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as if each research article consists of several parts. There are formats of research papers that differ from this model, but these are rare and private cases. So:
Abstract
This is where you write briefly (about 200-250 words) what the paper contains - what is being studied and why, how it was studied, what the results are and what they mean. Only the buy a narrative essay abstract along with the title and authors show up in "scientific search engines".
Introduction (Background)
The introduction contains the background information of the research - what is the problem, why do we want to study it, what is known so far about the problem, how are we going to study it and why, what are the working hypotheses...
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An important detail of a scientific paper is that every claim is supported by a reference (in English literature, but it sounds terrible and that's why it's commonly called a "reference"). References can contain scientific articles, books, monographs, web-addresses, etc. I haven't seen a serious scientific article where the references are not mostly scientific articles. The important thing is something else - if you say something, you have to cite a scientific study that proves/confirms it. This makes it very difficult to lie and speculate. Informed sources wishing to remain anonymous are not accepted. "So-called protein" is also unacceptable. Normally a 6-10 page scientific paper has about 50 references, which are mostly found after the text.
Materials and Methods (Experimental)
This section contains the technical information about the experiment. For example, how and what we synthesized, what methods of analysis we used, what statistical tests we applied, etc. The information is concise, but generally quite sufficient for anyone to be able to fully replicate your experiment. If you use foreign or old methods, reference them.
Results
The name says it all. All data, spectra, pictures, etc. are here. In the mainstream case, this part of the paper is also quite technical and laconic.
Discussion
This is where the "truth" is sought. This is where the interesting part is - in the interpretation of the results. What are they about, what do they mean, what can they be used for? If you want to speculate, again, this is where it belongs. Alas, again, everything has to be referenced, and so much speculation "doesn't pass". Still, inspiration usually finds a place in this section.
Conclusions
Conclusions succinctly. Without any speculation and reasoning. Without any new information and therefore without references.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to the people who have helped your research with any specific persuasive essay activity. For example, they have taken spectra or edited your manuscript. Also mention here who funded the research, if any. In the mainstream case there is.
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