Communicate Science Papers, Presentations, and Posters Effectively is a guidebook on science writing and communication that professors, students, and professionals in the STEM fields can use in a practical way. This book advocates a clear and concise writing and presenting style, enabling users to concentrate on content. The text is useful to both native and non-native English speakers, identifying best practices for preparing graphs and tables, and offering practical guidance for writing equations. It includes content on significant figures and error bars, and provides the reader with extensive practice material consisting of both exercises and solutions.
Preface
Questions
Acknowledgments
Answers
Chapter 1: Publishing Industry
Abstract
1.1 Bibliometrics
1.2 Citation Indices
1.3 Scientific Categories—Disciplines
1.4 Citations
1.5 Journal Prestige
1.6 Article Citations
1.7 Personal Citation Reports
1.8 Exercises
Chapter 2: Writing Style
Abstract
Logos, Ethos, Pathos
2.1 Concise Versus Redundant
2.2 Precise Versus Vague
2.3 Active Versus Passive
2.4 Vigorous Versus Feeble
2.5 Straightforward Versus Convoluted
2.6 Exercises
Chapter 3: Reporting Data
Abstract
3.1 The International System of Units
3.2 Refresher on Statistics
3.3 Chauvenet’s Criterion
3.4 Definitions
3.5 Error Propagation
3.6 Report Data Realistically
3.7 Error Bars
3.8 Exercises
Chapter 4: Graphs
Abstract
4.1 Graph Types
4.2 Dimensions
4.3 Text
4.4 Axes
4.5 Lines
4.6 Representing Data
4.7 Titles and Captions
4.8 Exercises
Chapter 5: Tables
Abstract
Presentations and Posters
5.1 Terminology
5.2 Descriptive
5.3 Property
5.4 Data
5.5 Exercises
Chapter 6: Paper Essentials
Abstract
6.1 Title
6.2 Abstract
6.3 Graphical Abstract
6.4 Research Highlights
6.5 Introduction
6.6 Methods
6.7 Results and Discussion
6.8 Conclusions
6.9 Acknowledgments
6.10 Exercises
Chapter 7: Presentations They Will Remember
Abstract
7.1 Content
7.2 Style—Format
7.3 Colors
7.4 Delivery
7.5 Exercises
Chapter 8: Posters That Captivate
Abstract
8.1 Content
8.2 Style—Format
8.3 Presentation
8.4 Judging Criteria
8.5 Exercises
Chapter 9: Plagiarism
Abstract
9.1 Forms of Plagiarism
9.2 Copyright Infringement Versus Plagiarism
9.3 Self-Plagiarism
9.4 References
9.5 Patents
9.6 Authors’ Responsibilities
9.7 Avoiding Plagiarism
9.8 Exercises
Appendix A: Solutions
A.1 Chapter 1: Publishing Industry
A.2 Chapter 2: Writing Style
A.3 Chapter 3: Reporting Data
A.4 Chapter 4: Graphs
A.5 Chapter 5: Table Essentials
A.6 Chapter 6: Paper Essentials
A.7 Chapter 7: Presentations They Will Remember
A.8 Chapter 8: Posters That Captivate
A.9 Chapter 9: Plagiarism
Appendix B: Appendix
Web of Science Categories
Web of Science Articles Published by Country
Bibliography
Index
Gregory Patience joined the Department of Chemical Engineering of cole Polytechnique de Montréal in 2004 after a fourteen year career in industry. Before joining academia, he held various research positions related to catalyst manufacture, process design, technical marketing and management with Du Pont de Nemours & Co. in the USA, Spain and Switzerland. Language fascinated him so after his M.Sc. at the University of Calgary he moved to Montreal and became proficient French while completing his Ph.D. at Polytechnique. Since then he mastered Spanish and then studied Italian while he lived in Geneva. He has consulted for major corporations – Total, Haldor-Tops e, Arkema – and several start-ups that have resulted in a dozen patents. Together with 100 journal articles and book chapters, Professor Patience has presented his work at 100 conferences and developed courses on fluidization, reactor design, process design, and textiles manufacturing