IMRAD For Diss Workshop 1
IMRAD For Diss Workshop 1
IMRAD For Diss Workshop 1
METHODS
Purpose
From the methods section (sometimes methods and materials), the reader should be able to conceptualize
and evaluate your process and replicate your work.
The section answers the question: How was the data generated?
Were results generated in a manner consistent with accepted practice? Were methods appropriate
to objectives? What analytical methods were applied?
The section includes enough specific detail about materials used and methods followed that another
scientist could repeat your experiment, especially to verify your results.
This section should also cover the problems you anticipated, the steps you took to prevent them from
occurring, the problems that did occur and the ways you minimized their impact.
Common Problems
Not taking the readers level of expertise into account: edit for unnecessary explanation of common
procedures.
Not providing for reproducibility: consider exactly what your reader will need to reproduce your work.
The most crucial detail is usually measurement.
Not providing rationale for the protocol followed.
Not describing the control: identify the control(s) and explain what they are controlling for.
Ignoring significant problems: discuss problems that arose and how you overcame them.
Putting results in the methods section: results always go in the results section.
Process
Keep excellent notes: what you did, why you did it, and what happened. As you revise, go to your target
publication and read the notes to authors AND the methods sections of several articles similar to yours.
Organization
Narrative structure: Think of this section as a narrative not a recipe. Tell what you did, not how to perform
the experiment.
Follow natural chronology: Describe what you did in the order in which you did it.
Consider using subsections: if you used a lot of materials, if the procedure is unusually complicated, or if
you have used a new or generally unfamiliar procedure.
RESULTS
Function: to objectively present your key results, without interpretation, in an orderly and logical sequence
using both illustrative materials (Tables and Figures) and text.
Organization: The tables and/or figures present key findings in a logical order. This organization of the
tables and figures should tell a story, leading the reader through the steps needed to logically answer the
research question. The text of the results section follows this sequence and highlights the answers to the
research question.
Refer to each Table and/or Figure individually and in sequence (see numbering sequence), and clearly
indicate for the reader the key results that each conveys. Key results depend on your question: they might
include obvious trends, important differences, similarities, correlations, maximums, minimums, etc.
Summarize Data: Reduce data to a manageable size. Convert raw data to means, for example by
reporting mean capture rates in weeks or months. Present this compacted information in the visually
accessible forms of Tables and Figures. Once reduced, comparisons can be made, trends can be noted, and
from them generalizations can be put forth.
Both kinds of information must be presented: In the text section, present the major generalization(s); In the
Tables and Figures, present the data supporting the generalization(s).
Text Section: The body of the Results section is a text-based presentation of the key findings. The text
should guide the reader through the results, stressing key findings. A major function of the text section is to
provide clarifying information.
Write the text of the Results section consecutively, concisely and objectively. Use passive voice if that is
the norm of the target journal but use the active voice when possible. Use past tense.
Every Figure and Table included in the paper MUST be referred to in the text section; these references
should be individual, in sequence and should clearly indicate for the reader the key results that each
conveys. Sentences should draw the reader's attention to the relationship or trend highlighted. Refer to the
appropriate Figure or Table parenthetically:
Germination rates were significantly higher after 24 h in running water than in controls (Fig. 4).
DNA sequence homologies for the purple gene from the four congeners (Table 1) show high
similarity, differing by at most 4 base pairs.
Tables and Figures: These can take 3 forms: text (different than the text section described above), Tables
and Figures. Arrange these in the most logical sequence.
Text: Some simple results are best stated in a single sentence, with data summarized parenthetically.
Figures: Figures are visual presentations of results, including graphs, diagrams, photos, drawings,
schematics, maps, etc. Graphs show trends or patterns of relationship. Bar graphs, frequency histograms,
RESOURCES
Day and Gastel, How to Write and Publish a
Scientific Paper (Greenwood Press).
Penrose and Katz, Writing in the Sciences (Allyn
and Bacon)
Scientific Style and Format: The CSE Manual
for Authors, Editors, and Publishers Seventh
Edition
http://www.dianahacker.com/resdoc/sciences.ht
ml (CSE formatting)
Graduate Writing Fellows:
[email protected]