3.2 Anatomy of a Journal Article

All journal article have a similar format, consistent format.

Journal articles each contain labeled sections so that readers can navigate them

 

Example Article:

Note:

The names and orders of article sections may vary from article to article.

 

Parts of a Journal Article

Title: a concise and descriptive title. This lets you know what the article is about

Author Information: All authors who contributed to the article are listed. Often their affiliated institutions are included here or as a footnote.

Abstract: a short summary of the article. The abstract should share the research findings

Introduction or Background: an overview of the research area that lays the foundation for the articles research.

Methodology/Methods: This describes how the research study was performed. Methods are often presented before the Results, but are sometimes presented later in the article (like in the example image)

Results: a description of the results obtained. It presents the results without providing an interpretation. This often includes figures and tables.

Discussion: This session analyses and interprets the results presented in the Results section. New data is never presented.

Conclusion: This is a short section that summarizes the findings and significance of the article. The conclusion is omitted in some articles.

References: A list of all articles cited in the article

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Library Skills for BIO 107/108 Copyright © by Lauren Stieglitz is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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