Chapter 5: Writing the Results Section
Results Goal 4: Expanding the Niche
The final goal in the Results section is called Expanding the Niche. The main aim of Goal 4 is to further develop the evaluations of the results that come from Goal 3. This expanded commentary helps to relate your current study to the broader context of the discipline.
Like Goal 3, this particular objective (Goal 4) may or may not appear in the Results section. If your paper is organized with the Results and Discussion sections combined, Goal 4 is more likely to appear. Nevertheless, if the Results section and Discussion section are separate, Goal 4 may not appear in the Results but would be in the Discussion section instead.
Strategies for Results Communicative Goal 4: Expanding the Niche
- Generalizing results
- Stating the value
- Noting implications
- Proposing directions
We’ll now discuss each of these and provide some examples from published research.
Results Goal 4 Strategy: Generalizing Results
Generalizing results infers, or deduces meaning, from results and develops general claims or conclusions. Authors typically generalize results by summarizing or synthesizing major findings or making deductions from the findings to broaden the scope of specific results, expand the meaning of the principle findings outside the framework of the study, or deliberate on (consider) the generalizability, transferability, and/or validity of the results.
Here are two examples of how you can accomplish this step:
Examples
- In conclusion, through the separate experiments, we determined that the addition of 1-CO2H to an ethanol solution of zinc acetate does not result in quenching of the emission.[1]
- Because of their disabilities, combat veterans have trouble working, which leads them to stop looking for work and leave the labor force. This is further evidence that combat veterans experience direct cumulative disadvantage. Figure 3 presents predicted probabilities of disability by age and combat status, demonstrating that combat veterans were somewhat more likely than non-veterans and much more likely than non-combat veterans to be disabled throughout the work life.[2]
- What stands out in the results is …
- It is apparent from these results that …
- The most interesting aspect of the findings is …
- What is striking about the results is …
- What is interesting about the outcomes is that …
- This finding is quite revealing in several ways.
Following are some examples from the Academic Phrasebank website that you might consider using as sentence starters:
- It can therefore be assumed that the …
- It can therefore be assumed that the …
- An implication of this is the possibility that …
- The present study raises the possibility that …
- One of the issues that emerges from these findings is …
- Some of the issues emerging from this finding relate specifically to …
- These findings may help us to understand …
- This finding, while preliminary, suggests that .…
- This finding has important implications for developing …
- This observational study suggests that a diet rich in X may help prevent …
- These findings raise intriguing questions regarding the nature and extent of …
- This combination of findings provides some support for the conceptual premise that …
Key Takeaways
There are four strategies that can help you attain the objective of Goal 4: Expanding the Niche:
- Generalizing results, and/or
- Stating the value, and/or
- Noting implications, and/or
- Proposing directions
- Rossini, J. E., Huss, A. S., Bohnsack, J. N., Blank, D. A., Mann, K. R., & Gladfelter, W. L. (2011). Binding and static quenching behavior of a terthiophene carboxylate on monodispersed zinc oxide nanocrystals. The Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 115(1), 11-17. ↵
- MacLean, A. (2010). The things they carry: Combat, disability, and unemployment among US men. American Sociological Review, 75(4), 563-585. ↵
- Norton, R. K. (2005). More and better local planning: State-mandated local planning in coastal North Carolina. Journal of the American Planning Association, 71(1), 55-71. ↵
- Devi, T. A., Sarla, N., Siddiq, E. A., & Sirdeshmukh, R. (2010). Activity and expression of adenosine diphosphate glucose pyrophosphorylase in developing rice grains: Varietal differences and implications on grain filling. Plant Science, 178(2), 123-129. ↵
- Hansey, C. N., Johnson, J. M., Sekhon, R. S., Kaeppler, S. M., & De Leon, N. (2011). Genetic diversity of a maize association population with restricted phenology. Crop Science, 51(2), 704-715. ↵
- Wang, B., Demuren, A., Gyuricsko, E., & Hu, H. (2011). An experimental study of pulsed micro-flows pertinent to continuous subcutaneous insulin infusion therapy. Experiments in Fluids, 51(1), 65-74. ↵