CZ:UoE Appetite and Obesity 2011: Difference between revisions

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The article should be written clearly, concisely and authoritatively, and be understandable by other students with no specialist background in physiology or neuroscience. References cited in the main article should be carefully chosen, and should mainly be to review articles published in the scientific literature. You should aim to explain the topic, and explain the key scientific evidence that informs the present state of our understanding.
The article should be written clearly, concisely and authoritatively, and be understandable by other students with no specialist background in physiology or neuroscience. References cited in the main article should be carefully chosen, and should mainly be to review articles published in the scientific literature. You should aim to explain the topic, and explain the key scientific evidence that informs the present state of our understanding.
You will be displaying:
#your ability to synthesise scientific knowledge from a variety of sources;
#your ability to communicate fluently to a general audience;
#your ability to structure an article logically and clearly;
#''knowledge in depth'' through your pertinent use of key examples of experimental evidence;
#''breadth of knowledge'' by showing your awareness of the broader issues that arise;
#critical thinking by your selection of key, strong evidence


==Project schedule and deadlines==
==Project schedule and deadlines==

Revision as of 06:46, 13 September 2011

The course coordinates

Appetite.jpg

Instructor: Gareth Leng; Nancy Sabatier

Institution: University of Edinburgh

The Appetite and Obesity course

‘Appetite and Obesity’ is an elective course that is part of the Honours Medical Biology programme in the School of Biomedical Sciences at the University of Edinburgh, UK.

Project Description

The project is to write an encyclopedia article on a chosen topic related to obesity research, working in groups of (normally) at most four students. At the end of the course, articles will be released on Citizendium; until then, articles will be locked from editing by other users.

The article should be written clearly, concisely and authoritatively, and be understandable by other students with no specialist background in physiology or neuroscience. References cited in the main article should be carefully chosen, and should mainly be to review articles published in the scientific literature. You should aim to explain the topic, and explain the key scientific evidence that informs the present state of our understanding.

You will be displaying:

  1. your ability to synthesise scientific knowledge from a variety of sources;
  2. your ability to communicate fluently to a general audience;
  3. your ability to structure an article logically and clearly;
  4. knowledge in depth through your pertinent use of key examples of experimental evidence;
  5. breadth of knowledge by showing your awareness of the broader issues that arise;
  6. critical thinking by your selection of key, strong evidence

Project schedule and deadlines

20.09.11: Introduction to Citizendium.

11.10.11: Reference list updated. Your article should present a bibliography with an extract of the abstract for each reference illustrating why the paper has been chosen. For an example of how your reference list should look like: Gut-brain signalling/Bibliography

25.10.11: Rough draft due. Your article should have an introduction and at least a detailed plan with section subheadings. You should also have decided what picture(s) or diagram(s) you want to include.

01.11.11: Peer reviews due. Leave your comments on each course article Talk page.

15.11.11: Final draft due. Your main article should be finalised, picture and diagram included. For an example how your article could look like: Gut-brain signalling. Bibliography, Related articles and External links pages should be updated.

22.11.11: Tutorial 2: Feedback session, peer reviews due.

Week 11: Articles ready for final feedback; comments will be put on Talk pages.

Article topics

Please select the topic you want to work on by signing your name (using 4 tildes) on the article talkpage.


  • Stub Poverty and Obesity [r]: Relation between obesity and diet quality, dietary energy density, and energy costs. [e]




  • Stub Healthy Obesity [r]: The healthy obese phenotype is characterized by favorable cardiometabolic risk factors despite excess adipose tissue. [e]
  • Stub Normal Weight Obesity [r]: The combination of normal body mass index (BMI) and high body fat content is associated with a high prevalence of cardiometabolic dysregulation, metabolic syndrome, and cardiovascular risk factors. [e]


Help and 'How to'

For tips on how to write and edit an article: See CZ:How to edit an article and CZ:Article_Mechanics.

For more info on how to create and organize subpages: See CZ:Subpages.

How to insert a picture or diagram: See CZ: About Media Hosted at Citizendium. You must have copyright permission to upload any picture or diagram that is the work of others! If it's your own work, there's no problem, and if you use figures from open access journals you can use them provided you cite the source. To insert a picture: See CZ: Upload

How to make a table: See Help for Tables