Drug-Resistant Infections and Disease Dynamics group handbook

Welcome to our group's handbook. This is intended to help group members to find the information they need and to give prospective members an idea about what it is like to work with our group.

View the Project on GitHub DRIaDD/handbook

Writing a paper

Many journals have specific requirements so it is a good idea to write with a specific journal in mind. For example, some journals require the methods section to go at the end, which will affect how you write the results.

Modelling papers can be particularly difficult as the traditional separation between methods and results is less clear. Stacey Smith? at the University of Ottawa has shared a presentation about how to write a modelling paper, with 13 stages of a draft paper to show its evolution.

Most papers we write will be a collaboration so don’t be afraid to ask your colleagues and co-authors for help.

Authorship

The International Committee of Medical Journal Editors has defined authorship as requiring four criteria:

Many journals subscribe to these and require that everyone who meets the criteria is listed as an author and no one who does not meet the criteria is listed.

Pre-prints

Most journals allow work to be shared as a pre-print without affecting eligibility for full publication in the journal. Many pre-print servers are available. medRxiv is the most relevant for most of our work. bioRxiv and arXiv may also be relevant.

Writing tips

Software

Writing software

Reference managers

Keeping track of literature

The Bodleian library offers support from dedicated librarians in the Medical sciences to guide you on a literature search, you can reach them at hcl-enquiries@bodleian.ox.ac.uk.