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How To Write A Scientific Paper With Impact

Posted By: ELK1nG
How To Write A Scientific Paper With Impact

How To Write A Scientific Paper With Impact
Published 8/2022
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 576.82 MB | Duration: 0h 38m

Polish your academic writing skills with this step-by-step course!

What you'll learn
Learn which different types of scientific papers exist.
Learn to tell a story (introduction)
Learn to write about your did (methods)
Learn to write about what you observed (results) methods.
Learn to write about you interpretation (discussion).
Learn to format your paper like a pro.
Learn to pitch your paper for a journal (cover letter).
Learn to deal with comments (rebuttal letter).
Learn to write with impact!
Requirements
No scientific writing experience needed.
Description
Welcome everyone!In this course I will share my experiences with writing scientific papers with you. The course is especially useful for clinical researchers within medicine, as this is my background. But even if you are not specifically in this field, it may still be of benefit for you! You could use the course for your thesis, research paper, research proposal or just to polish your academic writing skills!The components of this course are published on the go, as I work on it besides my regular work. Feedback and comments are obviously more than welcome, that way I can further improve the course whilst working on it! This course is divided into five comprehensive sections:1. Introduction2. Overview of different types of papers (i.e. evidence pyramid/research methodology)3. Writing your paper (introduction, methods, results, conclusion)4. What comes after writing5. Final remarksBelow you will find the status of each lecture:Section 1. Introduction- Lecture 1: introduction > publishedSection 2. Overview of different types of papers - Lecture 2: The evidence pyramid > published- Lecture 3: Case series/reports > published- Lecture 4: Case control studies > published- Lecture 5: Cohort studies > published- Lecture 6: Randomized controlled trials > published- Lecture 7: Systematic reviews > publishedSection 3. Writing your paper - Lecture 8: Writing your paper > published - Lecture 9: Introducing your work - the introduction > published- Lecture 10: Writing about what you did - the methods section: reviews > published- Lecture 11: Writing about what you did - the methods section: cohort studies > published- Lecture 12: Writing about what you did - the methods section: randomized controlled trials > published- Lecture 13: Writing about what you observed - the results section: reviews > pending- Lecture 14: Writing about what you observed - the results section: cohort studies > pending- Lecture 15: Writing about what you observed - the results section: RCTs > pending- Lecture 16: Writing about your interpretation - the discussion > pending- Lecture 17: What should the readers remember - conclusion > pendingSection 4. What comes after writing- Lecture 18: Formatting your paper > pending- Lecture 19: Feedback from co-authors > pending- Lecture 20: Selecting journals > pending- Lecture 21: Writing a cover letter > pending- Lecture 22: Writing a rebuttal letter > pendingSection 5. Final remarks- Lecture 23: Final remarks > pending

Overview

Section 1: Introduction

Lecture 1 Introduction

Section 2: Overview of different types of papers

Lecture 2 The evidence pyramid

Lecture 3 Case series/reports

Lecture 4 Case control studies

Lecture 5 Cohort studies

Lecture 6 Randomized controlled trials

Lecture 7 Systematic reviews

Section 3: Writing your paper

Lecture 8 Writing your paper

Lecture 9 Introducing your work - the introduction

Lecture 10 Writing about what you did - the methods section: reviews

Lecture 11 Writing about what you did - the methods section: cohort studies

Lecture 12 Writing about what you did - the methods section: randomized controlled trials

Undergraduate students,Graduate students,PhD students,Healthcare professionals,Anyone within the field of (life) sciences