
Technical writing: Your Literature Review
First, your readers are most interested in figuring out what you do. After you’ve explained your contribution, then you can write a brief literature review. Make it a separate section. Be generous in your citations. Set your paper off against two or three closest current papers, and give proper credit to people who deserve priority for things that might otherwise seem new.
The body of your paper
Your task now is to get to the central result as fast as possible. Most papers start with:
- long motivation
- long literature review
- big complex model
- descriptive statistics
- preliminary results
- side discussions
Boring! Put nothing before the main result that the reader does not need to know in order to understand it.
Your conclusions
Do not restate all of your findings. One statement in the abstract, one in the introduction and once more in the body of the text should be enough. You can include a short paragraph or two acknowledging limitations, and suggesting implications beyond those in the paper. Keep it short. Don’t speculate.
Remember: