Define all symbols, specialized terms or
abbreviation used. - Introduce the symbols, specialized terms or
abbreviation a long phrase that we are going to
use many times - Give full name the first time you use it (only
for the first time)
37Acknowledgement
- Should consider to acknowledge any help and
assistance, such as research grant, scholarship,
special permission, people who helped to review,
comments, etc.
38Literature Cited
- List all literature cited in your paper, in
alphabetical order, by first author. In a proper
research paper, only primary literature is used
(original research articles authored by the
original investigators). - If possible, do not include a web site as a
reference - anyone can put just about anything on
a web site, and you have no way of knowing if it
is truth or fiction. - If you are citing an on line journal, use the
journal citation (name, volume, year, page
numbers).
39Appendices
- Here include details that are needed for
completeness but whose complete expression would
interfere with the flow of your main text. - These things have a small place in your central
argument, yet are long or complex. Also at the
end you can put things you might like to keep for
your records, but take too much space for a
published paper like computer programs,
mathematical proofs, detailed graphs, work
chronologies, purchase lists, and shop drawings.
40What Do Editors Look For?
- It is generally accepted that the most successful
papers are those written by experienced authors. - This is not because they are great writers
(although some are), but because they are
practiced and take care. - Successful papers show knowledge of the area.
Knowing the area allows your paper to be relevant
to the audience and timely in its appearance. - These two facts alone greatly enhance the chances
of publication. - The author of the successful paper knows the
journal to which the paper is submitted. This
involves knowing the academic level at which the
journal is pitched, knowing the sort of papers it
publishes and knowing its intended readership.
41Formatting
- Read journal guidelines again and again
- Create a single word document
- Cover page
- Separate abstract page
- Text
- Separate table and figure pages
- Figure captions
- References
42Formattingcont.
- Dont forget to include a shortened manuscript
title on the cover page - Acknowledgements
- Sponsors
- Technical assistance
- Authors/Corresponding Author
- Which order!!!
- Student, Post-doc and Supervisor??
43Rewards of Writing
- There are some tangible rewards. The letter of
acceptance, the arrival of the proofs of the
paper, the arrival of the complimentary copies of
the journal or the reprints, the correspondence,
the requests for reprints, the congratulations of
colleagues, even (occasionally) money! - All these gifts, and more, are the lot of the
published author, however modest the paper. - If you want to communicate your work, can you
imagine not being delighted when you have
successfully done so?
44Summary
- Everybody can write a successful academic papers
- Writing academic papers is a way to disseminate
knowledge - The reward of writing paper is a merely personal
Satisfaction - Type of publication is important
- Do some background work on journals in specific
subject areas - Preparing a quality paper takes time
- Prepare your initial thoughts
- Produce the final paper
- 6-18 months from start to publication