写作相关Academic toolbox英文论文写作

writing science笔记

2015-11-07  本文已影响1431人  石博士

推荐给各位科研工作者一本好书:writing science。
这本书不同于其他教写作的书,不是从写作的角度教你具体的写作方法,而是强调一个理念:科研写作实际是讲故事。
阅读了这本书的前九章,感觉受益颇多,难怪亚马逊上有人评论:看过他的书之后,我想把我之前写过的论文全部重新写一遍。
强烈推荐各位科研工作者和写论文感到痛苦的小伙伴阅读这本书,并完成每章的练习。

Writing science

Preface

Principles versus rules

Acknowledge

1 Writing Science

1.1 Writing versus rewriting

2 Science writing as storytelling

2.1. Finding the story

3 Making a story sticky

  • S: Simple

3.1. Simple

3.1.1. Simple Language: Schemas

It's a light-colored, finely textured meat, with very little fat. It cuts easily and is moist if not overcooked. The flavor is mild.

It tastes like chick, but a little meatier.

3.2. Unexpected

3.3 Concrete

3.4 Credible

3.5 Emotional

3.6. Stories

4 Story Structure

Opening (O): Whom is the story about? Who are the characters? Where does it take place? What do you need to understand about the situation to follow the story? what is the larger problem you are addressing?
Challenge (C): What do your characters need to accomplish? What specific question do you propose to answer?
Action (A): What happens to address the challenge? In a paper, this describes the work you did; in a proposal, it describes the work you hope to do.
Resolution (R): Howe have the characters and their world changed as a result of the action? This is your conclusion--what did you learn from your work?

4.1 The four core story structures

OCAR structure

ABDCE Structure

  • Action (A): Start with a dramatic action to immediately engage readers and entice them to keep reading.

LD Structure

LDR Structure

  • OCAR: Slowest--take your time working into the story.

4.2. Applying story structure to science writing

4.3. Mapping OCAR onto IMRaD

  • Opening: This is typically the first paragraph that introduces the larger problem the paper is targeting. What is the context, and what are the characters we are studying?

Materials and Methods :This begins describing the action--what did you do?
Results :This continues the action by describing your findings.
Discussion : This develops to the climax and resolution. What did it all mean, and what have you learned? It often ends with a conclusions subsection that is the resolution.

5 The opening

5.1. Examples of good openings

Example 5.1
Since the late 1800s, N mineralization has been the perceived center point of the soil N cycle and the process that controls N availability to plants.

Example 5.2
Current public health guidelines in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia recommend that women consume a supplemental dose of 400 μg of folic acid per day in the month preceding and during the first trimester of pregnancy to reduce the risk of neural tube defects in children.

Example 5.3
The topography of mountainous landscapes is created by the interaction of rock uplift and erosion. River incision into bedrock is the key erosional process that controls the rate of landscape response to changes in rock uplift rate and climate.

5.2. Bad openings

5.2.1 Misdirection

Example 5.5
Plants are a critical control of CH4 dynamics in wetland ecosystems. They supply C [carbon] to the soil methanogenic community both through production of soil organic matter, and as fresh exudates and residues. Fresh plant material may be an important CH4 precursor even in an organic matter–rich peat soil. Strong correlations between net primary productivity and systemlevel CH4 fluxes across a wide range of ecosystems highlight the importance of plant C inputs.
Vascular plants, however, also transport CH4 out of soil and sediment, effectively bypassing the aerobic zone of CH4 oxidation.

“Plants control CH4 dynamics in wetland ecosystems by two mechanisms. The first is to supply C to the soil methanogenic community . . .”

5.2.2 No Direction

Example 5.6
In meiosis, genes that are always transmitted together are described as showing “linkage.” Linkage, however, can be incomplete, due to the exchange of segments of DNA when chromosomes are paired. This incomplete linkage can lead to the creation of new pairings of alleles, creating new lineages with distinct sets of traits.

5.3. Targeting your audience

  • Example 5.7
    For a specialist journal: Epifluorescence microscopy and direct viable counting methods have shown that only 0.01 to 0.1 % of all the microbial cells from marine environments form colonies on standard agar plates. Much of the discrepancy between direct counts and plate counts has been explained by measurements of microbial diversity that employed 16S rRNA gene sequencing without cultivation. The present consensus is that many of the most abundant marine microbial groups are not yet cultivated.
  • Example 5.8
    For a generalist journal: Antonie van Leeuwenhoek (1632–1723), the first observer of bacteria, would be surprised that over 99 % of microbes in the sea remained unseen until after Viking Lander (1976) set out to seek microbial life on Mars.
  • Example 5.9:
    The influence of fog on ecological and hydrological processes in coastal zones has long intrigued scientists.
  • Example 5.10:
    California’s coastal forests are among its most distinctive and treasured natural resources.

5.4. Opening for a Broader audience: The two-step opening

Example 5.11:
The Arctic has become a focus of attention because global warming is expected to be the most severe at extreme latitudes. The thick organic soils of the tundra contain large stocks of carbon (C), and these soils may act as either a source or a sink for atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). It has been suggested that as the climate warms, increased organic matter decomposition will release CO2 to the atmosphere, contributing to warming and creating a positive feedback that results in further increases in atmospheric CO2. Alternatively, it has been argued that increased decomposition will release bound nitrogen (N) and other nutrients in the soil and thereby enhance plant growth, since plant growth is nutrient-limited in arctic tundra. Increased plant growth would allow the tundra to be a sink for atmospheric C because plant material has a wider C/N ratio than soil organic matter. Thus, the direction the C balance of the arctic will shift with warming is unclear and depends on interactions between soil C and N cycling that we still do not understand in the tundra.

Example 5.12
Succession has been a central theme in ecological research for almost a hundred years. Two questions have directed much of that research:
What causes the shifts in communities?
How do ecological processes change as a result of these community shifts?
These questions are linked through a feedback loop: plants affect soil processes which in turn affect plant community structure.

5.5. Changing style for different audiences

Example 5.13:
Larry Pomeroy’s seminal paper revolutionized our concepts of the ocean's food web by proposing that microorganisms mediate a large fraction of the energy flow in pelagic marine ecosystems. Before 1974, bacteria and protozoa were not included as significant components of food web models. Pomeroy argued forcefully that heterotrophic microorganisms, the “unseen strands in the ocean’s food web,” must be incorporated into ecosystem models.

5.6. How wide should your opening be?

Example 5.14:
Opening : The Arctic is important in the global climate system because tundra soils store a large amount of carbon that may be released to the atmosphere as CO2. An important recent discovery is that wintertime CO2 fluxes from soil are large.
Resolution 1: Developing a reliable model of CO2 fluxes in the Arctic therefore requires a better model of winter C cycling processes.
Resolution 2: In the arctic tundra, microbial community composition changes little through the winter.

5.7. Positioning statements: Pawn-pushes versus Queen-launches

6 The Funnel: Connecting O and C

6.1. Example of the funnel at work

Example 6.1 (见62页)

6.2. Bad introductions: Failing to define the problem

6.2.2. Offering a Solution before Defi ning a Problem

Example 6.2:
Addressing complex interactions among chemistry, physics, and biology in climate systems requires an interdisciplinary approach. We propose to address this challenge by using Complex Systems Modeling Theory (CSMT). CSMT has been used in chemical systems to model molecular reaction
mechanisms and in cell biology to model physiological pathways. It has been used . . .

6.3. Introduction versus literature review

7 The Challenge

7.1. Questions versus hypotheses

7.2. Questions versus objectives

7.3. What comes after stating the questions?

7.4. Good Challenges

Example 7.1
Our goal in this study was twofold. First, we tested whether an animal’s physical environment would affect hippocampal attributes. Specifically, we tested whether food-caching mountain chickadees (Poecile gambeli) housed in captivity differed in hippocampal volume, hippocampal neuron number and neuronal density as compared with fully developed wild-caught conspecifics. We predicted that captivity, with reduced environmental complexity and restricted memory-based experiences (compared with memory-based experiences afforded in the natural environment), would reduce hippocampal volume, neuron number and, potentially, neuron density.

Example 7.2
Despite the tantalizing evidence for DAG and/or its downstream products in visual transduction and the synergistic role of calcium, in no instance has application of such chemical stimuli fully reproduced the remarkable size and speed of the photocurrent. This may imply that yet another signal may be missing from the proposed schemes. In other systems PIP2 has been shown to possess signaling functions of its own, independent from those of its hydrolysis products. . . . These observations prompted the conjecture that in microvillar photoreceptors PIP2 may help keep the channels closed and its hydrolysis could promote their opening. In the present report, we examined the consequences of manipulating PIP2 on membrane currents and light responsiveness in is qolated photoreceptors from Pecten and Lima.

Example 7.4:
However, three decades of work in the gas phase have explored how the specifics of the forces between atoms involved in isolated chemical reactions determine the final energy partitioning as the reaction moves from the transition state. Is knowledge of these specifics completely immaterial to reaction dynamics in solution?

7.5. Bad Challenges

Example 7.5
Some T-cells may be anergic — that is, unable to proliferate after being restimulated with an antigen. Some anergic T-cells are unable to link to the T-cell– antigen presenting cell (APC) interface. Here we examined the structural characteristics of anergic mouse T-cells and we tested their functional response to being rechallenged with antigen-loaded APCs.

To determine what causes mouse T-cells to be anergic, we evaluated the structural characteristics of T-cells and how they responded to being rechallenged with antigen-loaded APCs.

Example 7.7
The study had two goals. First, we aimed to constrain our estimates of grassland plant production by comparing measurements based on two techniques: maximum biomass at the end of the season and periodic measurements of photosynthesis. Second, we examined the response of grass growth to a combination of elevated CO 2 and increased temperatures, conditions that are expected to occur with climate warming.

The primary goal of this study was to evaluate how grass growth responds to a combination of elevated CO2 and increased temperatures, conditions that are expected to occur with climate warming. To validate our plant growth measures, we used two approaches to estimate plant production: maximum biomass at the end of the season and periodic measurements of photosynthesis.

8 Action

8.1 Methods

  • Example 8.1
    Enzyme Inactivation following 3-HPAA Metabolism
    Enzyme inactivation associated with 3-HPAA metabolism was measured by the method of Turman et al. (2008).

We measured protein by the Lowry approach.
We measured microbial biomass by the chloroform slurry approach as described by Fierer and Schimel (2003).
We amplified DNA by hot-start PCR.

We measured protein by a modification of the Lowry protein assay, in which sodium citrate, instead of sodium tartrate, is used in reagent A.

8.2. Results and discussion

8.2.1. To sparate, or not to separate: That is the question

Example 8.5
Paragraph Integrating Results and Inference
Notably, the spectra of Rv0899-B (Figure 3B, red) and Rv0899-C (Figure 3B, blue) form perfect complementary subsets of the spectrum from Rv0899-BC (Figure 3A), spanning both domains, with the exception of some peaks from residues in the BC connecting region. This demonstrates that the B and C domains constitute independently folded modules, as suggested by sequence homology. The resonance line widths measured in the three spectra are very similar, further indicating that all three polypeptides exist as monomeric species in solution. Since the line widths are not appreciably larger in the spectra of the BC polypeptide, the B and C domains may be significantly dynamically decoupled.

Example 8.6
The B and C domains constitute independently folded modules, as indicated by the fact that their spectra form perfect complementary subsets of the spectrum from Rv0899-BC.

8.2.2. Choosing Data to present

8.2.3. Presenting Data

8.2.4. Statistics and Stories

8.3. Discussion

Example 8.8
It is well-known that factors such as the nature of the nucleophile, solvent, and leaving group directly affect the rate of the bimolecular nucleophilic substitution (SN2) reactions; yet, in the case of carbanions, little has been documented with absolute rate constants. . . .
Photoinduced decarboxylation of suitable substituted carbanions provides a route for the formation of substituted cycloalkanes that proceeds in high yields in nonhydroxylic solvents and with good leaving groups such as bromide and iodide.

Example 8.9
The extracellular forms of viruses face formidable challenges. The virion itself must be sufficiently stable to protect the viral genome during the passage from host to host and cell to cell, and yet, upon reaching the target cell and encountering the appropriate trigger, the virion must initiate programmed steps that result in the release of the viral genome into the appropriate compartment of the cell. For nonenveloped viruses, the conceptually simple mechanism of membrane fusion is not an option. . . .
After binding the cell surface, the virus is internalized through a clathrin-, caveolin-, and flotillin-independent, but actin- and tyrosine kinase–dependent, pathway. After internalization (and only after internalization), the virus releases its RNA rapidly from vesicles that are located within 100–200 nm of the plasma membrane without requiring endocytic acidification or microtubule-dependent transport. Our results have settled the long-lasting debate of whether PV [poliovirus] directly breaks the plasma membrane barrier or relies on endocytosis to deliver its genome into the cell. These results have also opened interesting questions for this important virus that await further investigation, including what characteristic of these endocytic vesicles near the plasma membrane triggers RNA release; and after release near the cell surface, how is the released RNA transported to replication sites.

Example 8.10
We have identified a novel class of GGT inhibitors that are not glutamine analogues. Kinetic studies of the lead compound OU749 revealed that the mechanism of inhibition was uncompetitive relative to the γ -glutamyl substrate, indicating that the inhibitor bound the enzyme-substrate complex. In contrast to competitive inhibitors, which lose potency as substrate concentration builds, uncompetitive inhibitors become more potent as the substrate concentration rises in an inhibited open system. . . .
Development of less toxic GGT inhibitors, such as OU749, holds great promise for enhanced cancer therapy.

Example 8.11:
In this paper, we have shown how to construct various D-branes in the type IIB plane-wave background that preserve half the dynamical supersymmetries of the background. . . .
The connection of the instantonic branes we have constructed with instantonic branes in AdS5 × S5 is more obscure. Understanding this could lead to an understanding of the relation between the D-instanton and instanton effects in the dual Yang-Mills field theory. It would also be interesting to understand the effect of the D-instanton on the plane-wave dynamics. Finally, one should be able to analyse the D-instanton contributions by considering the effects of the R4 and related terms in the effective low energy IIB action in this background.

9 The Resolution

9.1. Good resolutions

Example 9.1
{1} In conclusion, {2} our data suggest that Y-phosphorylated p27 can inhibit cyclin D-cdk4 complexes by two independent mechanisms: blocking access to the T-loop and disrupting the cdk4 active site directly. {3} Our model suggests that p27 Y phosphorylation is a molecular “switch” that would help turn cdk4 activity on or off. {4} Modulation of Y kinase activity would permit activation of preformed, inactive p27-cyclin D-cdk4 complexes by cdk7 and may be used to regulate cdk4 activity throughout the cell cycle.

Example 9.2
{1} These templated nanostructured frameworks thus hold several advantages for the design and synthesis of devices. {2} Films can be selectively deposited through solution phase routes using the chalcogenide affinity to bind to gold. {3} Furthermore, the ability to control the elemental compositions of the nanostructured films allows the band structure of the inorganic framework to be tailored for specific applications. {4} Current research is underway to create composite materials using an organic semiconductor as the structure directing agent. Such materials would make good candidates for device applications such as photovoltaics. Moreover, it is likely that these same band energy trends will hold for nontemplated versions of chalcogenide glass semiconductors synthesized using Zintl cluster precursors. {5} As a result, the data presented here provide a basis to predicatively synthesize a broad range of semiconductors with desired band properties using Zintl cluster precursors and simple solution phase methods.

9.1.1 Concluding with a Question

Example 9.3
{1} There was an extraordinarily large amount of ice bottom melting in the Beaufort Sea region in the summer of 2007. Solar radiation absorbed in the upper ocean provided more than adequate heat for this melting. An increase in the open water fraction resulted in a 500 % positive anomaly in solar heat input to the upper ocean, triggering an ice–albedo feedback and contributing to the accelerating ice retreat. The melting in the Beaufort Sea has elements of a classic ice–albedo feedback signature: more open water leads to more solar heat absorbed, which results in more melting and more open water. The positive ice–albedo feedback can accelerate the observed reduction in Arctic sea ice. {2} Questions remain regarding how widespread this extreme bottom melting was, what initially triggered the increase in area of open water, and what the summer of 2007 portends for 2008 and beyond.

9.2. Bad resolutions

9.2.1 Weak

Example 9.5
A proteomic evaluation of hummingbirds under simulated migratory conditions revealed evidence of several stress-associated processes: protein degradation in wing muscle tissues, depletion of metabolic cofactors, and enhancement of stress-response proteins. These results suggest that changes in the hummingbird proteome may provide new insights into the complex physiology of avian systems biology.

A proteomic evaluation of hummingbirds under simulated migratory conditions revealed evidence of several stress-associated processes: protein degradation in wing muscle tissues, depletion of metabolic cofactors, and enhancement of stress-response proteins. While hummingbirds migrate long distances over water without feeding or resting, it is physiologically stressful, and the birds’ ability to manage this stress may limit the distance they can migrate.

“While many birds, such as hummingbirds, migrate long distances without feeding or resting, it is physiologically stressful, and birds’ ability to manage such stress may limit the distance they can migrate.”

Example 9.6
In summary, we show that X7 alters the expression pattern of extracellular proteases in the “flesh-eating bacterium” Streptococcus pyogenes, which causes necrotizing fasciitis. If the function of X7 can be fully established, it would likely deepen our understanding of this destructive disease.

“In summary, we show that X7 alters the expression pattern of extracellular proteases in the ‘flesh-eating bacterium’ Streptococcus pyogenes, which causes necrotizing fasciitis. This research may offer a route to developing therapeutic agents that would minimize tissue damage while antibiotic treatments were directly attacking the bacterium itself.”

9.2.2 Distracting

Example 9.7
The mycorrhizal fungal hyphae extending out from tree roots can comprise more than 1/3 of the total biomass of microbes in the soil. They greatly extend the absorptive surface area of the root system and enhance total nutrient uptake by the trees. Additional work, however, is required to assess how much mycorrhizal fungi enhance the uptake of organic N forms in forest soils.

Example 9.8:
In arid environments such as East Africa, termites are critical “ecosystem engineers.” They collect resources such as nitrogen and phosphorus from far afield and accumulate it in and near their mounds, creating nutrient hot-spots on the landscape. These hot-spots may be sites for colonization by new seedlings of both the native savanna trees and for novel invasive plant species.

9.2.3. Undermining your conclusions

Example 9.9
To conclude, 3-methyl-ambrosia offers a new approach for thyroid carcinoma therapy. Our data provide evidence on safety and in vivo activity of this compound in patients with this condition, although the proof for clinical benefit remains to be established in future clinical trials.

“While further clinical trials will be necessary to establish the full benefits of 3-methyl-ambrosia as a therapeutic agent, our data provide evidence that it is safe and shows in vivo activity against thyroid tumors. 3-Methyl-ambrosia therefore may offer a new approach for treating patients with thyroid carcinoma.”

9.3. How to fix a bad resolution

9.4. Resolutions in proposals

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