A practical guide to scientific writing that applies George David Gopen’s Reader Expectation Approach to help researchers communicate with greater clarity, precision, and reader impact.
For more than three decades, George David Gopen’s Reader Expectation Approach (REA) has transformed how scientists, researchers, and professionals write—not by prescribing rules, but by revealing how readers read. REA was first introduced in his highly acclaimed 1990 American Scientist article, “The Science of Scientific Writing,” co-authored with Judith A. Swan, which has become the publication’s second most viewed online article—approaching 148,000 views since 2017. The framework rests on a deceptively simple insight: Readers of English have unconscious expectations about where in a sentence they will find certain kinds of information. When writers fulfill those expectations, readers can easily interpret the meaning the writer intended. When writers violate reader expectations, even the most accurate science becomes difficult to follow, not because the ideas are complex, but because the prose is working against the reader’s natural interpretive process.
The New Science of Scientific Writing expands and deepens Gopen’s foundational work, drawing on decades of his teaching across research universities, national laboratories, medical schools, law firms, and corporations worldwide. Where other writing guides offer style rules and structural templates, Gopen offers something more fundamental: A cognitive account of how meaning is made. REA was developed independently through observation and practice, and has been corroborated by findings in cognitive psychology, psycholinguistics, and discourse analysis. Its applications extend across every form of scientific communication—from peer-reviewed manuscripts and grant proposals to computer programming, research presentations, and science education. Scientists who learn REA do not merely write more clearly; they think more precisely, because the discipline of structuring prose for a reader’s expectations forces a writer to confront exactly what they are communicating will be interpreted.
This book arrives at a critical moment for global science communication. With millions of non-native English speakers required to publish in English-language journals, and with research funding increasingly contingent on the clarity of grant proposals, the need for a principled, reader-centered writing framework has never been greater. For scientists whose careers depend on being understood—and whose funding depends on making reviewers believe—this book offers what no style guide can: a principled account of how readers make meaning and a practical method for working with that process rather than against it.