How To Write An Abstract
How To Write An Abstract
What is an abstract?
An abstract is a concise statement of the major elements of your research project, and the readers
first encounter with your research. Essentially, it should act as an advertisement for your work. It
states the purpose, methods, and findings of your research project. There are two types:
A descriptive abstract identifies the areas to be covered in the report (an extended statement of
purpose); it does not demonstrate the papers content.
An informative abstract summarizes the entire report and gives the reader an overview of the
facts that will be investigated in more details in the paper or presentation itself.
questions you are addressing with this project? For text- based
research projects, what argument are you proposing? Do not include a statement like
this paper will look atsuch a statement is too specific when you are discussing the
general purpose and approach of your research.
A summary of results.
A statement of conclusions (or hypothesized conclusions). What new knowledge are you
bringing to your field? Are your results general, potentially generalizable, or specific?
Possibly some discussion of the relevance of the conclusions. What are the implications
of your research? Are they generalizable or specific to a particular case? You might note
restrictions or limitations on the results by using words like might, could, may,
and seem. Be careful to use non-evaluative language; report instead of comment on your
findings.
Possibly some call for future research.
Whatever kind of research you are doing, your abstract should provide the reader with
the answers to the following questions: What are you asking? Why is it important? How
will you study it? What will you use to demonstrate your conclusions? What are those
conclusions? What do they mean?
Stylistic Considerations:
The abstract should be one paragraph (usually 100-250 words). Edit it closely to be sure it meets
the Four C's of abstract writing:
Complete it covers the major parts of the project. Avoid personal and biographical
references.
Concise its not excessively wordy and contains no unnecessary information. Fewer
words, more impressive. Dont copy sentences from your work; youll end up putting in
too much information. Sure, it might be fun to impress readers with your acrobatic feats
of polysyllabic parlance, but guess what? They dont really care. And abstracts arent
about fanciness, anyway; theyre about conveying an idea quickly and convincingly.
Clear it is readable, well organized, and not too jargon-laden. Use plain English, and
avoid trade names, acronyms, abbreviations or symbols, all of which you would have to
explain, taking up valuable word space. Stick to simple language and formal, but
approachable, style. Choose active verbs, not passive ones (e.g. the study tested not it
was tested by the study); words like discuss and examine are also weak verbs to be
avoided. Use simple sentences; but vary sentence structure to avoid choppiness.
Cohesive it flows smoothly between the parts. Make logical connections and good
transitions.
Common Problems:
Too long, too much detail, or including too much introductory/methodology material:
The Black-Capped Chickadee (Poecile atricapillus) is a species of North American songbird
inhabiting the United States and Canada. Unlike many other songbirds whose songs vary
geographically, previous studies done on chickadee populations from Massachusetts,
Pennsylvania, New York, Ontario, Missouri, Wisconsin, Alberta, Utah, British Columbia,
Washington, and California have shown that males sing a typical two tone song, "fee-bee-ee,"
with little variation between populations. Researchers have also shown that an isolated
population from Martha's Vineyard, an island offshore of Massachusetts, demonstrates singing
patterns different from the usual two note songs. I am studying a second isolated population of
chickadees in Alaska, which has not been systematically investigated previously. There is one
anecdotal report that suggested the males from the Alaskan population have unusual singing
patterns. For example, the males sing songs with multiple notes accompanied with frequency
shifts. The goal of my research...
Using too much jargon. Use plain English and active voice where you can, and simple sentences:
Within the historiography of North American studies, my research attempts to combine
criticisms of Them vs. Us historical paradigms with recent psychological findings on stereotype
formation, self-esteem and implicit self-theories.
Too short, or not giving the reader sufficient context and completeness: Shorter is not always better!
We have used infrared reflectance to study the effects of melt recrystallization on the structure of
thin polymer films. We hypothesized that slowly melting and then resolidifying the thin polymer
films will lead to higher levels of crystallinity and orientational order in very
thin polymer films. (46 words)
Vagueness
This article describes how to write an abstract. The author relies on established rules of good
composition. She also provides a number of helpful hints about writing abstracts. The article
includes examples of both bad and good abstracts. Compare this to: A useful abstract is a well-
constructed paragraph with an informative topic sentence followed by two to three supporting
sentences. The supporting sentences contain specific information about the topic. The sentences
are arranged in a logical order and the ideas are connected with good transitions. Inspiration for
the topic sentences should come from the recommendations, results, conclusions, tutorial, and
summary sections of the document.
Sample
Abstract
Worksheet
Use
the
categories
below
to
help
draft
your
abstract.
Examples
are
provided
as
a
guide.
Title
(e.g.,
N-terminal
arm
of
Mcm1
is
required
for
transcription
of
a
subset
of
genes
involved
in
maintenance
of
the
cell
wall.)
Introduction
(e.g.,
The
yeast
Mcm1
protein
is
a
member
of
the
MADS
box
family
of
transcription
factors
that
interacts
with
several
cofactors
to
differentially
regulate
genes
involved
in
cell-type
determination,
mating,
cell
cycle
control
and
arginine
metabolism.
Residues
18
to
96
of
the
protein,
which
form
the
core
DNA-binding
domain
of
Mcm1,
are
sufficient
to
carry
out
many
Mcm1-dependent
functions.)
Hypothesis
(e.g.,
However,
deletion
of
residues
2
to
17,
which
form
the
nonessential
N-
terminal
(NT)
arm,
confers
a
salt-
sensitive
phenotype,
suggesting
that
the
NT
arm
is
required
for
the
activation
of
salt
response
genes.)
Methods
(e.g.,
We
used
a
strategy
that
combined
information
from
the
mutational
analysis
of
the
Mcm1-binding
site
with
microarray
expression
data
under
salt
stress
conditions
to
identify
a
new
subset
of
Mcm1-regulated
genes.)
Results
(e.g.,
Northern
blot
analysis
showed
that
the
transcript
levels
of
several
genes
encoding
associated
with
the
cell
wall,
especially
YGP1,
decrease
significantly
upon
deletion
of
the
Mcm1
NT
arm.
Deletion
of
the
Mcm1
NT
arm
results
in
a
calcofluor
white-sensitive
phenotype,
which
is
often
associated
with
defects
in
transcription
of
cell
wall
genes.
In
addition,
the
deletion
makes
cells
sensitive
to
CaCl2
and
alkaline
pH.)
Discussion
(e.g.,
We
found
that
the
defect
caused
by
removal
of
the
NT
arm
is
not
due
to
changes
in
Mcm1
protein
level,
stability,
DNA-binding
affinity,
or
DNA
bending.)
Conclusion
(e.g.,
This
suggests
that
residues
2
to
17
of
Mcm1
may
be
involved
in
recruiting
a
cofactor
to
the
promoters
of
these
genes
to
activate
transcription.)