La Plata: 301-934-7676
Leonardtown: 240-725-5360
Prince Frederick: 443-550-6060
An empirical research article reports research based on actual observation or experiment. The research may use quantitative or qualitative research methods.
Quantitative Research uses numerical data to try to establish causal relationships between variables (“Based on 100 interactions, A causes B.”)
Qualitative Research objectively and critically analyzes behaviors, beliefs, feelings, or other values (“People suffering from Illness A tend to be more cautious.”)
What type of source is your article published in?
Popular Magazines (Time, People, Psychology Today, WebMD, etc.): usually NOT empirical
Journals (Academic, Scholarly, Peer-reviewed, Professional): sometimes YES
An abstract is a brief summary or overview of the article. Abstracts for empirical research articles:
May describe a study, observation, or analysis
May mention participants or subjects, data, surveys, questionnaires, assessments, interviews, or other measurements
Empirical articles (and scholarly articles in general) are usually at least 5 pages (often up to 20 pages long).
Empirical articles may include headings or subheadings for sections such as:
Introduction
Literature Review
Methodology or Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
References
Empirical research articles often include some sort of (quantitative and/or qualitative) data. This may be included in the article as charts, tables, graphs, or appendices.
---
Note: If you are not sure if an article is an empirical research article, share the article citation and abstract with your professor. This can help you to become better at recognizing the differences between empirical research and other types of scholarly articles, and also ensures your article is acceptable for the assignment.