: Can I use the passive voice to avoid referring to myself in a scientific report? I'm writing a report for a piece of University coursework, but I understand that I should avoid referring to
I'm writing a report for a piece of University coursework, but I understand that I should avoid referring to myself as "me" or "I". I've seen an example piece in which the author occasionally referred to themselves as "the author", but this seems a little clunky depending how I use it.
Would it be better to use the passive voice? For example, in the beginning of my report should I write
The author will consider several arguments...
or
Several arguments will be considered...
Which looks better? Are there better alternatives to "the author"?
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This depends on the style guide. In APA, you should prefer "I":
Here are two common cases in which you should prefer the active voice rather than the passive voice:
Use the active voice to describe your own actions. It is completely permissible, and in fact encouraged, to use the first person to describe your own actions in APA Style. Use I to refer to yourself if you worked alone and we if you worked as part of a group (see PM 3.09 for more).
Active voice: I conducted an experiment about body image.
Passive voice: An experiment about body image was conducted.
Principles of Writing: Passive and Active Voice
This has several advantages. It tends to lead to shorter, clearer sentences. Most people prefer reading active voice sentences. It also avoids a potential source of confusion: "the author" could refer to the author of a paper that was cited, while "I" is unambiguous.
Passive voice is common for scientific papers so it is recommended to use it. Using "we consider" is also popular, but passive voice is better IMO.
Also it is better if you use present tense instead of future when possible. "Several arguments are considered..." instead of "Several arguments will be considered...". It is a bad tone to refer to things not yet presented.
You can also use the royal "we", even if there was only one person doing it.
"We conditioned the matrices using ..."
"After these adjustments, we found a significant increase in ..."
We use this extensively. We think it improves readability as well. It has never been mentioned as an issue in any (of many) peer reviews.
You've pretty much got the 3 choices. Use first person with active voice, use passive voice, or use 3rd person stating "the author" (or "the writer," "the researcher," etc).
I will say it depends on the field. I too was taught that only the latter two were acceptable (and mostly the passive voice one). But I've seen plenty of academic papers that use first person (mostly I've seen it in plural, but not entirely). As long as it's done sparingly and very professionally, it can work. But it really depends on what your peers have done.
In your case, it depends on what your professor thinks is okay. You can always ask!
Passive tone is the preferred tone in scientific writing. As much as is possible, avoid references to people doing things and instead refer to the actions that are performed (who does it is unimportant to scientific writing).
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