SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Research that others publish and how to publish your own Ng Seik Weng Honorary professor Fuyang Normal College, Xianning College, Central China Normal University, Guangdong Ocean University,  Guangxi Normal University, Guangzhou University, Harbin Normal University, Heilongjiang University, Jilin Normal University, Luoyang Normal University, Northeast Normal University, Northwest University, Qingdao University of S & T, Qufu Normal University, Shantou University, Shanxi Normal University, Wenzhou University, Yangzhou University, Yunnan University, Zhejiang Normal University,  Zhengzhou University   Department of Chemistry University of Malaya
Purpose of publishing research SCI  publications are used to rank a university. Other researchers make use of the findings. … .. if a student doesn’t publish work, the student cannot graduate.
Conceptual design Is it a new tangible thing? Is it a new tangible construction? Is it new system? Are systems being compared with? Is it only an idea? It does not mean that the publication will answer all the questions.
Has the author published in the field? If yes, why is the work extended? Does the project leader really know the field?  Or, is the blind leading the blind?
Wouldn’t it be easier to wait for the rain to stop?
The cash is in the  other  machine ... ATM robbers steal check deposit machine from bank in Bukit Mertajam  (9 August 2006)
Useless measurements: African speed trap
300-year da Vinci  vs . 6-week Nagyvary:  a blind test at Texas A&M (2003)
The core of research is in biomedical   sciences … Research on the auto immune system will always dominate science. Some research topics will always be at the periphery: tin is a “ less common metal ”, allergies are not life-threatening, ….. and there will be a market for cook books.
Ig Nobel prizes  to reward those research projects that first make people laugh, and then make them think….. ( Nature )
Search engines Scholar Google PubMed British Library Direct SciFinder Web of Science
The Science Citation Index The 6400 journals are ranked by  Impact Factors  published annually in  Journal Citation Reports .  The journals (but not their impact factors) can be found at www.isinet.com.
Subject variation of impact factors
Types of publications
The  Impact Factor  refers to the journal, not the paper itself. The significance of a  paper  is judged by the number of citations for the paper. The reputation of the  author  is judged by the citations for author’s papers divided by author’s papers.
The “cold fusion” paper: 500 citations M. Fleischmann, S. Pons & M. Hawkins (1989).  Journal of Electroanalysis Chemistry   Interface,  261, 301-8.
Impact factors do not take into account self-citations (about one third). P.O. Seglen (1997).  Citation and journal impact factors: questionable indicators of research quality.  Allergy , 52, 1050-1056.
Zeitschrift für Kristallographie
 
Online articles are more highly cited.
Generalized citation curve
Impact Factors (2006) of American journals are higher. Inorg. Chem . 3.91 Eur. J. Inorg. Chem . 2.70 Chin. J. Inorg. Chem. 0.58 Russ. J. Inorg. Chem. 0.18 J. Org. Chem . 3.79 Eur. J. Org. Chem . 2.77 Chin. J. Org. Chem . 0.74 Russ. J. Org. Chem. 0.49
 
Angew. Chem. 10.23 Chem.  –  Eur. J. 5.02 Chem. Commun. 4.52 Cryst. Growth Des.  4.34 Inorg. Chem. 3.91 CrystEngComm 3.72 Dalton Trans.   3.01 Eur. J. Inorg. Chem. 2.70 J. Inorg. Biochem. 2.65 J. Solid State Chem. 2.11 …  Acta Cryst. E 0.57
Impact Factors and Carats 0.5 carat  $ 1,000 1.0 carat s $ 5,000 2.0 carats $ 15,000 3.0 carats $ 50,000
 
Citation Classics The number of times a paper is cited in the work of other researchers gives an indication of the usefulness of the paper. Citation analysis can expose well-funded researchers publishing in  obscure national  journals  and permit comparison with poorly-funded but well-cited researchers publishing in  international journals .
Last words from the chairman emeritus of the Institute for Scientific Information Of the 4500 covered by  SCI  and  SSCI , 3000 are biomedical journals. 500 journals account for 50% of what is published and 75% of what is cited.
Advice No. 1: Think about writing the report at every stage of research. The analysis of data will unravel many relationships and the scientist will gain numerous insights into the problem.  The publication should consist of only one main point. This point should be so fundamental that it can be expressed in one sentence or one paragraph.
Advice No. 2: Know your audience. a.k.a.  First Rule of Advertising Is your work suitable  for the journal? Is the level too high? Will the review take too long?
Advice No. 3: Give your findings, the whole findings and nothing but your findings. Inform the scientific community  why you want to conduct the study,  what you are investigating, how you conducted your investigation,  what results you found and  what you think of your work.  Your job is to report, not to  convince .
Formats for reporting: Sonata-allegro format
The exposition introduces the main theme in a tonic key and  minor  theme in a related key. The development expands on the themes.  It is creative but “unstable”. The recapitulation re-states the themes.  Sometimes, the work ends with a coda.
“Ten-course Chinese dinner” format Cold dish Soup 3 ………. ……… . ……… . ……… . ……… . ……… . Rice or noodles Desert
Format of a research paper Title Authors and addresses Abstract Introduction Experimental Results and Discussion References Schemes and figures
Long titles are self-explanatory Size matters: how height affects the health, happiness and success of boys   (Stephen S. Hall: Houghton Mifflin) (Taller people are smarter than shorter ones.)
‘ Novel’ does not mean new! J. Am. Chem. Soc.  banned ‘novel’ in 2003 because many cases turned out later not to be ‘novel’. There are many words that having no useful meanings, e.g.,  facile, respectively . ... there is no such word as “unreacted”.
Abstract: The abstract is not a conclusion, and a house is not a home. Give some  real  information.  Do not re-state the problem. Concentrate on the solution of the problem and your findings. “ The title compound has been synthesized and its crystal structure determined” is not an abstract!
Advice 4: Give a reason for the study.
Advice No. 5: Connect the previous to the present work in Introduction. Do : Survey and summarize the field. Explain how your work is a contribution to the field. Do not : motivate the study because of “potential applications”. harp on the importance of the field. give multiple references to prove the importance of the field.
Examples of flawed introductions A well-cited introduction to supramolecular chemistry but …
An example of a four-line introduction: “Dream”  People say that life is like a dream. I say that a dream is like life.  Third line ….. (singer talks about  his  dreams). Fourth line ….. (singer  will talk  of he learned from life).
A four-line introduction So-and-so reported something (ref) and so-and-so reported a related thing (ref); the field has been surveyed (ref). However, they missed something which takes place in another system (ref). You wish to conflate the two ideas because ….. (give a reason/ref). You round up the introduction by hinting what you will do. The reader should want to kick himself.
Advice No. 6: Pace your ideas by references. Use about ¼ to introduce the subject. Use another ¼ for the Experimental. Use the rest for the Results & Discussion.
References: the suit of cards in your hand Use some of your own papers as references. The references will tell whether the field is a important field or not. The year will tell whether the field is new or old.
Advice 7: Weave your thoughts by connecting and contrasting your ideas with  discourse marks . Furthermore, strengthen sentences by transitive verbs and weaken sentences by intransitive verbs.
Experimental Give full details so that someone who is not in the field can repeat the experiment. Someone should be able to read the experimental only. Say it matter-of-factically (say it with a straight face). Note anything unusual even if you cannot deal with the problem.
Results and Discussion Describe the work and highlight any unusual features. Return to the problem you introduced. Talk on the significance of the work.
... and   Do  not  explain the work. Do  not  explain the charts.  Do  not  talk on the significance of the field. Do  not  write a conclusion!!!
Advice 8: Don’t write a conclusion if you have no  final  impression to leave to the reader. Why say “in conclusion, we have done this and done that”, which already appears in the abstract?
Advice 9: Paint a thousand words with one picture.
Reminder:  SCI  papers contribute to ranking. When a university campus is faced with an outbreak of dengue, it is not the time to read a zoological treatise on the  Aedes aegypti .
Gesundheit!  … not for weak-hearted   53-Year old robber dies of heart attack after being chased by police  (NST 3 November 2006)
Advice 10:  Don’t give the reader a headache.
Art consists in concealing art.    Horace Connect your ideas seamlessly so that the reader does not notice the art that has gone into the writing.
The expanding universe
Malaysia
The people
The religions
The food
Twin Towers
Tourism
Thank you

More Related Content

PDF
how to write first research paper October, 2015 [Compati
PPTX
How to write and publish a research proposal
PDF
المحاضرة السادسة - سلسلة أساسيات البحث العلمي
PDF
المحاضرة الخامسة - سلسلة محاضرات البحث العلمي
PPTX
How to write a research paper for an international peerreviewed journal
PPT
Writing A Literary Analysis Essay Process Questions
PPTX
How to write a scientific research ( Discussion section)
PPTX
How to write and publish good quality research paper
how to write first research paper October, 2015 [Compati
How to write and publish a research proposal
المحاضرة السادسة - سلسلة أساسيات البحث العلمي
المحاضرة الخامسة - سلسلة محاضرات البحث العلمي
How to write a research paper for an international peerreviewed journal
Writing A Literary Analysis Essay Process Questions
How to write a scientific research ( Discussion section)
How to write and publish good quality research paper

What's hot (20)

PPTX
Writing and publishing a research article
PPT
RSS 2012 Preparing & Submitting the Manuscript
PPTX
Structure of a medical paper writing essential elements and reporting guideli...
PPTX
Professional Workshop of Writing Academic Essay
PPTX
How to write and publish an articles in Scientific journals. dr. kamran ishfaq
PPTX
How to publish in journals with impact
PDF
Agustín Estrada-Peña: "1001 common problems when submitting a paper (and how...
PPT
How To Write A Research Paper
PDF
11.why not reflect the outcome of your study in an academic paper
PDF
Why not reflect the outcome of your study in an academic paper
PDF
How to write an abstract
PDF
A Guideline on How to Write and Publish a Review Paper by prof. dr. saidur ra...
PPT
Scientific Writing Format: Imrad
PPTX
APA Workshop: Writing a Research Paper
PDF
المحاضرة التاسعة - سلسلة أساسيات البحث العلمي
PPT
How to-write-a-research-paper
PDF
How to write research paper in cse
PPTX
Structure of research article for journal publication- Dr. THRIJIL KRISHNAN E M
PPT
English for writing research papers (chap 2 and 11)
PPTX
Article writing process_Literature review Day 2 article_writing_note
Writing and publishing a research article
RSS 2012 Preparing & Submitting the Manuscript
Structure of a medical paper writing essential elements and reporting guideli...
Professional Workshop of Writing Academic Essay
How to write and publish an articles in Scientific journals. dr. kamran ishfaq
How to publish in journals with impact
Agustín Estrada-Peña: "1001 common problems when submitting a paper (and how...
How To Write A Research Paper
11.why not reflect the outcome of your study in an academic paper
Why not reflect the outcome of your study in an academic paper
How to write an abstract
A Guideline on How to Write and Publish a Review Paper by prof. dr. saidur ra...
Scientific Writing Format: Imrad
APA Workshop: Writing a Research Paper
المحاضرة التاسعة - سلسلة أساسيات البحث العلمي
How to-write-a-research-paper
How to write research paper in cse
Structure of research article for journal publication- Dr. THRIJIL KRISHNAN E M
English for writing research papers (chap 2 and 11)
Article writing process_Literature review Day 2 article_writing_note
Ad

Viewers also liked (8)

PDF
The acs style guide
PDF
美国教授对中国学生写英文文章的建议
PPT
Using side effects for drug target identification
PDF
Anatomically shaped tooth and periodontal regeneration by cell homing
DOCX
写科研论文的高级方法学
PDF
Better writing rightnow
PDF
Unveiling the role of network and systems biology in drug discovery
PDF
China Pharmaceuticals - Building Bridges to Innovation - 2015 McKinsey report
The acs style guide
美国教授对中国学生写英文文章的建议
Using side effects for drug target identification
Anatomically shaped tooth and periodontal regeneration by cell homing
写科研论文的高级方法学
Better writing rightnow
Unveiling the role of network and systems biology in drug discovery
China Pharmaceuticals - Building Bridges to Innovation - 2015 McKinsey report
Ad

Similar to How to publish_work (20)

PPT
Art of Publication.ppt
PPT
How to write a scientific Research Paper.ppt
PPT
R proposal 8
PDF
Writing for scientific & technical publications- Ravi Raghavan
PPTX
Draft 24 11-18
PPTX
Part_B_How_to_Write__Publish_a_Scientific_Paper_2018_12.pptx
PPT
R proposal 8
PDF
Publishing a research article malang v2
PDF
Elsevier Early Career Author
PDF
Elsevier Early Career Author - Workshop University of Balamand
PPT
How to write a research Paper_writing_new.ppt
PDF
Taylor & Francis: Author and Researcher Workshop
PPTX
Scientific Writing 1/3
PPTX
Journals.pptx
PPTX
Publishing sci paper
PPTX
Publishing in Academic Journals
PDF
Writing manuscripts for peer reviewed engineering journals
PPTX
Principles of scientific publishing
PPTX
Scientific writing as a means of communication
Art of Publication.ppt
How to write a scientific Research Paper.ppt
R proposal 8
Writing for scientific & technical publications- Ravi Raghavan
Draft 24 11-18
Part_B_How_to_Write__Publish_a_Scientific_Paper_2018_12.pptx
R proposal 8
Publishing a research article malang v2
Elsevier Early Career Author
Elsevier Early Career Author - Workshop University of Balamand
How to write a research Paper_writing_new.ppt
Taylor & Francis: Author and Researcher Workshop
Scientific Writing 1/3
Journals.pptx
Publishing sci paper
Publishing in Academic Journals
Writing manuscripts for peer reviewed engineering journals
Principles of scientific publishing
Scientific writing as a means of communication

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
technical writing on emotional quotient ppt
PPT
proper hygiene for teenagers for secondary students .ppt
PPTX
Travel mania in india needs to change the world
PPTX
THEORIES-PSYCH-3.pptx theory of Abraham Maslow
PDF
Red Light Wali Muskurahat – A Heart-touching Hindi Story
PPTX
Presentation on interview preparation.pt
DOCX
Boost your energy levels and Shred Weight
PPTX
Learn how to use Portable Grinders Safely
PPT
cypt-cht-healthy-relationships-part1-presentation-v1.1en.ppt
PPTX
SELF ASSESSMENT -SNAPSHOT.pptx an index of yourself by Dr NIKITA SHARMA
PPTX
The Hidden Link Between Self-Talk and Self-Worth.pptx
PDF
My 'novel' Account of Human Possibility pdf.pdf
PPTX
UNIVERSAL HUMAN VALUES for NEP student .pptx
PPTX
Pradeep Kumar Roll no.30 Paper I.pptx....
PPTX
Commmunication in Todays world- Principles and Barriers
PDF
Top 10 Visionary Entrepreneurs to Watch in 2025
PPTX
How to Deal with Imposter Syndrome for Personality Development?
PDF
SEX-GENDER-AND-SEXUALITY-LESSON-1-M (2).pdf
PPTX
Personal Development - By Knowing Oneself?
PDF
Quiet Wins: Why the Silent Fish Survives.pdf
technical writing on emotional quotient ppt
proper hygiene for teenagers for secondary students .ppt
Travel mania in india needs to change the world
THEORIES-PSYCH-3.pptx theory of Abraham Maslow
Red Light Wali Muskurahat – A Heart-touching Hindi Story
Presentation on interview preparation.pt
Boost your energy levels and Shred Weight
Learn how to use Portable Grinders Safely
cypt-cht-healthy-relationships-part1-presentation-v1.1en.ppt
SELF ASSESSMENT -SNAPSHOT.pptx an index of yourself by Dr NIKITA SHARMA
The Hidden Link Between Self-Talk and Self-Worth.pptx
My 'novel' Account of Human Possibility pdf.pdf
UNIVERSAL HUMAN VALUES for NEP student .pptx
Pradeep Kumar Roll no.30 Paper I.pptx....
Commmunication in Todays world- Principles and Barriers
Top 10 Visionary Entrepreneurs to Watch in 2025
How to Deal with Imposter Syndrome for Personality Development?
SEX-GENDER-AND-SEXUALITY-LESSON-1-M (2).pdf
Personal Development - By Knowing Oneself?
Quiet Wins: Why the Silent Fish Survives.pdf

How to publish_work

  • 1. Research that others publish and how to publish your own Ng Seik Weng Honorary professor Fuyang Normal College, Xianning College, Central China Normal University, Guangdong Ocean University, Guangxi Normal University, Guangzhou University, Harbin Normal University, Heilongjiang University, Jilin Normal University, Luoyang Normal University, Northeast Normal University, Northwest University, Qingdao University of S & T, Qufu Normal University, Shantou University, Shanxi Normal University, Wenzhou University, Yangzhou University, Yunnan University, Zhejiang Normal University, Zhengzhou University Department of Chemistry University of Malaya
  • 2. Purpose of publishing research SCI publications are used to rank a university. Other researchers make use of the findings. … .. if a student doesn’t publish work, the student cannot graduate.
  • 3. Conceptual design Is it a new tangible thing? Is it a new tangible construction? Is it new system? Are systems being compared with? Is it only an idea? It does not mean that the publication will answer all the questions.
  • 4. Has the author published in the field? If yes, why is the work extended? Does the project leader really know the field? Or, is the blind leading the blind?
  • 5. Wouldn’t it be easier to wait for the rain to stop?
  • 6. The cash is in the other machine ... ATM robbers steal check deposit machine from bank in Bukit Mertajam (9 August 2006)
  • 8. 300-year da Vinci vs . 6-week Nagyvary: a blind test at Texas A&M (2003)
  • 9. The core of research is in biomedical sciences … Research on the auto immune system will always dominate science. Some research topics will always be at the periphery: tin is a “ less common metal ”, allergies are not life-threatening, ….. and there will be a market for cook books.
  • 10. Ig Nobel prizes to reward those research projects that first make people laugh, and then make them think….. ( Nature )
  • 11. Search engines Scholar Google PubMed British Library Direct SciFinder Web of Science
  • 12. The Science Citation Index The 6400 journals are ranked by Impact Factors published annually in Journal Citation Reports . The journals (but not their impact factors) can be found at www.isinet.com.
  • 13. Subject variation of impact factors
  • 15. The Impact Factor refers to the journal, not the paper itself. The significance of a paper is judged by the number of citations for the paper. The reputation of the author is judged by the citations for author’s papers divided by author’s papers.
  • 16. The “cold fusion” paper: 500 citations M. Fleischmann, S. Pons & M. Hawkins (1989). Journal of Electroanalysis Chemistry Interface, 261, 301-8.
  • 17. Impact factors do not take into account self-citations (about one third). P.O. Seglen (1997). Citation and journal impact factors: questionable indicators of research quality. Allergy , 52, 1050-1056.
  • 19.  
  • 20. Online articles are more highly cited.
  • 22. Impact Factors (2006) of American journals are higher. Inorg. Chem . 3.91 Eur. J. Inorg. Chem . 2.70 Chin. J. Inorg. Chem. 0.58 Russ. J. Inorg. Chem. 0.18 J. Org. Chem . 3.79 Eur. J. Org. Chem . 2.77 Chin. J. Org. Chem . 0.74 Russ. J. Org. Chem. 0.49
  • 23.  
  • 24. Angew. Chem. 10.23 Chem. – Eur. J. 5.02 Chem. Commun. 4.52 Cryst. Growth Des. 4.34 Inorg. Chem. 3.91 CrystEngComm 3.72 Dalton Trans. 3.01 Eur. J. Inorg. Chem. 2.70 J. Inorg. Biochem. 2.65 J. Solid State Chem. 2.11 … Acta Cryst. E 0.57
  • 25. Impact Factors and Carats 0.5 carat $ 1,000 1.0 carat s $ 5,000 2.0 carats $ 15,000 3.0 carats $ 50,000
  • 26.  
  • 27. Citation Classics The number of times a paper is cited in the work of other researchers gives an indication of the usefulness of the paper. Citation analysis can expose well-funded researchers publishing in obscure national journals and permit comparison with poorly-funded but well-cited researchers publishing in international journals .
  • 28. Last words from the chairman emeritus of the Institute for Scientific Information Of the 4500 covered by SCI and SSCI , 3000 are biomedical journals. 500 journals account for 50% of what is published and 75% of what is cited.
  • 29. Advice No. 1: Think about writing the report at every stage of research. The analysis of data will unravel many relationships and the scientist will gain numerous insights into the problem. The publication should consist of only one main point. This point should be so fundamental that it can be expressed in one sentence or one paragraph.
  • 30. Advice No. 2: Know your audience. a.k.a. First Rule of Advertising Is your work suitable for the journal? Is the level too high? Will the review take too long?
  • 31. Advice No. 3: Give your findings, the whole findings and nothing but your findings. Inform the scientific community why you want to conduct the study, what you are investigating, how you conducted your investigation, what results you found and what you think of your work. Your job is to report, not to convince .
  • 32. Formats for reporting: Sonata-allegro format
  • 33. The exposition introduces the main theme in a tonic key and minor theme in a related key. The development expands on the themes. It is creative but “unstable”. The recapitulation re-states the themes. Sometimes, the work ends with a coda.
  • 34. “Ten-course Chinese dinner” format Cold dish Soup 3 ………. ……… . ……… . ……… . ……… . ……… . Rice or noodles Desert
  • 35. Format of a research paper Title Authors and addresses Abstract Introduction Experimental Results and Discussion References Schemes and figures
  • 36. Long titles are self-explanatory Size matters: how height affects the health, happiness and success of boys (Stephen S. Hall: Houghton Mifflin) (Taller people are smarter than shorter ones.)
  • 37. ‘ Novel’ does not mean new! J. Am. Chem. Soc. banned ‘novel’ in 2003 because many cases turned out later not to be ‘novel’. There are many words that having no useful meanings, e.g., facile, respectively . ... there is no such word as “unreacted”.
  • 38. Abstract: The abstract is not a conclusion, and a house is not a home. Give some real information. Do not re-state the problem. Concentrate on the solution of the problem and your findings. “ The title compound has been synthesized and its crystal structure determined” is not an abstract!
  • 39. Advice 4: Give a reason for the study.
  • 40. Advice No. 5: Connect the previous to the present work in Introduction. Do : Survey and summarize the field. Explain how your work is a contribution to the field. Do not : motivate the study because of “potential applications”. harp on the importance of the field. give multiple references to prove the importance of the field.
  • 41. Examples of flawed introductions A well-cited introduction to supramolecular chemistry but …
  • 42. An example of a four-line introduction: “Dream” People say that life is like a dream. I say that a dream is like life. Third line ….. (singer talks about his dreams). Fourth line ….. (singer will talk of he learned from life).
  • 43. A four-line introduction So-and-so reported something (ref) and so-and-so reported a related thing (ref); the field has been surveyed (ref). However, they missed something which takes place in another system (ref). You wish to conflate the two ideas because ….. (give a reason/ref). You round up the introduction by hinting what you will do. The reader should want to kick himself.
  • 44. Advice No. 6: Pace your ideas by references. Use about ¼ to introduce the subject. Use another ¼ for the Experimental. Use the rest for the Results & Discussion.
  • 45. References: the suit of cards in your hand Use some of your own papers as references. The references will tell whether the field is a important field or not. The year will tell whether the field is new or old.
  • 46. Advice 7: Weave your thoughts by connecting and contrasting your ideas with discourse marks . Furthermore, strengthen sentences by transitive verbs and weaken sentences by intransitive verbs.
  • 47. Experimental Give full details so that someone who is not in the field can repeat the experiment. Someone should be able to read the experimental only. Say it matter-of-factically (say it with a straight face). Note anything unusual even if you cannot deal with the problem.
  • 48. Results and Discussion Describe the work and highlight any unusual features. Return to the problem you introduced. Talk on the significance of the work.
  • 49. ... and Do not explain the work. Do not explain the charts. Do not talk on the significance of the field. Do not write a conclusion!!!
  • 50. Advice 8: Don’t write a conclusion if you have no final impression to leave to the reader. Why say “in conclusion, we have done this and done that”, which already appears in the abstract?
  • 51. Advice 9: Paint a thousand words with one picture.
  • 52. Reminder: SCI papers contribute to ranking. When a university campus is faced with an outbreak of dengue, it is not the time to read a zoological treatise on the Aedes aegypti .
  • 53. Gesundheit! … not for weak-hearted 53-Year old robber dies of heart attack after being chased by police (NST 3 November 2006)
  • 54. Advice 10: Don’t give the reader a headache.
  • 55. Art consists in concealing art.  Horace Connect your ideas seamlessly so that the reader does not notice the art that has gone into the writing.

Editor's Notes