How it works / Submission

Formulating your question

Describe your question in structured, well-defined terms, enabling our experts to interpret it correctly and provide a scientifically grounded explanation.

How to write your scientific question?

Securing precise and useful answers depends fundamentally on how well the question itself is formulated. When you articulate your ideas with clarity and adequate detail, you enable the expert to understand the scope, intent, and context of your inquiry. This, in turn, allows them to provide a response that is accurate, relevant, and aligned with your needs. Investing effort in crafting a well-structured, unambiguous question therefore markedly increases the quality and specificity of the guidance you receive.

Three steps to success​

The core components of writing a successful question

01.

Deciding the question

Create a clear and simple question title stating what you want to ask the expert

02.

Defining the context​

Add a paragraph where you go into more detail about your question and give some context as to what you hope to gain from it.

03.

Taking your time!​

We strongly recommend spending time polishing the question to get the best results!

Some examples of questions

The Do’s and Dont’s of writing your question!

Incomplete

Is there anything new coming for prostate cancer?

Context: “The current treatments don’t seem great”.

Complete

What is the state-of-the-art in drugs and treatments in development for prostate cancer?

Context: “As a carer for someone living with prostate cancer, I want to understand what new treatments may become available in the coming years. Managing the disease day-to-day has made me aware of the limitations of current therapies, especially once the cancer becomes resistant to standard hormone treatment.”

Incomplete

Is climate change going to make everyone move somewhere else?

Context: “I’m hearing a lot of news about climate impacts but don’t really understand what is realistic”.

Complete

What are the projected patterns of climate-induced human migration over the next several decades, particularly in regions already experiencing recurrent flooding and heat extremes?

Context: “I work in local government planning and would like to understand how climate models, demographic forecasts, and socioeconomic risk factors interact to shape expected population movements”