#Literature Research
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digitalgoodsf · 19 days ago
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✨ Streamline Your Research – Stay Organized & Focused! ✨
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ziyue-kexin-jieyu · 3 months ago
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literaryvein-reblogs · 4 months ago
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How to Read a Scientific Article
THE THREE-PASS APPROACH
The key idea is that you should read the paper in up to 3 passes, instead of starting at the beginning and plowing your way to the end.
Each pass accomplishes specific goals and builds upon the previous pass:
The first pass gives you a general idea about the paper.
The second pass lets you grasp the paper’s content, but not its details.
The third pass helps you understand the paper in depth.
At the end of the first pass, you should be able to answer the 5 Cs:
Category: What type of paper is this? A measurement paper? An analysis of an existing system? A description of a research prototype?
Context: Which other papers is it related to? Which theoretical bases were used to analyze the problem?
Correctness: Do the assumptions appear to be valid?
Contributions: What are the paper’s main contributions?
Clarity: Is the paper well written?
Purpose of the Sections of Empirical Articles
Section — Use it for
Abstract — This is a great section to read to find out if the article will be relevant to your own research.
Introduction — This section gives you an overview of work that has been done on topics relating to the hypothesis of the article, and will often lead you to other relevant work that has been done in your area of interest.
Method — This section will help you understand the design of the experiment. This is particularly useful if you'd like to replicate the study.
Results — The results will tell you what the author/s found in the course of their experiment.
Discussion — The discussion section is typically easier to read than the method and results section, and it will help the reader understand the implications of the results of the experiment.
References — This is a great place to look to find articles that are related to the one you are reading. If you're looking to build your own literature review, the references are a great place to start.
The Anatomy of a Scientific Paper
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Some initial guidelines for how to read a paper:
Read critically: Reading a research paper must be a critical process. You should not assume that the authors are always correct. Instead, be suspicious. Critical reading involves asking appropriate questions.
Read creatively: Reading a paper critically is easy, in that it is always easier to tear something down than to build it up. Reading creatively involves harder, more positive thinking.
Make notes as you read the paper. Use whatever style you prefer. If you have questions or criticisms, write them down so you do not forget them. Underline key points the authors make. Mark the data that is most important or that appears questionable. Such efforts help the first time you read a paper and pay big dividends when you have to re-read a paper after several months.
After the first read-through, try to summarize the paper in one or two sentence.
If possible, compare the paper to other works.
Write a review that includes:
a one or two sentence summary of the paper.
a deeper, more extensive outline of the main points of the paper, including for example assumptions made, arguments presented, data analyzed, and conclusions drawn.
any limitations or extensions you see for the ideas in the paper.
your opinion of the paper; primarily, the quality of the ideas and its potential impact.
The guide below details how to read a scientific article step-by-step.
First, you should not approach a scientific article like a textbook— reading from beginning to end of the chapter or book without pause for reflection or criticism. Additionally, it is highly recommended that you highlight and take notes as you move through the article.
Skim the article. This should only take you a few minutes. You are not trying to comprehend the entire article at this point, but just get a basic overview. You don’t have to read in order; the discussion/conclusions will help you to determine if the article is relevant to your research. You might then continue on to the Introduction. Pay attention to the structure of the article, headings, and figures.
Grasp the vocabulary. Begin to go through the article and highlight words and phrases you do not understand. Some words or phrases you may be able to get an understanding from the context in which it is used, but for others you may need the assistance of a medical or scientific dictionary. Subject-specific dictionaries available through our Library databases and online are listed below.
Identify the structure of the article and work on your comprehension. Most journals use an IMRD structure: An abstract followed by Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion. These sections typically contain conventional features, which you will start to recognize. If you learn to look for these features you will begin to read and comprehend the article more quickly.
 Read the bibliography/references section. Reading the references or works cited may lead you to other useful resources. You might also get a better understanding of the basic terminology, main concepts, major researchers, and basic terminology in the area you are researching.
Reflect on what you have read and draw your own conclusions. As you are reading jot down any questions that come to mind. They may be answered later on in the article or you may have stumbled upon something that the authors did not consider. Here are some examples of questions you may ask yourself as you read:
 Have I taken time to understand all the terminology?
Am I spending too much time on the less important parts of this article?
Do I have any reason to question the credibility of this research?
What specific problem does the research address and why is it important?
How do these results relate to my research interests or to other works which I have read?
6. Read the article a second time in chronological order. Reading the article a second time will reinforce your overall understanding. You may even start to make connections to other articles that you have read on this topic.
Identify Key Information
Whether you are looking for information that supports the hypothesis in your own paper or carefully analyzing the article and critiquing the research methods or findings, there are important questions that you should answer as you read the article.
What is the main hypothesis?
Why is this research important?
Did the researchers use appropriate measurements and procedures?
What were the variables in the study?
What was the key finding of the research?
Do the findings justify the author’s conclusions?
Sources: 1 2 3 4 5 6 ⚜ More: Notes & References ⚜ Writing Resources PDFs
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poorly-drawn-mdzs · 7 months ago
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Started a new book series, and has been a journey...an Odyssey, if you will.
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magical-awesome-kid · 3 months ago
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That moment when you use your Master’s Degree in Cell and Molecular Biology and your peer-reviewed knowledge of cancer and blood biology to write out a highly accurate reason for Anime Logic…
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butchazepam · 1 year ago
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updated radical feminist library
the radical feminist library, by aggrolesbo/ladielabrys, is great. but it has a lot of repeated and illegible files, and without the proper authors so it gets difficult to search for things. I cleaned it put and then added a lot more books recommended across the internet. Plus very good releases by suny press and routledge.
i separated the trans folder from the rest of the library so you can send it to people who would otherwise be turned off.
If you have any recommendations i would be glad to add it!
spread it far and wide please
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jstor · 5 months ago
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Hi Jstor! Bless what you do, but I have to know: is there a way you can filter out reviews of articles? I keep trying to find specific articles for some searches and all I get is reviews by other people OF the specific article.
If it does not exist yet, maybe that's a function to look into eventually? It'd sure make my life easier, I bet others agree. If that's not feasible, I understand.
Thanks!
Hi there, yes you can! Here's a video tutorial we put together a while ago.
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digitalgoodsf · 29 days ago
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🔍 Streamline Your Research Process with Ease
Conducting a literature review can be overwhelming, but Cognisight helps you stay organized, track sources, and analyze key findings efficiently. Whether you're a student, researcher, or academic, this planner provides a structured approach to managing your research.
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The Ultimate Research Planner – Stay Ahead in Your Studies! 🎓📊
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belovedapollo · 7 months ago
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inspired by the quote
I want to write a novel about Silence," he said; “the things people don’t say.
from The Voyage Out by Virginia Woolf
I did a little research about silence and what it can mean
reblog is ok, don’t repost/use
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separatist-apologist · 12 days ago
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Just watched a tiktok of a GRADUATE level student UPLOADING other people's research into chat gpt so it would find the gaps for her. Can you IMAGINE? Like can you actually imagine all the time spent working on research just for some lazy student to feed your work into a plagarism program so she doesn't have to do any thinking for the advanced degree she claims to want?
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literaryvein-reblogs · 3 months ago
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How to Read
some references for the writing tip: "read a lot" / "read widely"
Active Reading ⚜ Tips for Active Reading
Critical Reading ⚜ Identifying Character Descriptions
Evaluating Sources ⚜ Primary Sources ⚜ Source Integration
Narrative Elements ⚜ Note Taking ⚜ Read like a Writer
Scientific Article ⚜ Your Reading Journal
More: Writing Tips & Advice ⚜ Editing ⚜ Writing Resources PDFs
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briechyne · 3 months ago
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For the Graduating Class of 2025.
We got this!
Seniors. Survivors.
IG: @briechyne
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thesecrethistori-an · 3 months ago
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PhD Day 108: came to the doctoral office in my faculty to avoid taking a nap after lunch. Enjoying my readings today and very happy and stressed about all that's coming 🤍✨
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ayesharahmannsstuff · 3 months ago
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greekmythcomix · 2 years ago
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I just had a look online to find if anyone had made a list of all the names of fighters in the Iliad, and I discovered that someone in fact had.
I had.
Me.
In 2015.
I have absolutely no memory of this.
I made a spreadsheet, and even wordclouds ffs.
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It’s even got what side they’re on, where they’re originally from, their epithet and patronymic if they have one. Wow.
And, you can filter it by any of these to find which version of a character you need.
Oh my god I even put if they brought SHIPS? I made an excel spreadsheet of the CATALOGUE OF SHIPS. (I’m Dyscalculaic though so they might be wrong ha!)
Anyway, thanks, past-fugue-state-me?!
I’m sure I used it to make the Deaths in the Iliad infographic: https://www.tumblr.com/greekmythcomix/722650261704867840/death-in-the-iliad-an-infographic-originally
Anyway, the ‘names in the Iliad’ post is here with links to the spreadsheet: https://greekmythcomix.com/2015/07/21/fighters-in-the-iliad/
Have fun with it!
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