A scholarly journal article has an abstract, introduction, method, results, conclusion and a list of references (bibliography).The journal article's topic should be easy to understand as you read its abstract and introduction. The method, results and conclusion sections discuss and compare the conducted research. Authors have to include their cited references about research by other scientists. The use of references distinguish scholarly journal articles from non scholarly journals.
Journal publishers define their peer review process
Double check the publisher's usage permission of images in journal articles
The best way to distinguish scholarly journal articles is to first look for the author's references which will show the author's literature review method. Be suspect of an article that has only 2 or 3 references
Source of guide : Brooklyn College Library , created By Susan Thomas, Librarian (sthomas@bmcc.cuny.edu): http://lib1.bmcc.cuny.edu/help/sources.html
https://libguides.brooklyn.cuny.edu/startingresearch/primaryorsecondary
Anatomy of a Scholarly Article
Click on the image to review different parts of a scholarly article.
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