Simple present in scientific articles












3















I'm editing a medicine article and in the introduction the author writes




We report this case of a 25-year-old female with cholestatic hepatitis




Isn't this simple present strange here? Shouldn't it be




we are going to report




or




this article reports?











share|improve this question

























  • You may be interested in my note "You can go a long way in the present tense" in the context of technical manuscripts. The simple present tense is quite useful for presenting a scientific article to the reader in real time. The use of "We are going to..." or "In Section II, we will..." is generally not necessary in a short paper; you are reporting the results now, and there's no guarantee that your reader is progressing through the sections in order.

    – Chemomechanics
    Jan 9 at 19:49


















3















I'm editing a medicine article and in the introduction the author writes




We report this case of a 25-year-old female with cholestatic hepatitis




Isn't this simple present strange here? Shouldn't it be




we are going to report




or




this article reports?











share|improve this question

























  • You may be interested in my note "You can go a long way in the present tense" in the context of technical manuscripts. The simple present tense is quite useful for presenting a scientific article to the reader in real time. The use of "We are going to..." or "In Section II, we will..." is generally not necessary in a short paper; you are reporting the results now, and there's no guarantee that your reader is progressing through the sections in order.

    – Chemomechanics
    Jan 9 at 19:49
















3












3








3








I'm editing a medicine article and in the introduction the author writes




We report this case of a 25-year-old female with cholestatic hepatitis




Isn't this simple present strange here? Shouldn't it be




we are going to report




or




this article reports?











share|improve this question
















I'm editing a medicine article and in the introduction the author writes




We report this case of a 25-year-old female with cholestatic hepatitis




Isn't this simple present strange here? Shouldn't it be




we are going to report




or




this article reports?








present-simple






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 9 at 14:27









userr2684291

2,59521531




2,59521531










asked Jan 9 at 14:12









Tiago KondageskiTiago Kondageski

866




866













  • You may be interested in my note "You can go a long way in the present tense" in the context of technical manuscripts. The simple present tense is quite useful for presenting a scientific article to the reader in real time. The use of "We are going to..." or "In Section II, we will..." is generally not necessary in a short paper; you are reporting the results now, and there's no guarantee that your reader is progressing through the sections in order.

    – Chemomechanics
    Jan 9 at 19:49





















  • You may be interested in my note "You can go a long way in the present tense" in the context of technical manuscripts. The simple present tense is quite useful for presenting a scientific article to the reader in real time. The use of "We are going to..." or "In Section II, we will..." is generally not necessary in a short paper; you are reporting the results now, and there's no guarantee that your reader is progressing through the sections in order.

    – Chemomechanics
    Jan 9 at 19:49



















You may be interested in my note "You can go a long way in the present tense" in the context of technical manuscripts. The simple present tense is quite useful for presenting a scientific article to the reader in real time. The use of "We are going to..." or "In Section II, we will..." is generally not necessary in a short paper; you are reporting the results now, and there's no guarantee that your reader is progressing through the sections in order.

– Chemomechanics
Jan 9 at 19:49







You may be interested in my note "You can go a long way in the present tense" in the context of technical manuscripts. The simple present tense is quite useful for presenting a scientific article to the reader in real time. The use of "We are going to..." or "In Section II, we will..." is generally not necessary in a short paper; you are reporting the results now, and there's no guarantee that your reader is progressing through the sections in order.

– Chemomechanics
Jan 9 at 19:49












2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















5














In scientific writing it is quite common to use the simple present to describe the actions of the paper and its contents or the intentions of the authors in writing the paper.



For example:




The authors propose a new standard method for data analysis.



The figure illustrates the stimulus pattern.



The results contradict previous studies.




I believe this is a common practice because those actions are happening in the reader's present each time the article is read. The simple present is preferred over the progressive, e.g. "the results are indicating", because the actions occur repeatedly, each time a new reader looks at the article. (This is just like how "the bus stops here" is for the repeated actions while "the bus is stopping here" describes the current situation.)



Sometimes the past tense is used to describe methods and results (since those happened prior to publication), but the intended impact of the publication is usually still in present tense.



Future tense, e.g. "we will report", is usually reserved for actions that will occur after the article is printed. "Future collaborations will expand on these results." (Also note that future constructions with "will" are more formal than constructions with "going to".)



As for "this article reports" vs "we report", both of those choices use simple present. Some authors choose to avoid using 1st person pronouns ("I" and "we"), but that choice is not unanimous and differs across various domains.






share|improve this answer


























  • I agree with the answer, but the question was about the present as opposed to the continuous, and you don't address that possibility.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 17:44













  • @ColinFine I don't see anything in the question about the continuous, except in the future construction "going to" which I address.

    – Tashus
    Jan 9 at 19:02











  • You're right, @Tashus, I misread it. Apologies

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:41



















2














The present continuous is rarely used in this context. Mostly this is just the convention of that kind of writing; but it is also a convention of present-tense narrative.



If the writer of a paper used a continuous form (We are investigating) it would be taken to mean that, separately from whatever this paper is about the writers are currently pursuing that investigation. This might be about a larger research project of which the findings in this paper are a part; or some investigation only tangentially related to the paper.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I don't see any examples of the present continuous by the OP, just "going to + verb" to express intention in the near future as in "we are going to report"

    – Mari-Lou A
    Jan 9 at 18:33











  • You're quite right. I misread it. I was going to delete this answer, but somebody has upvoted it, so somebody has found it of value.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:40











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "481"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});

function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});


}
});














draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f192386%2fsimple-present-in-scientific-articles%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5














In scientific writing it is quite common to use the simple present to describe the actions of the paper and its contents or the intentions of the authors in writing the paper.



For example:




The authors propose a new standard method for data analysis.



The figure illustrates the stimulus pattern.



The results contradict previous studies.




I believe this is a common practice because those actions are happening in the reader's present each time the article is read. The simple present is preferred over the progressive, e.g. "the results are indicating", because the actions occur repeatedly, each time a new reader looks at the article. (This is just like how "the bus stops here" is for the repeated actions while "the bus is stopping here" describes the current situation.)



Sometimes the past tense is used to describe methods and results (since those happened prior to publication), but the intended impact of the publication is usually still in present tense.



Future tense, e.g. "we will report", is usually reserved for actions that will occur after the article is printed. "Future collaborations will expand on these results." (Also note that future constructions with "will" are more formal than constructions with "going to".)



As for "this article reports" vs "we report", both of those choices use simple present. Some authors choose to avoid using 1st person pronouns ("I" and "we"), but that choice is not unanimous and differs across various domains.






share|improve this answer


























  • I agree with the answer, but the question was about the present as opposed to the continuous, and you don't address that possibility.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 17:44













  • @ColinFine I don't see anything in the question about the continuous, except in the future construction "going to" which I address.

    – Tashus
    Jan 9 at 19:02











  • You're right, @Tashus, I misread it. Apologies

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:41
















5














In scientific writing it is quite common to use the simple present to describe the actions of the paper and its contents or the intentions of the authors in writing the paper.



For example:




The authors propose a new standard method for data analysis.



The figure illustrates the stimulus pattern.



The results contradict previous studies.




I believe this is a common practice because those actions are happening in the reader's present each time the article is read. The simple present is preferred over the progressive, e.g. "the results are indicating", because the actions occur repeatedly, each time a new reader looks at the article. (This is just like how "the bus stops here" is for the repeated actions while "the bus is stopping here" describes the current situation.)



Sometimes the past tense is used to describe methods and results (since those happened prior to publication), but the intended impact of the publication is usually still in present tense.



Future tense, e.g. "we will report", is usually reserved for actions that will occur after the article is printed. "Future collaborations will expand on these results." (Also note that future constructions with "will" are more formal than constructions with "going to".)



As for "this article reports" vs "we report", both of those choices use simple present. Some authors choose to avoid using 1st person pronouns ("I" and "we"), but that choice is not unanimous and differs across various domains.






share|improve this answer


























  • I agree with the answer, but the question was about the present as opposed to the continuous, and you don't address that possibility.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 17:44













  • @ColinFine I don't see anything in the question about the continuous, except in the future construction "going to" which I address.

    – Tashus
    Jan 9 at 19:02











  • You're right, @Tashus, I misread it. Apologies

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:41














5












5








5







In scientific writing it is quite common to use the simple present to describe the actions of the paper and its contents or the intentions of the authors in writing the paper.



For example:




The authors propose a new standard method for data analysis.



The figure illustrates the stimulus pattern.



The results contradict previous studies.




I believe this is a common practice because those actions are happening in the reader's present each time the article is read. The simple present is preferred over the progressive, e.g. "the results are indicating", because the actions occur repeatedly, each time a new reader looks at the article. (This is just like how "the bus stops here" is for the repeated actions while "the bus is stopping here" describes the current situation.)



Sometimes the past tense is used to describe methods and results (since those happened prior to publication), but the intended impact of the publication is usually still in present tense.



Future tense, e.g. "we will report", is usually reserved for actions that will occur after the article is printed. "Future collaborations will expand on these results." (Also note that future constructions with "will" are more formal than constructions with "going to".)



As for "this article reports" vs "we report", both of those choices use simple present. Some authors choose to avoid using 1st person pronouns ("I" and "we"), but that choice is not unanimous and differs across various domains.






share|improve this answer















In scientific writing it is quite common to use the simple present to describe the actions of the paper and its contents or the intentions of the authors in writing the paper.



For example:




The authors propose a new standard method for data analysis.



The figure illustrates the stimulus pattern.



The results contradict previous studies.




I believe this is a common practice because those actions are happening in the reader's present each time the article is read. The simple present is preferred over the progressive, e.g. "the results are indicating", because the actions occur repeatedly, each time a new reader looks at the article. (This is just like how "the bus stops here" is for the repeated actions while "the bus is stopping here" describes the current situation.)



Sometimes the past tense is used to describe methods and results (since those happened prior to publication), but the intended impact of the publication is usually still in present tense.



Future tense, e.g. "we will report", is usually reserved for actions that will occur after the article is printed. "Future collaborations will expand on these results." (Also note that future constructions with "will" are more formal than constructions with "going to".)



As for "this article reports" vs "we report", both of those choices use simple present. Some authors choose to avoid using 1st person pronouns ("I" and "we"), but that choice is not unanimous and differs across various domains.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 9 at 19:03

























answered Jan 9 at 14:29









TashusTashus

6,262820




6,262820













  • I agree with the answer, but the question was about the present as opposed to the continuous, and you don't address that possibility.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 17:44













  • @ColinFine I don't see anything in the question about the continuous, except in the future construction "going to" which I address.

    – Tashus
    Jan 9 at 19:02











  • You're right, @Tashus, I misread it. Apologies

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:41



















  • I agree with the answer, but the question was about the present as opposed to the continuous, and you don't address that possibility.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 17:44













  • @ColinFine I don't see anything in the question about the continuous, except in the future construction "going to" which I address.

    – Tashus
    Jan 9 at 19:02











  • You're right, @Tashus, I misread it. Apologies

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:41

















I agree with the answer, but the question was about the present as opposed to the continuous, and you don't address that possibility.

– Colin Fine
Jan 9 at 17:44







I agree with the answer, but the question was about the present as opposed to the continuous, and you don't address that possibility.

– Colin Fine
Jan 9 at 17:44















@ColinFine I don't see anything in the question about the continuous, except in the future construction "going to" which I address.

– Tashus
Jan 9 at 19:02





@ColinFine I don't see anything in the question about the continuous, except in the future construction "going to" which I address.

– Tashus
Jan 9 at 19:02













You're right, @Tashus, I misread it. Apologies

– Colin Fine
Jan 9 at 22:41





You're right, @Tashus, I misread it. Apologies

– Colin Fine
Jan 9 at 22:41













2














The present continuous is rarely used in this context. Mostly this is just the convention of that kind of writing; but it is also a convention of present-tense narrative.



If the writer of a paper used a continuous form (We are investigating) it would be taken to mean that, separately from whatever this paper is about the writers are currently pursuing that investigation. This might be about a larger research project of which the findings in this paper are a part; or some investigation only tangentially related to the paper.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I don't see any examples of the present continuous by the OP, just "going to + verb" to express intention in the near future as in "we are going to report"

    – Mari-Lou A
    Jan 9 at 18:33











  • You're quite right. I misread it. I was going to delete this answer, but somebody has upvoted it, so somebody has found it of value.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:40
















2














The present continuous is rarely used in this context. Mostly this is just the convention of that kind of writing; but it is also a convention of present-tense narrative.



If the writer of a paper used a continuous form (We are investigating) it would be taken to mean that, separately from whatever this paper is about the writers are currently pursuing that investigation. This might be about a larger research project of which the findings in this paper are a part; or some investigation only tangentially related to the paper.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I don't see any examples of the present continuous by the OP, just "going to + verb" to express intention in the near future as in "we are going to report"

    – Mari-Lou A
    Jan 9 at 18:33











  • You're quite right. I misread it. I was going to delete this answer, but somebody has upvoted it, so somebody has found it of value.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:40














2












2








2







The present continuous is rarely used in this context. Mostly this is just the convention of that kind of writing; but it is also a convention of present-tense narrative.



If the writer of a paper used a continuous form (We are investigating) it would be taken to mean that, separately from whatever this paper is about the writers are currently pursuing that investigation. This might be about a larger research project of which the findings in this paper are a part; or some investigation only tangentially related to the paper.






share|improve this answer













The present continuous is rarely used in this context. Mostly this is just the convention of that kind of writing; but it is also a convention of present-tense narrative.



If the writer of a paper used a continuous form (We are investigating) it would be taken to mean that, separately from whatever this paper is about the writers are currently pursuing that investigation. This might be about a larger research project of which the findings in this paper are a part; or some investigation only tangentially related to the paper.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Jan 9 at 17:50









Colin FineColin Fine

29.3k24157




29.3k24157








  • 1





    I don't see any examples of the present continuous by the OP, just "going to + verb" to express intention in the near future as in "we are going to report"

    – Mari-Lou A
    Jan 9 at 18:33











  • You're quite right. I misread it. I was going to delete this answer, but somebody has upvoted it, so somebody has found it of value.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:40














  • 1





    I don't see any examples of the present continuous by the OP, just "going to + verb" to express intention in the near future as in "we are going to report"

    – Mari-Lou A
    Jan 9 at 18:33











  • You're quite right. I misread it. I was going to delete this answer, but somebody has upvoted it, so somebody has found it of value.

    – Colin Fine
    Jan 9 at 22:40








1




1





I don't see any examples of the present continuous by the OP, just "going to + verb" to express intention in the near future as in "we are going to report"

– Mari-Lou A
Jan 9 at 18:33





I don't see any examples of the present continuous by the OP, just "going to + verb" to express intention in the near future as in "we are going to report"

– Mari-Lou A
Jan 9 at 18:33













You're quite right. I misread it. I was going to delete this answer, but somebody has upvoted it, so somebody has found it of value.

– Colin Fine
Jan 9 at 22:40





You're quite right. I misread it. I was going to delete this answer, but somebody has upvoted it, so somebody has found it of value.

– Colin Fine
Jan 9 at 22:40


















draft saved

draft discarded




















































Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language Learners Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f192386%2fsimple-present-in-scientific-articles%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

How do I know what Microsoft account the skydrive app is syncing to?

When does type information flow backwards in C++?

Grease: Live!