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CHEM 222: Organic Biological Chemistry (HC) Fall 2020

Chemistry 222: Organic Biological Chemistry (Akerfeldt)

Popular Literature Versus Scholarly Literature

  Popular Scholarly
Author Staff writer; journalist Expert in the field; known credentials
Audience General public Scholars, researchers
Language Little technical language or subject-specific jargon Uses technical language and subject-specific jargon
Coverage Broad topics; shallow coverage; shorter length Narrow topics; in-depth coverage; longer length
Documentation Usually no bibliography Bibliography present
Peer-reviewed? No Often

Primary Literature Versus Review Literature

Primary literature

  • A primary research article in the sciences reports the findings of original research done by the authors of the article
     
  • Primary research articles are usually published in peer-reviewed journals.
     
  • A primary research article poses a research question or states a hypothesis.
     
  • To determine whether or not you've found a primary research article, scan the article (or even just the abstract). Look for an introduction, methods, results, and discussion sections

How do I find a primary research article?

  • There's no perfect way to find primary research articles. Most primary research articles will describe a study that has been done, so one option is to use the word "study" as one of your search words.
  • Also, review articles (see below) often have primary research articles in their list of references.

Review literature

  • Review articles in the sciences summarize previously reported findings rather than present new findings, often pulling together the findings of multiple primary research articles. In doing so, review literature often gives a broader view of the current state of understanding in a given topic area.