What part of a research report reveals the most important result of the study?

In simple terms, the significance of the study is basically the importance of your research. The significance of a study must be stated in the Introduction section of your research paper. While stating the significance, you must highlight how your research will be beneficial to the development of science and the society in general. You can first outline the significance in a broader sense by stating how your research will contribute to the broader problem in your field and gradually narrow it down to demonstrate the specific group that will benefit from your research. While writing the significance of your study, you must answer questions like:

  • Why should your research be published?
  • How will this study contribute to the development of your field?

You might find this course helpful: How to write a strong introduction for your research paper

Related reading:

  • What is significance of the study in research?
  • 4 Step approach to writing the Introduction section of a research paper
  • The secret to writing the introduction and methods section of a manuscript

 

What part of a research report reveals the most important result of the study?

Answered by Editage Insights on 25 Jun, 2019

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What part of a research report reveals the most important result of the study?

What part of a research report reveals the most important result of the study?

What part of a research report reveals the most important result of the study?

The significance of a research refers to its value; how does it contribute to the field of study. Also, significance shows who benefits from the study. By writing the significance of your study, researchers can appreciate your work. The significance of your study determines if your research paper is accepted or rejected. You must write the significance of your study in these sections of your paper introduction, conclusion, and abstract. You can learn more about significance of a research paper on How to Write a Research Paper - Step by Step Guide (questwriters.org)

The function of the Results section is to objectively present your key results, without interpretation, and in an orderly and logical sequence using both illustrative materials (Tables and Figures) and text.

While the Methods section explains how the data were collected, the Results section presents what data were accumulated. Summaries of statistical analyses may appear either in the text or in the relevant Tables or Figures.

The Results section should be organized around a series of Tables and/or Figures sequenced to present your key findings in a logical order. The text of the Results section follows this sequence and provides answers to the questions/hypotheses you investigated. Important negative results should be reported as well. Authors usually write the text of the results section based upon this sequence of Tables and Figures.

A common error is for authors to confuse the information in the Results and Discussion sections. Overall, there are two basic ways of organizing the results:

  • Presenting all the results in one section, followed by the  discussion (perhaps in a different section)
  • Presenting the results and discussion in parts


The method of organization you use will depend on the quantity and type of results you obtain from your research. You should look for a method of presentation that makes the information and ideas you are presenting as clear as possible to the reader. The style is usually dictated by the target journal.

When the journal expects results and discussion to be two separate sections, note the difference in their functions:

  • Results = Data Presentation (Experiments showed that…)
  • Discussion = Data Interpretation (Experiments suggest that…)

Language Style

The Results section is written in a concise and objective fashion. Irrespective of the field of study, some commonalities are as follows:

  • Use passive voice, though active voice can be used when required
  • Use the past tense
  • Avoid repetitive paragraph structures
  • Do not interpret data here

Related: Do you have questions on manuscript drafting? Get personalized answers on the FREE Q&A Forum!

The transition into interpretive language can be a slippery slope. Consider the following two examples:

Example without interpretation: The duration of exposure to running water had a pronounced effect on cumulative seed germination percentages (Fig. 2). Seeds exposed to the 2-day treatment had the highest cumulative germination (84%), 1.25 times that of the 12-h or 5-day groups and four times that of controls.

The above example highlights the trend/difference that the author wants the reader to focus on. Now consider the following example:

Example with interpretation: The results of the germination experiment (Fig. 2) suggest that the optimal time for running-water treatment is 2 days. This group showed the highest cumulative germination (84%), with longer (5 d) or shorter (12 h) exposures producing smaller gains in germination when compared to the control group.

In contrast, this example strays subtly into interpretation by referring to optimality (a

conceptual model) and tying the observed result to that idea.

Writing Strategy

Organize the Results section based on the sequence of Table and Figures you include. Prepare the Tables and Figures as soon as all the data are analyzed and arrange them in the sequence that best presents your findings in a logical way. A good strategy is to note, on a draft of each Table or Figure, the one or two key results you want to address in the text portion of the Results.

Simple rules to follow related to Tables and Figures:

Guideline #1: Tables and Figures are assigned numbers separately and in the sequence that you will refer to them from the text. Each Table or Figure must include a brief description of the results being presented and other necessary information in a legend.

  • Table legends go above the Table; tables are read from top to bottom.
  • Figure legends go below the figure; figures are usually viewed from bottom to top.

Tip 1!

When referring to a figure from the text, “Figure” is usually abbreviated as Fig., e.g., Fig. 1. Table is never abbreviated, e.g., Table 1.

Also, note that Figure is not abbreviated when used at the beginning of a sentence.

The body of the Results section is a text-based presentation of the key findings which includes references to each of the Tables and Figures. The text should guide the reader through your results stressing the key results which provide the answers to the question(s) investigated. Key results depend on your questions; they might include obvious trends, important differences, similarities, correlations, maximums, minimums, etc.

Caution!

  • Do not reiterate each value from a Figure or Table—only the key result or trends that each conveys.
  • Do not present the same data in both a Table and Figure—this is considered redundant and a waste of space and energy. Decide which format best shows the result and go with it.
  • Do not report raw data values when they can be summarized as means, percents, etc.

 

Guideline #2: Statistical test summaries (test name, p-value) are usually reported parenthetically in conjunction with the biological results they support. Always report your results with parenthetical reference to the statistical conclusion that supports your finding. This parenthetical reference should include the statistical test used and the level of significance (test statistic and DF are optional). For example, if you found that the mean height of male Biology majors was significantly larger than that of female Biology majors, you might report this result and your statistical conclusion as follows:

Example: Males (180.5 ± 5.1 cm; n = 34) averaged 12.5 cm taller than females (168 ± 7.6 cm; n = 34) in the AY 1995 pool of Biology majors (two-sample t-test, t = 5.78, 33 d.f., p < 0.001).

If the summary statistics are shown in a figure, the sentence above need not report them specifically but must include a reference to the figure where they may be seen:

Example: Males averaged 12.5 cm taller than females in the AY 1995 pool of Biology majors (two-sample t-test, t = 5.78, 33 d.f., p < 0.001; Fig. 1).

Tip 2!

Notes about the use of the word significant(ly)

In scientific studies, the use of this word implies that a statistical test was employed to make a decision about the data; in this case, the test indicated a larger difference in mean heights than you would expect to get by chance alone. Limit the use of the word “significant” to this purpose only.

If your parenthetical statistical information includes a p-value that is significant, it is unnecessary (and redundant) to use the word “significant” in the body of the sentence.

 

Guideline #3: Report negative results—they are important! If you did not get the anticipated results, it may mean your hypothesis was incorrect and needs to be reformulated, or perhaps you have stumbled onto something unexpected that warrants further study. In either case, your results may be of importance to others even though they did not support your hypothesis. Do not fall into the trap of thinking that results contrary to what you expected are necessarily “bad data.” If you carried out the work well, they are simply your results and need interpretation. Many important discoveries can be traced to “bad data.”

What is the most important part of a research report?

The abstract is the most important part of a research report (except possibly for the title). Many people who read the abstract will not read any other part of the report. Write the abstract last. Although the abstract will be the first thing the readers read, it should be the last part of the report that you write.

What part of the research report describe the most important aspect of the study?

An abstract is an overview that highlights all important aspects of the research including the research method, data collection process, and research findings. Think of an abstract as a summary of your research report that presents pertinent information in a concise manner.

In which parts of the research report could the reader find the one most important result of the study?

The results section is where you report the findings of your study based upon the methodology [or methodologies] you applied to gather information. The results section should state the findings of the research arranged in a logical sequence without bias or interpretation.

Which component of a research paper typically displays the most important results?

The purpose of the abstract is to allow potential readers of a paper to find out the important points of the paper without having to actually read the paper.