
You might be required to find scientific papers for a variety of classes. Often, your instructors will require that you find articles that are reporting original research. You will want the original scientific report, including the information you would need if you were going to replicate the experiment or study. But sometimes these articles can be difficult to find and identify.
Characteristics of Most Scientific Articles
First, let's look at how to identify an article reporting scientific findings. Take a brief look at the article. In general, scientific articles:
Are often 10 pages or longer
Include technical and specialized language
Are likely to be challenging to read and to require looking up terminology
Have lengthy bibliographies at the end
If an article is only 2 pages long, has no references (bibliography), and you understand it without concentrating and perhaps looking up some of the words, then it is not presenting scientific research. It's just talking about it.
If your article looks good so far, then take a closer look. Most scientific research is divided into distinct, easily recognizable sub-sections. Here are some of the subheadings to look for:
Summary or Abstract
Introduction
Materials and Methods (or Methodology)
Results
Discussion
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References
If the article has three or more of these subheadings, then it almost certainly is an article presenting original scientific research.
For comparison, here's an example of an article presenting scientific findings about the possible connection between cell phones and brain tumors:
"Long-term use of cellular phones and brain tumours: increased risk associated with use for >=10 years"
And here's an example of an article from a magazine on the same topic that is not presenting scientific findings