Draft results sections for academic manuscripts with APA 7th tables and narrative flow. Use for writing results, presenting findings, formatting statistical tables, or reporting quantitative analysis.
Draft results sections following APA 7th edition standards with narrative flow and properly formatted tables.
The template describes what goes where; this section describes why each element appears where it does and how findings build narratively.
Orient the reader to the full analytical landscape before presenting specific findings. Summarize what analyses were conducted, how the section is organized, and what the reader should expect. This paragraph earns the reader's attention by previewing the story the data tells.
Organize by research question, not by statistical test — the reader follows the argument, not the toolchain. For each RQ: state what was analyzed, present key findings with statistics, reference supporting tables, and transition to the next RQ by connecting what was just found to what comes next. Tables support the narrative but do not replace it; every table should be introduced before it appears and interpreted after. Summarize patterns rather than exhaustively listing every result.
Brief synthesis of key findings without interpretation. Connect the findings back to the research questions. Do not introduce new results or offer theoretical explanations — those belong in the discussion.
| Step | Action | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Identify research questions and corresponding analyses | — |
| 2 | Draft sections organized by RQ, not by statistical test; use template as structural guide, not verbatim script | references/results_template.md |
| 3 | Format tables per APA 7th | ../references/table_formatting.md |
| 4 | Separate core findings (main text) from peripheral detail (appendix) | ../references/appendix_template.md |
| 5 | Ask user to refine the core-vs-peripheral boundary | — |
| 6 | Tighten: apply Core Principles, ensure no interpretation beyond connectors | ../references/apa_style_guide.md |
The main text tells the story of the findings; appendices provide the evidence trail for verification and reproducibility.
Core results (main text): Findings that directly answer the research questions, including the key tables and statistics needed to follow the narrative. Present only the most informative tables inline; summarize patterns rather than exhaustively listing every pathway, configuration, or subgroup.
Peripheral results (appendices): Complete truth tables, full solution tables with all equivalent models, exhaustive cross-tabulations, detailed robustness checks, sensitivity analyses, and supplementary breakdowns by subgroup or condition. Reference these at the point of relevance: "complete results in Table A4" or "detailed breakdowns are available in Appendix B."
When to move results to an appendix:
Then ask the user to refine the core-vs-peripheral boundary for their study, since it is context-dependent. What counts as a core table in one analysis may be appendix material in another depending on the research questions and audience.
Include: Statistical findings, pattern discoveries, comparative analyses, distribution results. Reserve: Theoretical interpretation, implications, causal explanations (discussion).