How to write papers in psychology
Articles• Sternberg Article Writing 101 (advice from
many authors)• Sternberg 21 tips• Sternberg misconceptions• Bem empirical paper• Baumeister review paper• Thoughts on articles?
Types of articles• Narrative review• Meta-analysis• Empirical article
Introduction tips• Start broadly and w/o jargon• Start strong—cut 1st 2 sentences• Tell us why we should care• Set up what is to come• Use examples and keep them consistent• Focus on findings and relevant methodology• Keep it balanced
More intro tips• Keep people in ()• Criticize softly/ not ad hominem or high
and mighty• Write simply and directly• Organize conceptually, not chronologically• Keep a focus throughout—provide a
roadmap
More intro tips• Use topic sentences• Cite generously, especially important and
primary sources• Cite classic as well as recent articles
General format for paragraph in the introduction section
• Topic sentence—what does this paragraph add to our knowledge?
• Summary of findings and relevant methodology of studies supporting your topic sentence
• Sum it up with what this means or suggests
The social inhibition of responsible behavioris not limited to emergencies. Individualsbecome slower or less likely to pick up droppedobjects in elevators (Latane & Dabbs, 1975), toanswer the telephone (Levy et al., 1972), or evento respond to a knock on the door (Freeman,1974, as cited in Latane, 1981), as the number ofothers able to respond increases. Even such aroutine behavior as tipping in restaurants is aninverse function of group size: The larger thegroup that shares in the responsibility forcoming up with a tip, the smaller the percentagecontributed (Freeman, Walker, Borden, & Latane,1975).
Harkins & Latané, 1998
Your lit review should• Define and clarify the problem• Summarize previous research• Identify inconsistencies, gaps, controversies• Keep your terminology consistent• Suggest the next steps (your study!)• The last part of this section should address how your
study adds to previous research (what’s new) and what your hypothesis/research question is.
Present study section• Review what has been done and tell what
we don’t know and how your study will address that
• Make sure the reason for your study is really clear!
Hypothesis• Hypotheses should state a testable relationship
(direction and operational definitions)• Parental English language skills might correlate with
successful transition to kindergarten.• My hypothesis is to prove that parental English
language skills will correlate with children’s successful transition to kindergarten.
• Parental English language skills will influence successful transition to kindergarten.
Method section• In the participants section, address recruitment• Name things with meaningful names (e.g., no
“Group 1”)• Report reliability/validity and samples for each
scale used• Make operational definitions clear• Write the procedures section in “time order”—
this happened, then this, then this…
Results section
• Manipulation checks, recodings, deception probing
• Plan of analysis• Start with central findings, then more peripheral• Start with more general, then more specifics• Explain in words and then in numbers• Get to know your data and their story
More for the results section
• Reference figures and tables, which should add to but be independent of the text
• Point out what people should notice in f/t• Tell a story—explain what the results mean• Hypothesis, analysis, finding in words, stat
(with exact p and effect size/confidence intervals)
Discussion section• Start with a summary of the results• Compare results with previous studies• Explain unexpected findings• Address limitations in terms of why they aren’t
that bad (if true) and how future research could address them
• Give implications for theory and practice• End strong! With a clear take home message
Title, abstract, and general• 10-12 word title• Leave in important words, leave out unneeded ones• Abstract is about 120-150 words—problem
statement, who did what, main findings, what they mean
• Make the paper an hourglass• Write for a lower level audience• Tell (an interesting) story
General style stuff
• Get rid of words that don’t do anything – The results showed that– X and Y found that– Be concise!
• Avoid metacomments/autobiography• Use parallel constructions and consistent terms• Be careful with terminology and make
meanings clear—no “believed,” “felt”
General style stuff 2
• Avoid passive voice—”I” is okay, so is “we” if there is a “we”
• Past tense when referring directly to a study or describing yours
• Present tense for general findings or present results
• Avoid biased language (opposite sex, he)
General style stuff 3
• Compared to vs. compared with• Data are plural• Different from, not than• Since vs. because• That vs. which vs. who• While vs. whereas• Effect vs. affect
General style stuff 4
• Tell us where you’re going, go there, and remind us of where you’ve been.
• Use APA style• Use positive statements (instead of saying
what things are not)• Check noun/pronoun agreement• Be clear, not flowery
Misconceptions• Writing is easy• What matters is what you say, not how you say
it• Longer is better• Just give the facts (pull things together)• Inform, don’t persuade• Provide “support” for your theory by cutting
down another one
More Misconceptions (and slight revisions)
• Negative results are just as important– When are they important?
• The paper you should write is the one you intended to write– YES—but there may be details that are better
put in supplemental materials
Proofreading techniques
• Read it after a break• Read it out loud• Have someone else read it• Remember, if they say something’s unclear, it
is!• Don’t get too attached—reorganize if necessary• Pre and post outline
In response to “reviews”
• Don’t be discouraged or let too much time pass
• Don’t be defensive or refuse to revise• Complain to your friends and dog, then just
“do it”• If there is a reason that it shouldn’t be done,
then explain that. Otherwise, suck it up.