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How to guide for effectually writing a publishable research manuscript – Pubrica

Author: Pubrica UK
by Pubrica UK
Posted: Sep 21, 2021

Introduction

COMMON THOUGHTS FOR SCIENTIFIC WRITING

"Why this topic and study matters" starts the introduction to this story. "How we performed the research" and "the editorialized conclusions of the research" continue this story in the methodology and results section. The narrative comes to a close with a debate and conclusion on "how to interpret this study in light of prior studies on this issue.

GUIDANCE ON MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION

1. Introduction

Most studies have a brief, targeted introductory portion of 250-500 words. (See Table 1) Though many investigators will be tempted to use the introduction or data summary section from their Institutional Review Board submission as the final manuscript’s introduction, most will find that their thoughts on the research topic have become more refined during the research process and that this initial draft is likely too long, unfocused, or does not convey the exact message.

2. Method

The length of a concise, concentrated techniques section is usually between 350 and 750 words. Many inexperienced investigators may mistakenly assume that this is the easiest part to write; nonetheless, the problem of providing enough detail to allow another qualified researcher to replicate your work is significant. When feasible, use cited literature to explain essential concepts and objectives.

3. Results

A brief, concentrated results section, excluding tables and figures, is usually between 250 and 500 words (10-20% of the document length). The facts should be presented in a logical order, with no editorializing. Point estimates and the accuracy and confidence associated with them (e.g., odds ratio 1.78, 95 per cent confidence interval 1.04-2.56) give a complete narrative. Tables and figures should be utilized to cut down on the number of words in the primary text while presenting the most important results in a simpler way to understand, identify, and discuss with colleagues than the written word.

4. Discussion

The length of a short, focused discussion segment is typically between 750 and 1500 words (30-60 per cent of manuscript length). The opening paragraph of the text is likely to be one of the most read paragraphs. As a result, the authors should try to displeasure the reader’s interest by stating the research’s significance (e.g., "This is the first study to...") and the most noteworthy findings.

5. Conclusions

The average length of a concise, focused closing section is fewer than 100 words. The writers may end with a citation-worthy comment and a call to action for further study. The phrasing of the citable statements should reflect the study’s confidence and strength, focusing on not exaggerating the relevance of the findings.

6. Abstract

Although the author rules for the journal to which the article is being submitted should be read for particular criteria, most abstracts have a set word limit (e.g., 200-300 words) that necessitates a higher level of attention to detail with each word than the main content. Finally, the abstract concludes with a phrase or two of the conclusion.

Documentary Guidance to Manuscript Accommodation.

1. Cover letter

Although not all journals require a cover letter, including one may only help your application if it is well-structured. The cover letter is frequently deciding whether or not a manuscript is sent to reviewers by an editor. All required statements by the journal (e.g., funding disclosures, authorship criteria met, where results were previously published in abstract form, and conflicts of interest) should be included in the concluding paragraph.

2. Response to reviewer comments

Uninvited submissions are virtually never approved without further changes after the first submission. As a result, the chance to reply to a request for minor or substantial modifications and resubmit a new version of the article is the most favourable editorial decision.

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Author: Pubrica UK

Pubrica UK

Member since: Jul 29, 2019
Published articles: 96

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