Transcript
Page 1: Powerful  Titles and  Compelling Abstracts

Powerful Titles and Compelling Abstracts

Page 2: Powerful  Titles and  Compelling Abstracts

Overview

• Key elements

• What makes a good title/abstract

• Things to avoid

• Tips for writing

Page 3: Powerful  Titles and  Compelling Abstracts

Where to Begin

• Know your audience

• No “one way” to write

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When to Begin

• Title and Abstract summarize your work

• Should be last thing you write

• Timing issues

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Title and Abstract• Be specific

• Key elements should be included in both (Indexing)

• Part of paper most people will see

• Best way to get people interested

• Self-contained summary of work and significance

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Title• Key element describing content of study

• First (and often only) portion of paper that can be seen by everyone

• People judge by the title whether to read the abstract

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Writing a Title• Tells the complete story

• Specifically describes study

• Use as few words as possible

• Is unambiguous

• Includes model system

• Begins with an important word

• Concise label; not a descriptive sentence

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Title Tips• Avoid unnecessary words

• Avoid jargon

• Be specific with results

• “catchy” or “cute” titles?• Fat Rats: A Case of too Many Hormones?

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Be Specific

Unspecific • “Pneumococcal responses”

Specific• “Stress response of Streptococcus pneumoniae to lactoferrin”

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Syntax Errors

Poor syntax“Clinical Acinetobacter baumannii Isolates form Biofilm”

Better syntax“Biofilm Formation by Clinical Isolates of Acinetobacter baumannii”

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Brainstorming a Title

• Write down as many titles that come to mind in 3-5 minutes

• Put them aside

• Compose and revise

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Abstract• Self-contained summary of your work

• Statement of significance

• Succinct and clear

• Don’t exceed word limit

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Abstract

• First part of paper usually written last

• Use past tense

• Approach: can take sentences and phrases from each section of paper

• Put them in sequence to summarize paper

• Then revise

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Abstract Tips

• Be succinct

• Be logical in presentation

• Extract key points from study• Condense in successive revisions

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Abstract Styles• One paragraph

• Multiple sections

• Graphic data

• References

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Parts of an Abstract• Background

• Hypothesis

• Model system

• General methodology

• Results

• Conclusions

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Background

• 1-3 sentences

• Describe general topic

• Discuss why topic is important

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Hypothesis

• 1-2 sentences

• Specific question being investigated or

purpose of study

• State as a hypothesis

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Model System

• Describe model system used (rat, human, DNA, in vitro, in vivo)

• List specifics as needed• E. coli BL21• CBA/N mice• THP1 cell line

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General Methodology

• 1-2 sentences

• Keep general unless new and innovative

• No specifics needed

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Results

• 1-2 sentences

• Complete summary that is specific to study

• Include main point(s)

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Significance

• 1-2 sentences

• Summarize significance of findings

• Place in broader context

• Keep specific to study

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Avoid Wordiness

• Focus on writing short sentences when possible

• Example of wordiness• “It is, therefore, apparent from the data that we have

shown in this study that there is a considerable change in the response we see in the animals that were treated with the much higher dose.”

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Be Precise in Wording• Use terms that have meaning in the scientific world• “Went up a little” vs. “Increased by 5%”

• Don’t use scientific terms in a non-scientific context• If you say there was a significant change, make sure it was significant, statistically speaking

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Active vs. Passive Verbs

• An active verb allows for more clarity and shorter sentences• Passive Verb

• Growth inhibition and increased ion concentration were elicited by KCl in both groups.

• Active Verb• KCl elicited growth inhibition and increased ion concentration in

both groups.

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Abbreviations

• Don’t forget to define abbreviations the first time they are mentioned

• Common terms may be okay such as:• DNA, ATP, RNA

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Scientific Writing Should Be…

• Reader-Based• Purposeful• Accurate• Clear

• Concise• Precise• Simple

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Benefits of Writing• Writing is as important as doing the research

• Opportunity to think more clearly about the research

• Final product of the research project

• Share your results with the greater scientific community

• The more you write, the better you will be

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Title Exercise

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Pneumococcal Surface Protein K (PspK) of Streptococcus pneumoniae Increases Adherence to Epithelial Cells and Enhances Nasopharyngeal Colonization


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