Sunday, January 31, 2016

PB2A

A scholarly academic publication is typically a formal and professional publication written by researchers or subject experts. The article that I chose for PB2A is titled "Alzheimer's vaccine: a cure as dangerous as the disease?" and was written by G. Münch, a researcher at University of Leipzig, and S. R. Robinson, a researcher at Monash University. The title poses the question that drives the purpose of the article: is the Alzheimer's vaccine, a supposed cure, as dangerous as the disease itself? 
The article is headed by the title of the piece followed by the names of the authors and their credibility. The article began with a brief summary of what was to be discussed in the full article and provided the main points of the t­ext. The summary informed that there were studies done on transgenic mouse models that supposedly verified the potential for this vaccine's development, but that once the vaccine was used on Alzheimer's patients, the vaccine showed to negatively affect a small number of its recipients with symptoms of brain inflammation. The summary was followed by a short list of key words – “Alzheimer’s disease, vaccine, inflammation, auto-immune disease” (1) –, which, assuming this is an online article would make it easy for people to find this article is they are looking for an article about any of the key words. Following the list of key words is the main body of text in which the authors go in depth about how the studies conducted on the transgenic mice suggested that the vaccine would be safe to use on humans and would not cause any harmful side effects, but when some patients developed unwanted side effects such as ventral nervous system inflammation, brain inflammation, and meninoencephalitis, the use of the vaccine was temporarily suspended. The article was then concluded with acknowledgements and references that listed the authors’ sources of information.
Because this is a scholarly academic publication, the authors use formal, professional language, and as this is a research paper aimed toward the scientific, and more specifically the medical community, the article is written with scientific jargon. The article is also relatively brief – 4 paragraphs long – as it is meant to provide information and educate its readers on the progression of this vaccine. The authors do not include any unnecessary information or any information unrelated to the study done on the vaccine or on how the vaccine was problematic.
The part of the article that seemed the most important to me was the discussion of symptoms of brain inflammation that affected certain patients, and the explanation of what could have caused the brain inflammation to occur, as they address the main question that is posed in the article and is the driving force for the article. Another reason I found that part of the article important is because thee symptoms and side effects related to the vaccine is that the vaccine are what affect the real life patients of these trials. The article explained that the side effects that have thus far affected the patients of the trial have been irreversible, and are potentially life threatening. Even for people who are not apart of the scientific community and do not participate in research for Alzheimer’s, it should be important that more people be aware of life-threatening symptoms from certain vaccines as to be wary of taking and vaccines or forms of medication that could be dangerous.
As this is an article about a trial vaccine that ultimately failed to serve its purpose, the last paragraph of the text include ways in which scientists are trying to improve the vaccine as to reduce and minimize the unwanted side effects produced by this vaccine. Most research articles conclude with a statement about how researchers either have found new advancements, or of how they are trying to improve their methods and studies as to find new advancements.



Works Cited
Münch, G. and S. R. Robinson. “Alzheimer's vaccine: a cure as dangerous as

the disease?”. Journal of Neural Transmission, 2002. Print.

4 comments:

  1. Hi Deanna,

    Your PB has really great organization and structure to it. The way in which you transition from convention to convention makes it really clear to understand. I liked how you described a general overview of the article and then later used that background information to give examples. Something that stood out to me was your explanation of the formal and professional tone academic articles possess. I thought it was great that you explained such articles contain specific jargon that might not be found in other works. Really good job overall!

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  2. Hi! This is a super interesting topic; I'm really glad I picked your response to read. I love how you ended your introduction paragraph with the main research question from the article because it left me, as the reader, wanting to know more. You also mentioned each of the conventions really clearly and analyzed them; I could hear your personal voice which was super cool. In addition to this, the paragraph where you talked about the most important aspect of the article was a really in depth analysis and was actually the best one I have read. Good job!

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  3. This was a great PB2A! You really drove the point home that the driving force of the article was to explain the root cause of the observed brain inflammation, which identifies the exigence for this piece of scholarly work. Your explanation about the intricacies of the paper's discussion section were quite astute, as this portion of research articles truly is the most essential part. Your analysis of key conventions present in the article such as key words and structural concepts was quality work, thanks for reviewing this article!

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  4. Hey Deanna!

    I really love learning about neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s, so this post immediately caught my attention once I discovered the subject you wrote about. What you’ve written here is very thorough and accurate, and I personally thoroughly enjoyed what I have learned from this scholarly article as well. You paid a lot of attention to detail here, and it definitely paid off! It’s easy to tell that you have put a lot of work into this, analyzing each tiny, subtle convention that many have forgotten to mention. Great job, I hope to read more from you!

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