too-open-minded Posted October 21, 2013 Share Posted October 21, 2013 So as an amateur only working on a general associates degree, how would I go about trying to make a well constructed hypothesis and or publishable paper? I'm guessing my first steps are to write a research paper? This is the best advice on formatting that I have found - http://www.wikihow.com/Write-a-Research-Paper Advice on how to do this? Please and thankyou! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ajb Posted October 21, 2013 Share Posted October 21, 2013 I'm guessing my first steps are to write a research paper? That tends to come after you have done most of the work. In my experience though, when writing a paper you find holes in your arguments, better ways to prove things, more examples and avenues to explore that you did not first see. The final draft of the paper is often a lot more involved than the first rough draft. For more specific advice you need to tell us what area your research is in. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
too-open-minded Posted October 21, 2013 Author Share Posted October 21, 2013 (edited) My research is in psychology and neurology or more specifically neurotherapy/neurofeedback. I'm not expecting to write a research paper that will be written one time and be accepted because I think I'm right.I'm expecting to write a rough draft and have it ran through a crucible of people to point out the errors and flaws. But yes my research is in psychology and neurology, I want to write a research paper and begin the path to developing my hypothesis. I have done a good bit of work, in the sense of educating myself in terminology, past research, and where/what these fields are working on today that I can contrast with my hypothesis. basically I feel like I have all the information, I just need to know how to format and organize it for other people to read. I'm a very unorganized person so this is going to be a challenge lol. Edited October 21, 2013 by too-open-minded Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CharonY Posted October 21, 2013 Share Posted October 21, 2013 Well, as ajb mentioned, the paper is usually only interesting once you get a conclusion based on experiments, for example. Ending with a hypothesis will not get many people interested. Developing an approach is slightly better and may fit into something akin to a grant application (though certainly does not merit a research paper). That requires highly specific sets of experiments being described. Writing a research paper to develop the hypothesis is kind of backwards. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
too-open-minded Posted October 22, 2013 Author Share Posted October 22, 2013 (edited) Well guys i'm an amateur, only in my first year of college and have no clue where to begin with this. What direction should I go in? How do I start this off? I've developed experiments but sadly I have no resources to conduct them :/ My best bet right now is finding similar experiments and arguing through gathered data, correlations, and logic. The way I see it. So where do I begin? Edited October 22, 2013 by too-open-minded Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
too-open-minded Posted October 22, 2013 Author Share Posted October 22, 2013 Well i'm gonna go ahead and write a paper that has related experiments and data, facts, precise terminology, correlate all of that, and then project it into how my hypothesized experiments would produce their data. Unless any of you can point me in a better direction, that's the first route I am going to take. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ringer Posted October 23, 2013 Share Posted October 23, 2013 Figure out what you're testing --> research findings in that field --> see what experiments have been done with what variables --> figure out what variables you want to test --> Find ways to test that variable --> find the ways the variable has been tested before --> find better ways to test that variable --> figure out if those tests REALLY test that variable --> figure out the problems with the tests you plan --> attempt to solve problems with tests --> Repeat all that two or three times --> conduct tests (experiments) --> repeat experiments --> hope that the experiments find something significant (if not negative results still tell you something Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
too-open-minded Posted October 24, 2013 Author Share Posted October 24, 2013 Thankyou very much Ringer. Do you have any example papers or formatting that I could follow? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ajb Posted October 24, 2013 Share Posted October 24, 2013 Do you have any example papers or formatting that I could follow? My suggestion is to pick the best paper you have read so far in the subject you are working on and follow that. You will of course develop your own style in due course. Now, if you actually submit the paper for publication then there is usually some hard rules about formatting. The specific journal should supply you with a dummy paper. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
too-open-minded Posted October 26, 2013 Author Share Posted October 26, 2013 Thankyou very much! You have all been much help. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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