In the field of genome researchers, I have noticed that it is popular to refer to one's and other people's studies as "the XXX story"; "our ATPase story", for instance. Scientific reports are certainly different from stories in the common sense, which center on characters (people), their interactions, and development, and essentially comprise a beginning, middle, and end. Contrasted with this, these scientific studies are like explanations and hypotheses of mechanisms, informed by observations. I am not really sure how to reconcile these. What are your thoughts about this? If you refer to genome studies as stories, what exactly do you mean by it?
A "story" is the flow of the writing. The "narrative". Not the findings itself. Papers are rarely chronological, figures and data are arranged to make logical sense, to have some connectivity and to have an overall ommon thread. Some figures are eye candy or supportive but dispensable while visually attractive, others are of critical importance. Lots of the paper content is "selling" the "story" rather than being 100% scientifically needed. Sometimes maybe 25% of figures are critically important, but few decent journals accept a super-few-figure paper. Publication is not entirely (or at all?) about the science alone.