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Abstract and Conclusion

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Abstract and Conclusion. Gerry S. Doroja, MSCS. Associate Professor. Department of Computer Science ... Indicate the methodology used. Present the main findings. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Abstract and Conclusion


1
Abstract and Conclusion
  • Gerry S. Doroja, MSCS
  • Associate Professor
  • Department of Computer Science
  • Xavier University - Ateneo de Cagayan
  • gsd_at_xu.edu.ph
  • January 7, 2005

Adapted from Writing up research online,
Language Center, Asian Institute of Technology,
Bangkok, Thailand, 2003 (http//www.languages.ait.
ac.th/EL21OPEN.HTM)
2
Purpose of the Abstract
  • For conference papers, research papers, theses
    and dissertations, you will almost always be
    asked to write an abstract.
  • The main point to remember is that it must be
    short, because it should give a summary of your
    research.
  • In fact, not only are abstracts short, they must
    almost always be a certain, specified length
    (e.g. 200 words) and you should come close to -
    but not go over - this limit.
  • Abstracts that exceed the maximum word limit are
    often rejected because they cannot be used for
    databases, summaries of conferences, etc.

3
What the Abstract Includes?
  • An abstract should briefly
  • Re-establish the topic of the research.
  • Give the research problem and/or main objective
    of the research (this usually comes first).
  • Indicate the methodology used.
  • Present the main findings.
  • Present the main conclusions

4
What the Abstract Includes?
  • It is essential that your abstract includes all
    the keywords/key terminologies of your research.
  • Obviously if you only have two hundred words, you
    can only cover each of these areas briefly.
  • The emphasis is generally on the main findings
    and main conclusions since these areas are of
    most interest to readers.

5
Abstract Common Problems
  • Too long. If your abstract is too long, it may be
    rejected - abstracts are entered on databases,
    and those is usually a specified maximum number
    of words. Abstracts are often too long because
    people forget to count their words (remember that
    you can use your word processing program to do
    this) and make their abstracts too detailed (see
    below).
  • Too much detail. Abstracts that are too long
    often have unnecessary details. The abstract is
    not the place for detailed explanations of
    methodology or for details about the context of
    your research problem because you simply do not
    have the space to present anything but the main
    points of your research.

6
Abstract Common Problems
  • Too short. Shorter is not necessarily better.  If
    your word limit is 200 but you only write 95
    words, you probably have not written in
    sufficient detail. You should review your
    abstract and see where you could usefully give
    more explanation - remember that in many cases
    readers decide whether to read the rest of your
    research from looking at the abstract. Many
    writers do not give sufficient information about
    their findings
  • Failure to include important information. You
    need to be careful to cover the points listed
    above. Often people do not cover all of them
    because they spend too long explaining, for
    example, the methodology and then do not have
    enough space to present their conclusion.

7
Abstract and Introduction Comparison
  • At first glance, it might seem that the
    introduction and the abstract are very similar
    because they both present the research problem
    and objectives as well as briefly reviewing
    methodology, main findings and main conclusions.  

8
Abstract and Introduction Comparison
  • However, there are important differences between
    the two
  • Introduction
  • Should be short, but does not have a word limit
  • Main purpose is to introduce the research by
    presenting its context or background.
    Introductions usually go from general to
    specific, introducing the research problem and
    how it will be investigated).
  • Abstract
  • Has a maximum word limit
  • Is a summary of the whole research
  • Main purpose is to summarize the research
    (particularly the objective and the main
    finding/conclusion), NOT to introduce the
    research area.

9
Purpose of the Conclusion Chapter
  • To give a summary of
  • What was learned (this usually comes first)
  • What remains to be learned (directions for future
    research)
  • The shortcomings of what was done (evaluation)
  • The benefits, advantages, applications, etc. of
    the research (evaluation), and 
  • Recommendations.

10
Conclusion Chapter Common Problems
  • Too long. The conclusion section should be short.
    Often the conclusion section is as little as 2.5
    of an entire piece of published research.
  • Too much detail. Conclusions that are too long
    often have unnecessary detail. The conclusion
    section is not the place for details about your
    methodology or results. Although you should give
    a summary of what was learnt from your research,
    this summary should be short, since the emphasis
    in the conclusions section is on the
    implications, evaluations, etc. that you make.

11
Conclusion Chapter Common Problems
  • Failure to comment on larger, more significant
    issues. Whereas in the introduction your task was
    to move from general (your field) to specific
    (your research), in the concluding section your
    task is to move from specific (your research)
    back to general (your field, how your research
    will affect the world). In other words, in the
    conclusion you should put your research in
    context.
  • Failure to reveal the complexities of a
    conclusion or situation. Negative aspects of your
    research should not be ignored. Problems,
    drawbacks etc. can be included in summary in your
    conclusion section as a way of qualifying your
    conclusions (i.e. pointing out the negative
    aspects, even if they are outweighed by the
    positive aspects).

12
Conclusion Chapter Common Problems
  • Lack of a concise summary of what was learned. In
    order to be able to discuss how your research
    fits back into your field of study (and the world
    at large) you need to summarize it very briefly.
    Often the summary is only a few sentences.
  • Failure to match the objectives of the research.
    Often research objectives change while the
    research is being carried out. This is not a
    problem unless you forget to go back and rewrite
    your original objectives in your introduction so
    that they accurately reflect what you were trying
    to accomplish in your research (not what you
    thought you might accomplish when you began).
    Here is an example of an objective and conclusion
    that do not match

13
Conclusion Chapter Common Problems
  • Objective The main objective of this study was
    to assess the impact of roadbuilding on villages
    on rural communities.
  • Conclusion The model produced in this study can
    accurately predict the social and economic impact
    of road-building on villages in northern Laos.
  • If we rewrite the objective to match what we
    actually did (we developed a model), it will fit
    the conclusion
  • Rewritten objective The main objective of this
    study was to develop a model to predict the
    social and economic impact of road-building on
    rural communities.
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