An interesting academic research
paper I recently read was called “Golden eagles, feral pigs, and insular
carnivores: How exotic species turn native predators into prey,” which
investigates the ecology of the animals on the Channel Islands in Santa
Barbara—specifically the relationships between the island fox, the feral pig,
the golden eagle, and the island spotted skunk. I found this paper by going to
the UCSB library website, logging in through the off-campus log in, going to the
Article Indexes and Research Databases quick link, and clicking on the Web of Science Database link.
Research
Papers have a specific format that many follow, and these many conventions tie
in with rhetorical features of this genre. The audiences of the SCIgen papers and the "Golden eagle..." paper differ, mostly because SCIgen is a genre generator that is mainly used for
entertainment. While its format can be reviewed as a scientific research paper,
its purpose is to create fake Computer Science research papers. Therefore, its
audience is the viewers who want to read them for pleasure or the unsuspecting people
who are being played on and believe they are reading real scientific papers.
The audience for the “Golden eagles…” paper, however, is the community of
ecologists or graduate and undergraduate students that are interested in the
topic or writing papers. The purposes of this research paper are to explore the
question being asked and provide the authors’ interpretation of the answer to
the question based on the data and models being used. The tones for SCIgen and the
“Golden eagles…” paper are true to their genre of scientific research papers
and are scholarly, confident, and respectful.
The format of these research papers
allows readers to know what to expect when reading a research paper. By taking
a superficial glance at the pages, readers can tell by the sections, graphs,
and references that what they are holding is an academic research paper. The
specific organization of these papers also helps readers find particular
information very quickly. For example, if the paper is six pages long and the reader is
specifically looking for the methods that the authors used, then he/she can easily flip to that
section in the paper.
The usual
order for research papers is: Title, Abstract, Introduction, Methods, Results,
Discussion, Conclusion, and References. SCIgen papers and the scholarly source
I found mostly follow this order. One difference is that SCIgen often adds an
“Implementation” section that has diagrams (usually diagrams are mostly found
in the results section) and a “Related Works” section. This could be because the
generator’s creators believed that adding these sections would improve their
research papers, or it could be a convention of Computer Science research papers
that is often used.
Usually,
the Results section is filled with the graphs, tables, charts, or observations
with explanations of the data, and the Discussion has the analysis of the results and the interpretation of them. Both SCIgen and the “Golden eagles…” paper combined their
Results and Discussion sections. SCIgen follows their Results section with
Related Work, Conclusion, and References sections, while the “Golden eagles…”
research paper has a combined “Results and Discussion” section and no “Conclusion”
section. The “Golden eagles…” paper also does not have titles for the Abstract,
Introduction, or References sections, and the titles for Methods and Results
and Discussion Sections are not numbered like the titles in the SCIgen research
paper are.
Both SCIgen and the “Golden
eagles…” research papers follow the usual conventions and rhetorical devices,
and the minor differences seen are from each author’s individual preferences. SCIgen
follows the conventional rules for the stereotypical structure more precisely
because it is a genre generator and the papers it produces are not actual
papers written by certified scientists. That means that the SCIgen papers rely
on the conventions of research papers to match the expectations of their
viewers. In other words, SCIgen relies on looks, not contents—so they have to
make their papers look like stereotypical Computer Science research papers. The
“Golden eagles, feral pigs, and insular carnivores: How exotic species turn
native predators into prey” research paper, however, is a real, published and
peer-reviewed research paper written by biologists and ecologists who have
their own ideas on how they want their paper to be organized on top of the
usual conventions.
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| Scholarly Source |
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| SCIgen |


Hey! Great job, I enjoyed reading your project builder. You nit-picked both journals so well and compared them in many ways. I like that you said "the minor differences between them were from author's preferences. Love it, keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteCarlos Pena