Draft Your Article
Draft Your Article
Writing a strong manuscript is as much about clarity, structure, and communication as it is about results. The following advice will help you draft a scientific article that is compelling, readable, and set up for success.
Understand Your Audience & Journal Style
- Before writing, review several published articles in your target journal to sense their level, tone, structure, and expectations. This helps you match the style and standards.
- Consider readers outside your immediate subdiscipline, aim for clarity and avoid assuming deep insider knowledge. Use plain language where possible, define terms at first use, and limit jargon.
- Use the active voice whenever it improves readability (e.g. “We measured…” rather than “It was measured…”).
Structure Your Manuscript Thoughtfully
- Create an outline before writing full prose. Decide what belongs in Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, and which data or details should go into Supplementary Information.
- Adhere to the IMRaD (Introduction, Methods, Results, and Discussion) structure unless your article type calls for a different layout.
- Use clear section headings and logical transitions so readers follow the flow of your argument.
- Keep your narrative focused: present one central message or key insight, and avoid diluting it with multiple equally important but disconnected threads.
Write an Engaging Title & Abstract
- The title should be concise yet descriptive, ideally containing key terms that aid indexing or discoverability.
- The abstract must summarize purpose, methods, key results, and main conclusions, in ~150–200 words (or journal norm). Avoid references or excessive abbreviations.
- Because many readers first scan abstracts to decide whether to read more, clarity, brevity, and coherence are essential.
Screening & Editorial Checks
- Write with simplicity: prefer short, direct sentences over long, convoluted ones. Avoid piling up adjectives.
- Explain every step: background, rationale, method, result, interpretation. Don’t assume readers fill gaps themselves.
- Define each abbreviation at first use; use it sparingly thereafter.
- Use transitions and signposting (e.g. “In contrast…”, “Next we show…”) to guide readers through your argument.
- When describing data, emphasize only the most important ones; minor or supplementary results may be referred to but not overburden the narrative.
Integrate Figures & Tables Thoughtfully
- Each figure or table should stand alone: include descriptive captions, define abbreviations, label axes with units, and make sure they are legible when reduced.
- In the main text, refer to figures in logical order and describe their key messages — don’t just say “see Figure 2.”
- Don’t replicate data in text and table/figure, either summarize in text or in visual form, not both.
- Consider using Supplementary Information for large datasets or extended analyses, while keeping the main article focused.
Methods: Transparent & Reproducible
- Provide enough detail so that others can repeat your experiments or analyses. Be explicit with quantities, parameters, software, versions, and procedural steps.
- Organize methods logically (e.g. material preparation, measurement methods, statistical analyses).
- If parts of your protocols are standard, cite literature rather than describing in full, but still note modifications you made.
- Include statements of ethical approvals, consent, and compliance if human or animal research is involved.
Revise & Refine Your Draft
- After an initial full draft, set it aside briefly before re-reading with fresh eyes. Look for clarity, coherence, and gaps in logic.
- Watch for redundancy, unnecessary digressions, or overly long paragraphs.
- Use checklists or “ten simple rules” for structuring papers (one such guide: “Ten simple rules for structuring papers”) to ensure you meet general expectations in organization and readability.
- If English is not your first language, consider having a colleague or professional editor review for language and style.
Using AI Tools in Manuscript Preparation
- At Global Journals®, we acknowledge that AI tools can assist authors, especially for tasks like improving language clarity, summarizing content for broader audiences, or formatting text to follow journal style. However, AI tools can also produce inaccuracies (often called “hallucinations”) or misattribute ideas. If you use any AI tool in preparing your manuscript, you must rigorously review its output before submission, and disclose the tool’s name, version, and how it was used.
Final Checks Before Submission
- Ensure your manuscript obeys journal-specific guidelines (formatting, font, references, figure style).
- Confirm that references are complete, correct, and consistent with the citation style.
- Remove track changes, hidden comments, or metadata in your file.
- Check that figures and supplementary files are properly linked, named, and legible.
- Ensure that you comply with ethical and disclosure requirements (competing interests, funding, data statements).