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Talk:Motivation and emotion/Book/2022/Nucleus accumbens and motivation

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Latest comment: 2 years ago by U3162201 in topic Resource


Topic development feedback

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The topic development has been reviewed according to the marking criteria. Written feedback is provided below, plus there is a general feedback page. Please also check the chapter's page history to see editing changes made whilst reviewing this chapter plan. Responses to this feedback can be made by starting a new section below and/or contacting the reviewer. Topic development marks are available via UCLearn. Note that marks are based on what was available before the due date, whereas the comments below may also be about all material on the page at the time of providing this feedback.

  1. The title is correctly worded and formatted
  2. The sub-title is correctly worded; extra ? removed
  1. Created – minimal, but sufficient
  2. Brief description about self provided – consider expanding
  3. Consider linking to your eportfolio page and/or any other professional online profile or resume such as LinkedIn. This is not required, but it can be useful to interlink your professional networks.
  4. Link provided to book chapter (consider renaming the link - see Tutorial 01)
  1. None summarised with direct link(s) to evidence – looking ahead to the book chapter submission see how to earn marks for social contribution
  1. Basic, 2-level heading structure – would benefit from further development
  2. Headings are a bit vague e.g., "Theories of relevance" – consider how they can become more descriptive. Sub-headings could be helpful.
  3. Avoid having sections with only 1 sub-heading – use 0 or 2+ sub-headings
  1. Basic development of key points for some sections, with relevant citations
  2. For sections which include sub-sections include key points for an overview paragraph prior to branching into the sub-headings
  3. Overview - Consider adding:
    1. an evocative description of the problem and what will be covered
    2. focus questions
    3. an image
    4. an example or case study
  4. Strive for an integrated balance of theory and research
  5. Include in-text interwiki links for the first mention of key terms to relevant Wikipedia articles and/or to other relevant book chapters.
  6. Consider including more examples/case studies
  7. Conclusion (the most important section):
    1. Well developed
    2. Hasn't been developed
  1. A figure is presented
  2. The figure caption(s) provide(s) a clear, appropriately detailed description that is meaningfully connected with the main text
  3. Cite each figure at least once in the main text
  1. OK
  2. Go beyond Reeve; could access resources that Reeve cited
  3. For APA referencing style, check and correct:
    1. capitalisation
    2. italicisation
    3. full names of journals
    4. doi formatting
    5. page numbers should be separated by an en-dash (–) rather than a hyphen (-)
  1. See also
    1. Not developed
  2. External links
    1. Good
    2. Use bullet-points
    3. Use lower case

-- Jtneill - Talk - c 22:08, 28 September 2022 (UTC)Reply

Resource

[edit source]

Hi there. Your book chapter has some overlapping concepts with mine: Reward system, motivation, and emotion. Feel free to check it out and we can share any helpful information with each other.

I found this link to be a useful overview of the brains reward system, and this is a great journal article with section 2 providing a nice overview. U3162201 (discusscontribs) 01:53, 4 October 2022 (UTC)Reply