The length of the paper is different from that of the paper. The paper is generally short, it is an article, generally 2000-5000 words; This paper is a book of hundreds of words. Papers and works are published in different ways. Papers are mainly published in periodicals, and works need to be officially published by publishing houses, and book numbers are needed.
The repetition rate requirements of papers and works are different. Papers are strictly repeated, and the repetition rate of published papers is required to be between 10-30%. Works value the author's creative efforts, most of the author's views, logic, theory, etc. Will not be repeated, so they can learn from other people's written results.
Papers and papers are graded in different ways. Papers need to look at the level of published journals, and generally require the first author or independent writing. A book depends on the level of the publishing house, the quality of the book and the status of the author. A paper written independently will not get higher marks than a work written independently.
First of all, the thesis and summary are a sub-column of the thesis, but the summary is a thesis, not a thesis. Generally speaking, the weight of the paper is greater than the summary. In the medical field, there are experimental studies, that is, experimental groups or case groups, but not all reviews.
"Thesis" refers to "argumentative essay", which is a common form of expression in the genre of medical papers and has a specific concept. It is the author's own achievements, experiences and understandings in scientific research, clinic and teaching. It is a written work formed by strict logical argumentation and standardization, and it is the most typical and representative style in medical papers. A "thesis" is an article to discuss and study a certain problem.
"Academic papers are articles that systematically and specifically discuss and study certain knowledge"; Scientific papers should discuss some important new knowledge of experiments, theories or observations, or the progress of a known principle in practical application. On the surface, there is not much difference. Especially in medical journals, it is difficult for editors to distinguish between the two.