How to read a scientific article? The committee for clinical references of the French society for anaesthesia and intensive therapyEvery scientific article has to undergo a critical reading before its conclusions can be accepted. This article discusses the tools for assessing the scientific value of ...
HowtoReadaScientificArticle(如何阅读科学论文) How to Critically Read a Scientific Paper A general strategy for reading and understanding a scientific paper is to read the material critically. There are two underlying themes to this strategy. First, one must ask his/her own questions about the ...
How to (seriously) read a scientific paper By Elisabeth PainMar. 21, 2016 , 1:15 PM Adam Ruben’s tongue-in-cheek column about the common difficulties and frustrations of reading a scientific paper broadly resonated among Science Careers readers. Many of you have come to us asking for more...
How to Read a Scientific Article Mary Purugganan, Ph.D. maryp@rice.edu Jan Hewitt, Ph.D. jhewitt@rice.edu Reading a scientific article is a complex task. The worst way to approach this task is to treat it like the reading of a textbook—reading from title to literature cited, digest...
How to Read a Scientific Paper The main purpose of a scientific paper is to report new results, usually experimental, and to relate these results to previous knowledge in the field. Papers are one of the most important ways that we communicate with one another. In understanding how to read ...
How to read a paper. Papers that tell you what things cost (economic analyses). Part VIII. Cites information necessary in medical economic analyses. Includes the scientific basis of the study; Costs and benefits of health interventions... T Greenhalgh - 《Bmj British Medical Journal》 被引量:...
Back to outline 2. Reading a scientific paper Although it is tempting to read the paper straight through as you would do with most text, it is more efficient to organize the way you read. Generally, you first read the Abstract in order to understand the major points of the work. The ...
A few weeks into the seminar, I decided enough was enough. I wasn’t going to read another paper without understanding it. So I took that week’s journal article to the library. Not just the regular library, but the obscure little biology library, one of those dusty academic hidey-holes...
study. I also always look at plots/figures, as they help me get a first impression of a paper. Then I usually read the entire article from beginning to end, going through the sections in the order they appear so that I can follow the flow of work that the authors want to communicate...
I will save informative sentences from each article about a specific topic in a Word document. I'll write comments along the way about new ideas I got or questions I need to explore further. Then, in the future, I’ll only need to read this document instead of re-reading all the indiv...