During writing, we should bring new knowledge to the reader in a clear order and at a slow pace, so that they can learn it steadily.
(1) it is essential to realise the known knowledge on the reader's side and the possible questions in the reader's mind at each stage when they go through the paper, for example, when a reader is reading Section 1 of a paper which has five sections, they know A, B and don't know C, so we need to introduce C in the first paragraph of section 1. In the second paragraph of section 1, the reader already knows A B C, and they may wonder about the details of C, which let's call C.1. So we need to introduce C.1 in section paragraph of section 1.
(2) It is essential to realise the relation between the knowledge we are about to present to the readers at each stage of writing. Here, stage means, for example, we write the paper in the order of section 1, section 2, and section 3, so each section is a stage.
Phrase bank: https://www.phrasebank.manchester.ac.uk/introducing-work/
How to write a paper?
Abstract:
(1) Introduce your field
(2) Detailed background
(3) Motivation: summarise the existing work and limitations of the existing work/research gaps
(4) How do we deal with these issues/our findings
(5) Our results
(6) Impact of our work
Introduction:
(1) Introduce your field
(2) Motivation:
(2.1) Detailed background
(2.2) Details the existing work and limitations of the existing work
(2.3) Research questions
(4) Our contributions
(6) How do we structure this paper
Methodology:
(1) Details of our methods
Experimental results:
(1) Detailed results for supporting our ideas
Conclusion:
(1) Summerise what we did, our research questions and the answers to the questions
(2) Limitation of the work
(3) Future directions