Topic > There are many different types of articles: newspaper articles, magazine articles, editorial articles, research articles. Each of these articles is aimed at a different audience. Authors take into account who will read their article and how much knowledge they have about the topic under discussion. The style of each of these articles depends on the audience. The understandability of a journal article will be much greater than a research journal article written by a scientist. The audience has a great impact on the style, structure, choice of words, credibility and understanding of different articles. When comparing different articles, the reader must read the articles with an unbiased understanding. Newspaper and magazine articles will likely be much easier to read, but the reader must have an open mind when reading a more difficult scholar or research journal article. People reading a newspaper article are most likely trying to gain knowledge about the topic. For example, a scientist or researcher who is reading the newspaper article to learn more about the topic presented in the article. They read the article with the intent of learning something new or adding to knowledge they already know. People who read a news or magazine article are gaining little knowledge about the topic. This specific audience usually seeks to obtain short but reliable information on a certain topic. Before you can analyze an article, you must read the entire article. The full concept of the newspaper or magazine article cannot be fully interpreted until the article is understood. Once you have read both works compared, you can discuss the comparison between different interesting audiences. An article in...... middle of the paper ......>T (P = 0.7388) and therefore we additionally only considered the results for g.664493737C>T” (Hill, 3). This is scientific language for “this is data that only some people can understand.” While the newspaper simply spreads information without any pleasant language, the newspaper article brings boring information to life by adding lively words. Different types of articles target different audiences. This is evident from the article's credibility, language, word choice, structure and target audience. The more information a reader wants, the more likely they are to find it in a lab report. The more general information a reader wants will likely be found in an easier-to-read newspaper or magazine article. Just because an article is aimed at a certain audience does not mean that it will be impossible for another audience to read it, it probably will not be preferred by that audience.