The Lay Scientist
Martin Robbins
guardian.co.uk

http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/the-lay-scientist/2010/sep/24/1/print

 
This is a news website article about a scientific paper

In the standfirst I will make a fairly obvious pun about the subject matter
before posing an inane question I have no intention of really answering: is
this an important scientific finding?

In this paragraph I will state the main claim that the research makes,
making appropriate use of "scare quotes" to ensure that it's clear that I
have no opinion about this research whatsoever.

In this paragraph I will briefly (because no paragraph should be more than
one line) state which existing scientific ideas this new research
"challenges".

If the research is about a potential cure, or a solution to a problem, this
paragraph will describe how it will raise hopes for a group of sufferers or
victims.

This paragraph elaborates on the claim, adding weasel-words like "the
scientists say" to shift responsibility for establishing the likely truth or
accuracy of the research findings on to absolutely anybody else but me, the
journalist.

In this paragraph I will state in which journal the research will be
published. I won't provide a link because either a) the concept of adding
links to web pages is alien to the editors, b) I can't be bothered, or c)
the journal inexplicably set the embargo on the press release to expire
before the paper was actually published.

"Basically, this is a brief soundbite," the scientist will say, from a
department and university that I will give brief credit to. "The existing
science is a bit dodgy, whereas my conclusion seems bang on," she or he will
continue.

I will then briefly state how many years the scientist spent leading the
study, to reinforce the fact that this is a serious study and worthy of
being published by the BBC the website.

This is a sub-heading that gives the impression I am about to add useful
context.

Here I will state that whatever was being researched was first discovered in
some year, presenting a vague timeline in a token gesture toward
establishing context for the reader.

To pad out this section I will include a variety of inane facts about the
subject of the research that I gathered by Googling the topic and reading
the Wikipedia article that appeared as the first link.

I will preface them with "it is believed" or "scientists think" to avoid
giving the impression of passing any sort of personal judgement on even the
most inane facts.

This fragment will be put on its own line for no obvious reason.

In this paragraph I will reference or quote some minor celebrity, historical
figure, eccentric, or a group of sufferers; because my editors are
ideologically committed to the idea that all news stories need a "human
interest", and I'm not convinced that the scientists are interesting enough.

At this point I will include a picture, because our search engine
optimisation experts have determined that humans are incapable of reading
more than 400 words without one.

[This picture has been optimised by SEO experts to appeal to our key target
demographics]

This subheading hints at controversy with a curt phrase and a question mark?

This paragraph will explain that while some scientists believe one thing to
be true, other people believe another, different thing to be true.

In this paragraph I will provide balance with a quote from another scientist
in the field. Since I picked their name at random from a Google search, and
since the research probably hasn't even been published yet for them to see
it, their response to my e-mail will be bland and non-committal.

"The research is useful", they will say, "and gives us new information.
However, we need more research before we can say if the conclusions are
correct, so I would advise caution for now."

If the subject is politically sensitive this paragraph will contain quotes
from some fringe special interest group of people who, though having no
apparent understanding of the subject, help to give the impression that
genuine public "controversy" exists.


This paragraph will provide more comments from the author restating their
beliefs about the research by basically repeating the same stuff they said
in the earlier quotes but with slightly different words. They won't address
any of the criticisms above because I only had time to send out one round of
e-mails.

This paragraph contained useful information or context, but was removed by
the sub-editor to keep the article within an arbitrary word limit in case
the internet runs out of space.

The final paragraph will state that some part of the result is still
ambiguous, and that research will continue.

Related Links:

The Journal (not the actual paper, we don't link to papers).

The University Home Page (finding the researcher's page would be too much
effort).

Unrelated story from 2007 matched by keyword analysis.

Special interest group linked to for balance.


Regards,

KGB

-----
Kevin G. Barkes
Email: kgbar...@gmail.com
KGB Report:
http://www.kgbreport.com
Commentwear by KGB:
http://www.commentwear.com
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http://nationaltemperatureindex.com
DCL Dialogue on line: 
http://www.dcldialogue.com
Random Quotations Generator: 
http://www.goodquotations.com
Over 13,000 searchable quotations.

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