Scholarly academic publication: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0119470
This academic publication is about anatomy, specifically
about using resonance imaging to see what happens inside the knuckles when they
are cracked. Being a scientific paper on a research journal website, it follows
many of the usual conventions of a research paper. It has a title that concise
and utilizes complex and technical to describe the experiment in a few amount
of words. Under the title, the names of the researchers and the date of
publishing is included. The first paragraph is an abstract that explains
broadly the scope and results of the experiment. The rest of the paper contains the details of
the experiment sorted into multiple sections with their own headings. Diagrams
and photographs are distributed throughout to explain things. Acknowledgements
and citations are at the bottom to reference other researchers and their
research.
Scigen generates a convincing but fake computer science
research paper. It has all the conventions that a normal research paper would,
like title, authors, and various sections outlining results of the experiment. Though the Scigen paper and the PLOS paper
both fall under the same genre, they have some differences. The audience for
the PLOS paper can be less technical, due to less jargon being used. In
addition, cracking knuckles is a much easier concept for the average person to
understand when compared to mathematical algorithm comparisons that are
commonly generated in Scigen. The context and the choice of words also on the
PLOS paper is also less technical in nature than the CS paper. Also, the CS
paper is most likely designed to be printed out or read in a document form. It
has no external links or color pictures, a sign that it wasn't intended to be
viewed mainly on a computer. On the other hand, the audience for the PLOS
article is mainly one that will view the research online, because of the
interactive galleries and external links directly embedded into the website.
These things cannot be fully experienced once the page has been printed out or
exported to a document, therefore the authors intend for this paper to be
viewed online on their website.
Though they are intended for different audiences (assuming
the Scigen article is actually read by someone), the two papers have many
similarities that qualify them to be considered to be of the same genre. They
both begin with abstracts that allow the reader to have a rough idea of what
the paper is about before reading it.
The abstract is followed by some form of background information
providing context to the experiment, then to a section that describes the scientific
processes used, then concludes with results and data gathered.
The selection of words and phrasing makes papers immediately
identifiable as academic research. The firsst thing that people would read of
any research paper is the title, and having a title that follows the convention
of a research paper is the most important in establishing the nature of the
paper to the reader. The title, as well as the text use within the body of the
paper, should make no sense to someone who has no expertise in the field. Having
something very difficult to understand makes an untrained audience less likely
to be enthusiastic about reading what the paper has to offer. This is
especially important for the Scigen papers, as the main purpose of the
generated paper is to create "submissions to conferences that you suspect
might have very low submission standards". Choosing language that is very
technical and obscure is the best way to concisely share the research to experts
in the field, as well as convince people that aren't experts that your research
is legit.
Interesting article. I feel like you could have elaborated a bit more in the first paragraph, it felt a bit like a list. I like how you explained the differences in the articles were partly due to the audience. I agree that the PLOS paper does have a broader audience and therefore used more common terms than a SCIgen paper would use. The point you made about the CS paper being designed to be printed out or read in a document form is interesting, I hadn’t really considered this reason for the format. I noticed that the abstract is common, and largely used by most science publications, including the PLOS. Your point about the title being intentionally difficult to understand is extremely curious. It does seem that a more complex title would discourage certain readers, although I’m not sure this is entirely the reasoning behind the titles. Overall I found your analysis very original, great job.
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