Creating and Saving Abstracts
An abstract provides a brief summary of the topic, the approach, the purpose, the most important findings and sometimes possibilities for future research. It should be written concisely and objectively.
When writing an abstract, keep the following points in mind:
- Briefly summarize the contents of the text by describing the main topic, arguments and scope.
- Identify the work's context within the discipline: what lines of thinking does it continue? Which methods were used and/or what theoretical stance does the author take?
- Determine the author's contributions to the research: what are the key contributions of the work? What are the author's major findings? What questions remain open for investigation?
Your own opinions and critical evaluations should be recorded as an Evaluation.
Adding an Abstract
If you're writing an abstract yourself, put your name and the date in brackets at the beginning of the abstract so that you do not forget that you are the author.
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Adding an Existing Abstract from the Preview
Many journal articles in electronic form already include an abstract. If this is the case, you can easily copy it into Citavi.
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Adding an Existing Abstract from Another Program
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Hint: To preserve the formatting of the original text when pasting, press F9 to open the advanced text editor, and then press Ctrl+Shift+V to paste as formatted text. To remove all character formatting, press Ctrl+Spacebar. To remove all tabs and line breaks, press Ctrl+Shift+Spacebar.