Fake Style

The latest Twitter phenomenon is FakeAPStylebook, an amusing take on guidelines to proper journalistic writing. Some tips include:

  • STAR WARS Episodes IV-VI are to be referred to as “The Original Trilogy.” Episodes I-III are not to be referred to at all.
  • Always capitalize Satan. You don’t want to get dead goats from those people.
  • The correct spelling is “Rocktober,” not “Roctober,” which is the month of giant birds.
  • Replace “situation deteriorated/worsened” with “shit [just] got real.” Ex: On day three of the hostage crisis, shit got real.

Amusing enough, but I have to admit that I originally read “Fake AP Stylebook” as “Fake APS Stylebook,” as if it were the (fake) American Physical Society rather than the (fake) Associated Press that was handing out advice. After all, the real APS is quite a bit quirkier than the AP; they insist that no article title begin with “The,” and for a while there they were insisting that “Lagrangian” be spelled “Lagrangean.” (Everyone has their quirks; Nature has banned the words “paradigm” and “scenario” from its pages entirely.)

So I’m sure we can do better. Any good suggestions for improved physics style? I promise to tweet anything sufficiently amusing.

37 Comments

37 thoughts on “Fake Style”

  1. I propose an immediate moratorium on the use of “Cheers” as an email signoff (particularly among astronomers), which has reached epidemic proportions and is really just getting ridiculous.

  2. You think Nature is quirky; I served the word “paradigm” with a restraining order so it can’t come within 100 yards of my person.

  3. All submission titles should begin “Encyclopedia Brown and the Case of…”

    Do not italicize Latin, such as “in vivo”, but do italicize 80s slang, such as “cowabunga” and “radical”.

    Though the passive voice is often used in scientific writing, the passive-aggressive voice is preferred. Ex: “The sample was prepared according to the procedure described by Dalton et al (2002)” is not as preferable as “The sample was prepared according to the procedure described by Dalton et al (2002), though not very well, but it is assumed they were very busy and didn’t have time to go over it in detail.”

  4. British authors should take pains to spell words phonetically, e.g. “Alyouminnium oxide.”

    “In this letter” is often an insufficiently pompous way to remind the reader of the importance of your paper; emphasize your direct communication with the editors by adding “Dear Sir,” or “To Whom It May Concern.”

    “Novel” is over-used and unclear – consider the simpler word “book” in its place.

  5. Hi,

    As a Brit who has used Cheers as a goodbye greeting in person and over the phone for many years before email, I deplore the Supernova’s suggestion. You just have a prejudice against British slang. If I have to put up with a “Hi” at the top of every email then you can certainly put up with a “Cheers” at the bottom.

    Cheers,

    Matt

  6. When writing about sports, do not use the terms “sartorial” or “quotidian!”

    To all fashion commentators, immediately stop using the term “product!”

    People need to know, that when one fails the colorblindness test for a driver’s license, one can still be a racist.

    From now forward, all sci-fi movies and tv series must not contain the word “STAR” in their titles

    Finally, all academics need to follow the advice of Thorstein Veblen: to become a connoisseur in creditable viands of various degrees of merit, in strong beverages and trinkets, in seemly apparel and architecture, in weapons, games, dances, and narcotics!”

  7. Ban the use of openings of the form, “The recent work of [Famous name] has attracted much attention,” , as if that were an excuse to write another one, instead of the reverse.

    Reward extreme honesty. “This paper has a good idea, but I can’t do anything with it; still, you never know, Ed Witten might see it and something good might result in that way.”

  8. “It is easy to see that…” should be replaced with “If you are smart enough, you will see that…..if not, please email author.”

  9. Based on a quick study of the ArXiv: “Consequently”, “therefore”, and “In view of the previous paragraph” should each be replaced by “so.”

    Acronymns and abbreviations should always be spelled out in Titles. Example: X-ray … who remembers what that X stands for anyway.

    Greek and other foreign alphabets should always be coverted to their English equivalents. No abbreviations!

    Authors names should be listed alphabetically. If there are more than three authors, those beyond the third will be omitted.

    Use passive voice for scientific communication. Example “Active galactic nuclei” -> “Galactic nuclei of minimal passivity”

  10. Single author papers are not permitted to use the first person plural, except if the author is actually the Queen of England.

  11. How about these:

    – A stringent and unforgiving requirement imposing a maximum of two indecipherable terms per abstract? It would be nice.* Indecipherable means not readable by fellow human beings who are educated in science at an advanced level.

    – Every paper that makes use of statistical claim or underlying probability theory** in any capacity should have a warning/hazard symbol watermarked on the front. And every usage of said mathematics should be linked to a footnote (dagger symbol preferred here) or an elaborate endnote detailing the author’s understanding of what murky, murky waters he wades in, and the controversial and rather horrid nature of this field.

    – It is not always clear what emotions the author is trying to communicate, and that sucks. Smileys/emoticons can help here. For e.g., “This is problematic :)” can mean the problem is finally resolving some bigger issue. “This confirms X :(” means a problem is persisting. The smileys will serve as guiding points in the storyline of a paper, so we don’t have to read all of it.

    Moving from style to more general regulations:

    – Every paper not within the technical grasp of a good undergrad in physics/math/similar should be accompanied with a sister-paper explaining it to (at minimum) such an audience. Just to make sure the author (and the committee!) actually knows what’s going on. String theorists can of course just write an apology or something.

    – All papers authored by people believing in the “multiverse” idea should be rejected. This should not hurt anyone’s feelings. In some other world, it was accepted, celebrated, and its results enshrined in patterns of solid gold on the stone walls of a temple in Venice.

    (*) Note that this does not apply to the title, which can be as cryptic as necessary.
    (**) With the exception of works on fundamental quantum mechanics related to uncertainty. They are the only people for whom the topic is real, not painfully approximate.

    Cheers,
    -A

  12. Pingback: Fake Style at Cosmic Variance « Mirror Image

  13. Authors should select one of “missing link”, “Rosetta stone”, or “holy grail” to describe any new object discovered.

    Authors should refer to at least one dark matter model that fits any anomalous effect observed. Vague assertions that it may instead be due to pulsars or LMXBs are optional.

    All data used in a published paper should be included in the paper, in an online supplement, in a publicly-accessible archive, or on hard disks in a grad student office buried under a pile of papers. Reel-to-reel tapes and 8-inch floppies are discouraged.

  14. From the actual style sheet of Language, the journal of the Linguistic Society of America:

    “3c. Use boldface for certain forms in Oscan and Umbrian, and to distinguish Gaulish and other forms originally written in the Greek alphabet.”

    Also, the journal Natural Language Semantics states very sternly, and in boldface so that you don’t miss it, that “PDF is not an acceptable file format” for submissions. This line comes right after a line where TIFF, GIF, JPEG, Excel, and Powerpoint are listed as acceptable formats.

    Man, there is something wrong about my profession.

  15. ‘Breakthrough’ is preferable to ‘result.’

    A good abstract should note how much sooner the cure for cancer will be found as a result of the breakthroughs contained in the paper and estimate how many lives will be saved.

    The innovative character of the paper should be emphasised by omitting misguided prior work.

    It is a good idea to congratulate yourself and your coauthors in the concluding paragraphs.

    Those who disagree with presented view should be clearly labeled as crackpots with the word preferably in bold, if criticism has to be included for reference use strikethrough font.

    Statements of questionable validity should be preceded with ‘self-evident.’

    Instead of giving undue weight to individuals it is often preferable to cite scientific consensus.

    Never let data stand in the way of great science.

  16. I once got in an argument with a collaborator (fairly well-known, but nameless in a public forum) over the correct spelling of “Lagrangian”, his argument being that “well, Phys Rev D spells it ‘Lagrangean'”. He is lucky, frankly, to be alive after that comment.

    The use of “shit just got real” in a physics paper should be saved for some nasty three-loop calculation, or the moral equivalent. Anybody using it as a math pun will face consequences too terrible to type.

  17. I have had (rather pointless) discussions with colleagues about whether to capitalise words like Hamiltonian, Gaussian etc. As a “brit” I would replace American English by English #opens can of worms#.

    Also, when speaking I tend to use cheers to mean “thanks” rather than “goodbye”. I have been cheerfully assuming that email correspondents are grateful to me for something.

  18. I don’t know, a nasty three-loop calculation would be more accurately described as a pimped out perturbation. Shit got real should be used as intended, e.g., “The LHC was switched on, and shit got real.”

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