Title: Reporting results: APA style
1Reporting results APA style
- Psych 231 Research Methods in Psychology
2Why present your research?
- Purpose of presenting your research
- To get the work out there
- to spur further research
- allow replication
- allow testing/falsifaction of your theory
3Why a structured format?
- To ease communication of what was done
- forces a minimal amount of information
- Provides consistent format within a discipline
- people know what to expect
- where to find the information in the article
- Allows readers to cross-reference your sources
easily
4- The ultimate resource for APA style is the APA
Publication manual, but also lots of websites to
help too. - Chapter 15 of your textbook is good too.
5Major goal Clarity
- Communicate with clarity.
- Using a consistent format helps your reader
understand your arguments and the sources theyre
built on. - It also helps you keep track of your sources as
you build arguments - Avoid jargon when possible, dont be too
creative, avoid slang and colloquialisms. - Avoid sexist and biased language
- Also try to be fairly concise dont use a whole
paragraph when two sentences will do
6Writing style
- Psychological writing tends to differ from other
academic writings - Try to avoid using direct quotes, restate things
in your own words. - Footnotes are rare, theyre used to
elaborate/clarify a point. Try to do so in the
text.
7Parts of a research report
8Title Page
- Title should be maximally
- informative while short
- (10 to 12 words recommended)
9Title Page
Order of Authorship sometimes carries meaning
10Title Page
- Title should be maximally
- informative while short
- (10 to 12 words recommended)
11Title Page
Order of Authorship sometimes carries meaning
12Title Page
Affiliation where the bulk of the research was
done
13Title Page
Running head will go on each page of published
article, no more than 50 characters
14Title Page
Short title goes in header (with page number)
on each page of the manuscript
15Abstract
- short summary of entire paper
- 100 to 120 words
- the problem/issue
- the method
- the results
- the major conclusions
16Body
- Background
- Literature Review
17Body
- Statement of purpose
- Specific hypotheses (at least at operational
level)
18Body
- Methods - Results
19Body
- Discussion
- Conclusions
- Implications
20Body
- Introduction
- Background
- Literature Review
- Statement of purpose
- Specific hypotheses (at least at operational
level)
21Body
- Methods (in enough detail that the reader can
replicate the study) - Participants
- How many, where they were selected from, any
special selection requirements, details about
those who didnt complete the experiment - Design (optional) suggested if you have a
complex experimental design, often combined with
Materials section - Apparatus/Materials
- Procedure what did each participant do? Other
details, including the operational levels of your
IV(s) and DV(s), counterbalancing, etc.
22Body
- Results (state the results but dont interpret
them here) - Verbal statement of results
- Tables and figures these get referred to in the
text, but actually get put into their own
sections at the end of the manuscript - Statistical Outcomes
23Body
- Discussion (interpret the results)
- Relationship between purpose and results
- Theoretical (or methodological) contribution
- Implications
- Future directions (optional)
24The rest
- References
- Authors name
- Year
- Title of work
- Publication information
- Journal
- Issue
- pages
When something odd comes up, dont guess. Look
it up!
25The rest
- Authors Notes
- Footnotes
- Tables
- Figure Captions
- Figures
26Figures and tables
- These are used to supplement the text.
- To make a point clearer for the reader.
- Typically used for
- The design
- Examples of stimuli
- Patterns of results
27Checklist - things to watch for
- Clarity
- Acknowledge the work of others (avoid plagiarism)
- Active vs. passive voice
- Active Seltzer and Wahlheim (2003) hypothesized
that speakers use to much passive voice - Passive It was hypothesized by Seltzer and
Wahlheim (2003) that speakers use to much passive
voice
28Checklist - things to watch for
- Avoid biased language
- APA guidelines
- Accurate descriptions of individuals (e.g., Asian
vs. Korean) - Be sensitive to labels (e.g., Oriental)
- Appropriate use of headings
- Correct citing and references
- Good grammar
- APA style checklist
29Next time
- Read chapters 45.
- Bring your APA Publication Manual to lab (if
youve got one) - Dont forget your first journal summary is due
this week in lab