Publications lecture1 HPHY 212 Summer 2013
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Transcript of Publications lecture1 HPHY 212 Summer 2013
On an index card or paper
Please write down a research question and/or hypothesis you’d like to know more about.
College research – better than good enough
HPHY 212Publications – lecture 1
Learning objectives
• Peer reviewed articles vs. popular for biomedical topics.• Identify parts of peer reviewed/primary
source literature in the sciences.• Recognize parts of the peer review
process.• Use FindText and Interlibrary loan to get
articles.
Information is not knowledge.
- Albert Einstein
-Frank Zappa
From http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2009/02/090226210039.htm
"If someone is doing a boring task, like listening to a dull telephone conversation, they may start to daydream," said study researcher Professor Jackie Andrade, Ph.D., of the School of Psychology, University of Plymouth. "Daydreaming distracts them from the task, resulting in poorer performance. A simple task, like doodling, may be sufficient to stop daydreaming without affecting performance on the main task.”
Listening to a mobile phone conversation dropped parietal lobe* activity by how much?
*That's the part of your brain that's doing the driving and any other spatial tasks.
I
HOW?
d it.
How much of your parietal lobe is used when listening on a cell phone and driving?
A. 0%-20%B. 21%-40%C. 41%-60%D. 61%-80%E. 81%-100%
I
HOW?
d it.
Do college level
research
life cycle of information – popular
Event happens
FB/twitter/Wikipedia/TV/
radio/blogs
Newspapers/magazines
journal articles
books and movies
Scientific information more like thisResearch
Poster/conference
talk
peer-review process
journal article
news – TV, blogs,
newspapers.
chapter/book/
textbook
Scholarly or popular?Q1
Easy to read
URL = publication/source
ABSTRACT
Sections of articleQ2
Q3
Attractive design
Title & author
Q4
Author & credentials
source
Q5
RoomHTTPS://ripple-dev.uoregon.edu
Parts most scholarly articles contain:
Anatomy of scientific journal article:
1. Publication/journal2. Title3. Authors4. Abstract5. Introduction6. Article text7. Charts/data/graphs8. Conclusions9. References
Professor Karduna discusses the peer review journal article process
Peer Review ProcessManuscript (potential article)
Sent to journal editor
Blind review Blind review Blind review
Sent to three to five experts in the field
Manuscript (potential article)
1. Accept2. Revise3. Reject
When should a college athlete return to playing sports after a concussion?
The Grid
Athletes should return to play when….
BooleanAND, OR, NOT
concussionBrain trauma
Closed head injur*
OROR
(concussion OR brain trauma OR closed head injur*) = larger set
BooleanAND, OR, NOT
Concussion O R brain injuries College
athlet*
Return to play
(concussion OR brain injuries) AND return to play AND college athlete*) = more precise set
AND
BooleanAND, OR, NOT
concussionsNOT
comas
I
HOW?
d it.
On an index card or paper
Please revise your research question and/or hypothesis you’d like to know more about.