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Research Block: PGY-2: Week 3

Year 2

Tasks

  1. If you have questions please reach out to us. lrc.ask@acom.edu
  2. Watch the Zotero installation video and install Zotero on your computer. 
  3. Read through the LibGuide making sure to read the linked articles.
  4. Watch How to Lie with Charts. 

What is a Citation or Reference?

A citation or reference is a short description of a resource that is used in a paper or project.  Whenever you refer to an idea that is not originally yours, or quote someone else's work, you must give credit to the originator by citing that source in your paper.  You should also provide documentation for any facts or figures you use that are not common knowledge.  All the sources you use will be compiled into a list at the end of your paper.  This is called a Bibliography, Reference List, or Works Cited.

Parts of a Citation

A citation or reference includes all the information needed for someone to identify and find the resource. There are 4 main parts to every citation: Author, Date, Title, & Location.  Depending on the citation style, a citation may include any of the following: title, author, date, page numbers, publisher, place of publication, etc.

 

Managing Citations

Figures, Graphs, Tables, and Charts

Misleading Graphs

Numbers don’t lie. Or do they? If you remember from last semester statistics is about the manipulation of data. If one can manipulate the data they can certainly manipulate the way it is visualized and displayed. While this happens more in business and politics than medicine often times the scientists who write papers do not involve a trained statistician. Thus, you need to be able to recognize when data is being misrepresented whether intentionally or accidentally.

 


Elements of Good Graphs

The best method of creating a good graph I’ve seen is the one taught by my biostatistics professor from UAB, Dr. Austin. Her checklist includes the following elements:

  1. A descriptive title
  2. Labels on the axes
  3. Clear category labels
  4. A legend
  5. A data source
  6. “Do NOT use 3-D!!!”
    1. Here is what Dr. Austin says about 3-D: “… do not use 3D, 3D is ridiculous. It never prints clearly, it doesn't look good and it's misleading. It makes it look as if we have three dimensional data when, in fact, we really don't. We're looking at two dimensional data. So there's no reason to use 3D when we create graphs.”
    2. Also, 3-D can be used to misrepresent data.

Here is an example of a graph I created for a class project following her instructions:

 

How to Lie with Charts

Watch Elliot Noma’s talk “How to Lie With Charts.” From 2:45 until the 31 minute mark.


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