Abstract
This seminar attempts to explain the mechanics of writing a scientific research paper. This serves as a useful starting point for those who have never written a research paper before or have very little previous experience. No one is born knowing how to write one. And yet, there are certain elements, a commonality, that can be found in virtually all good scientific research papers. We give our recommendations as to each section a good research paper consists of as well as what each section contains. This manuscript itself follows our recommended structure.
We believe that paper writing starts with the abstract. The abstract can be approximately 6-12 sentences. It’s a difficult starting point, but it forces the author to write down a concise description of what they’re researching and what the benefits are. Chances are, if the author can’t start out by writing an abstract, then it is not clear in
the author’s mind what the paper should be about. Of course the abstract will be refined and updated during the paper writing process. The abstract should concisely (1) identify the research topic, (2) describe the novelty of the presented work, and (3) identify the benefits and advantages that result.
This is part of Swansea University's Doctoral Training Seminar Series:
http://cs.swan.ac.uk/~csbob/dtc/
For more information please see:
How To Write A Visualization Research Paper: A Starting Point in Computer Graphics Forum (CGF), Vol. 29, No. 8, 2010, pages 2363-2371
http://cs.swan.ac.uk/~csbob/research/...
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