Academic_Paper_Structure_Guide for helping people to make paper and take adequate precautions

vidhiat 0 views 14 slides Oct 09, 2025
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About This Presentation

Important to researchers


Slide Content

Essential Components of Academic Paper Writing Structured Guide for Students & Researchers

Title - Concise topic of your study; why the topic is significant and important. - Be specific and accurate. - Avoid vague statements and jargon. - Include study population, species, or molecule studied. - Example: 'Serum Vitamin D levels correlate with Depression in University Undergraduates'.

Abstract - A 150–200 word snapshot of the paper. - Allows readers to decide if the paper is relevant to their needs. - Write after completing the paper. - Include background, aim, methods, results, and conclusion.

Keywords - 4–6 searchable terms for indexing databases. - Words/phrases that capture the core concepts of your research. - Example: 'Vitamin D', 'depression', 'serum levels', 'university students'.

Figures and Tables - Visual representation of data. - Graphs, charts, and tables simplify complex findings. - Ensure captions explain the data clearly. - Refer to them clearly in the text.

Introduction - Provide rationale for your study. - Build a logical bridge: what is known to what’s not known. - State objectives, research gaps, and questions. - End with hypothesis or aim.

Methodology - Describe how the study was done. - Include descriptions like study population, data sources, methods, and tools. - Explain data collection, procedures, and analysis.

Results/Findings - State data and findings without interpretation. - Use visuals (figures/tables) to enhance clarity. - Report observed outcomes based on methods applied. - Highlight significant trends or unexpected findings.

Discussion - Interpret the results and relate them to objectives. - Explain implications, limitations, and comparisons with past studies. - Provide meaning and context. - Compare results with prior studies and suggest future work.

Conclusion - Brief summary of findings. - Address the aim stated in introduction. - State contribution of your research. - Provide scope for future research. - Avoid repeating abstract.

References - Cite all sources and studies referred. - Ensure accurate citation and avoid plagiarism. - Follow journal’s citation guidelines. - Examples: APA, MLA, Chicago. - Each in-text citation must match reference list.

Acknowledgements (Optional) - Acknowledge non-author contributors and assistance. - Mention funding, technical assistance, peer reviewers.

Author Contributions (Optional) - Who did what in the research. - Clarifies responsibility and credit. - Common labels: 'Conceptualization', 'Data collection', 'Analysis', 'Writing', 'Review & Editing'.

Conflict of Interest & Funding Disclosure (Optional) - Disclose potential biases. - Disclose conflicts of interest, sources of funding. - Mention financial or personal interests involved.