Title: Scientific Writing, HRP 215 Weekly Quiz
1Scientific Writing, HRP 215Weekly Quiz
2Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. We studied the affects of the gene on
signaling. - B. We studied the effects of the gene on
signaling.
3Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. We studied the affects of the gene on
signaling. - B. We studied the effects of the gene on
signaling.
4Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She commented on the clearly defined mutant
traits. - B. She commented on the clearly-defined mutant
traits.
5Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She commented on the clearly defined mutant
traits. - B. She commented on the clearly-defined mutant
traits.
6Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. I like books, chocolate, and coffee.
- B. I like books, chocolate and coffee.
7Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. I like books, chocolate, and coffee.
- B. I like books, chocolate and coffee.
8Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She was self-employed.
- B. She was self employed.
9Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She was self-employed.
- B. She was self employed.
10Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. 65 people were saved.
- B. Sixty-five people were saved.
11Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. 65 people were saved.
- B. Sixty-five people were saved.
12Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She was the best-read scientist in the lab.
- B. She was the best read scientist in the lab.
13Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She was the best-read scientist in the lab.
- B. She was the best read scientist in the lab.
14Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. The previously-reported data were suspect.
- B. The previously reported data were suspect.
15Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. The previously-reported data were suspect.
- B. The previously reported data were suspect.
16Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. That was pre-SARS.
- B. That was pre SARS.
17Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. That was pre-SARS.
- B. That was pre SARS.
18Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. He cited the widely-believed fallacy.
- B. He cited the widely believed fallacy.
19Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. He cited the widely-believed fallacy.
- B. He cited the widely believed fallacy.
20Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She was a well-known scientist.
- B. She was a well known scientist.
21Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She was a well-known scientist.
- B. She was a well known scientist.
22Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She was well-known.
- B. She was well known.
23Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. She was well-known.
- B. She was well known.
24Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. He counted six pies.
- B. He counted 6 pies.
25Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. He counted six pies.
- B. He counted 6 pies.
26Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. His favorite breakfasts were cinnamon oatmeal,
French toast, and ham and eggs. - B. His favorite breakfasts were cinnamon oatmeal,
French toast, ham, and eggs.
27Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. His favorite breakfasts were cinnamon oatmeal,
French toast, and ham and eggs. - B. His favorite breakfasts were cinnamon
oatmeal, French toast, ham, and eggs.
28Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. Many of the clinics patients die from
complications of diabetes. - B. Many of the clinics patients die of
complications of diabetes.
29Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A. Many of the clinics patients die from
complications of diabetes. - B. Many of the clinics patients die of
complications of diabetes - ? understanding mnemonic die (as a result) of
- ? word pattern mnemonic dIE Of
30Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- Lecture Six
- Overview of Scientific Manuscripts
31Scientific Writing, HRP 215Scientific Manuscripts
Scientific Manuscripts (original research)
32Scientific Writing, HRP 215Scientific Manuscripts
- Scientific Manuscripts (original research)
- Submission process
- 2. Components
- Title
- Authors
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Materials and Methods
- Results (inc. figures and tables)
- Discussion
- Acknowledgements
- References
33Scientific Writing, HRP 215Scientific
Manuscripts outline for class
Title Authorship Abstract Introduction Materials
and Methods Results (includes figures and
tables) Discussion Acknowledgements References
34Scientific Writing, HRP 215Scientific
Manuscripts outline for class
Title Authorship Abstract Introduction Materia
ls and Methods Results (includes figures and
tables) Discussion Acknowledgements References
35Scientific Writing, HRP 215Scientific Manuscripts
- Submission process
- Identify a journal for submission
- Follow that journals style guidelines (online)
- Submit your manuscript with a cover letter
- some require written signature from all authors
- Possible outcomes accepted, accepted pending
revisions, rejected but re-submission possible,
no resubmission possible - Revision and resubmission re-submit with cover
letter that addresses reviewers critiques point
by point - Once accepted, author approves final proofs
36Scientific Writing, HRP 215Resubmission Cover
Letter
Date Editor Editors Address Subject Revised
Manuscript, MS Â Dear Dr. Editor, Enclosed
are xx copies of the revised paper (changes are
highlighted on one of the copies), Title. We
appreciate your helpful comments and those of the
reviewers. Correspondence should be sent to
Corresponding Authors Address, Email, Phone,
Fax  We have made revisions based on the
comments/suggestions of Reviewers I and II. The
comments of each reviewer are numbered below,
with our response (clarifications and changes)
following.
37Scientific Writing, HRP 215Resubmission Cover
Letter, Continued
Reviewer I Â 1. There is little discussion of
xxx We agree with Reviewers I and II that the
section on xxx was too abbreviated. Therefore,
we have added a paragraph that highlights xxx
(paragraph 33). Â 2. Could you comment on
xx We have added a sentence to paragraph 9 in
Methods/Materials that comments on
xx . . . Thank you again for your helpful
comments. Please let us know if any other
revisions are required. Â Â Regards, Correspondi
ng Author
38Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- Title
- Succinct
- Specific
- Informative
39Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- Authorship
- 1. Who gets authorship?
- Any author listed on the papers title page
should take public responsibility for its
content. - 2. In what order?
- Order implies authors relative contributions
- Keep in mind visibility often goes three deep.
- In some labs, the head of the lab or research
team is automatically included on any paper
coming from the lab, as senior author, second
author, or last-listed author - For fairness, alphabetical or reverse
alphabetical order may be used if researchers
have contributed equally. - Large working groups may be cited as a group
40Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- Authorship
- Conflict of Interest. Most journals ask authors
to disclose relevant conflicts of interest,
including specific financial interests relevant
to the subject of their manuscript, in their
cover letter or on a specific form.
41Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- Acknowledgements
- Funding sources
- Contributors who did not get authorship (e.g.
offered materials, advice or consultation that
was not significant enough to merit authorship).
42Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- References
- Use a computerized bibliographic program.
- Follow journal guidelines (may request
alphabetical listing or order of appearance in
the text). - Follow standard abbreviations (can be found
online). - Some journals limit number of references allowed.
43Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- Besides research papers,
- Other types of articles include
- The case report
- The review article or meta-analysis
- The opinion paper/editorial
44Scientific Writing, HRP 215Top 5
45Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- A few more (pseudo) homonyms and commonly
confused words - 1a. ALLUDE v. ELUDE
- allude to reference indirectly
- She frequently alluded to her distrust of lawyers
without explicitly stating her opinion. - He impressed the crowd with his allusions to
Greek mythology. (n.b. versus illusion) - elude to evade
- The stealthy cat-burglar eluded the police all
winter. - The elusive protein, which our team has been
trying to characterize for months, has baffled
labs across the country.
46Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- 1b. ASSURE v. ENSURE v. INSURE
- assure to promise, to state with confidence
- She assured the students that no one would fail
the course. - ensure to make certain
- Well-planned interventions can ensure better
outcomes for children with diabetes. - insure to protect against loss, in
legal/financial realms - The post-docs could barely afford to insure their
cars.
47Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- 1c. ARRANT v. ERRANT
- arrant being notoriously without moderation
extreme - We are arrant knaves, all believe none of us.
(Shakespeare) - errant given to travelling straying outside the
proper path or bounds moving aimlessly or
irregularly deviating from a standard fallible - The errant toddler found his way into all sorts
of mischief.
48Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- 2. AMONG v. BETWEEN
- Among collective and undefined relations (three
or more) - Youre among friends.
- Agreement was reached among all four neighbors.
- Between one-to-one relationships of pairs
within a group or the sense shared by. - Diplomatic relationships between the United
States and France ceased. - There is close friendship between the members of
the club.
49Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- LAY v. LIE
- Lay is a transitive verb (takes an object)
- forms lay, laid, has laid, is laying
- The hen lays an egg. (laid, had laid, is laying)
- The best laid schemes o mice an men / Gang aft
a-gley. (To a Mouse, Robert Burns) - Lie is an intransitive verb (does not take an
object) - forms lie, lay, has lain, is lying
- The llama lies down.
- ? Q What about Now I lay me down to sleep???
50Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- 4. DISINTERESTED v. UNINTERESTED
- Disinterested impartial.
- Uninterested not interested in.
- Let a disinterested person judge our dispute.
- This man is obviously uninterested in our dispute.
51Scientific Writing, HRP 215
- e.g. v. i.e. (informal)
- e.g. for example
- from Latin exempli gratia for the sake of an
example - ? Many animals (e.g., mountain lions, panthers,
etc.) are quite good hunters. - i.e. in other words
- from Latin id est that is
- ? That walking boot is synthetic (i.e., not
leather or suede).
52Scientific Writing, HRP 215For next week
- Homework
- Read chapter 1 of Successful Scientific Writing
(pp. 1-22) - 3-unit students Work on Introduction/Background.
53Scientific Writing, HRP 215For next week
- Next time
- Abstracts, Introductions, Discussions