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RESEARCH METHODS
Getting your work published
The journal publishing process
Writing a paper
Refereeing and dealing with
referees’ reports
Ten rules for success
Deciding whether to publish
• Why publish?
– to add knowledge to your field
– to advance your career
– to see your name in print!
• Have I got something worth
publishing?
– Does the work add enough to existing
knowledge?
– Is it of interest to others in the field?
Deciding where to publish
• Conference proceedings, book chapters and
journals
• 26,000 journals – how to choose?
• Different strategies
– topic and journal coverage (check website)
– Is it peer-reviewed?
– Most appropriate readership
– Prestige
– Length of time from submission to publication
– Highest ‘impact’
• Journal impact factors
What are impact factors?
• An impact factor attempts to provide a measure of how
frequently papers published in a journal are cited in the
scientific literature.
• Calculated as the average number of times an article
published in the journal in previous 2 years has been
cited in all scientific literature in the current year.
• So, if there were an average of 1000 citations in 2007 for
100 articles published in a journal in 2005 and 2006, the
impact factor would be 10.
• Most journals have impact factors that are below 2.
• Journals with impact factors above 4 tend to be regarded
as having a high impact factor, and those above 10 are
stellar,
– e.g. Nature = 28, TREE = 12, J. Applied Ecology = 4.5, MEPS =
2.3, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management =
1.6, Environmental and Resource Economics = 0.9.
What editors look for in a
manuscript
• Quality
– good science: well planned, well executed study
– good presentation
• Significance and originality
• Consistent with scope of journal
• Demonstrated broad interest to readership
• Will it cite?
• Well written ‘story’
• Author enthusiasm
Writing the paper: key points
• Strong Introduction
– Engage the reader
– Set the scene, explain why the work is important, and
state the aim of the study
• Clear, logically organised, complete Methods
– Provide enough information to allow assessment of
results (could someone else repeat the study?)
• Results
– Be clear and concise; avoid repetition between text,
tables and figures
• Relevant Discussion
– Start strongly – were aims achieved?
– Discuss significance and implications of results
Thesis versus papers
• “Your thesis is the kitchen sink.”
• Your papers should be your jewels.
• Revise and refine
• … And then do it again
Journal publishing process
Submission Refereeing
Reject
Revision Acceptance Publication
More revision
Reject Reject
Reject
Attracting the editor/reader
• There are lots of opportunities for rejection!
• Remember: your paper is competing with many
others for the attention of editors and readers
• Title
– Brief, interesting and accurate
• Abstract
– Attract readers to your paper
– Aim for 4 sections: why, how, what and implications
– Include important keywords for searching
– Make it clear and easy to read
Before you submit
 Internal review
– Ask your peers to read it to get an alternative
perspective
– Ask someone outside your field to read it
• Read the Notice to Authors
– Follow format and submission instructions
• Write a covering letter to the editor
– Should clearly explain (but not overstate) the scientific
advance
• Submit with the consent of all authors and to
only one journal
After you submit:
the refereeing process
• Referees are crucial to quality control – they play
a vital role in the scientific process
• Selection criteria
– Knowledge of the field, expertise, reputation
– Specific recommendations
– Editor’s experience of referee’s style
– Reliability
• Referee selection: two or three referees
– Referees hand-picked for each paper
– Use cited references, keyword searches, related papers
– ISI Web of Science, web (Google Scholar), journal/publisher
databases
– Editorial Board member recommendations
Understanding reviews: what
makes a good review
• Good reviews provide the editor with the
information on which a decision can be
based
• The best are insightful, articulate and
constructive
• They tell the editor:
• What is interesting about the paper
• How the results are significant
• What contribution the paper makes to the field
• What can be done to improve the paper
• If the paper is not publishable and why
Detailed comments in the review
• A good review answers the following
questions and provides suggestions for
improvement:
– Does the introduction explain why the work was done
and the hypothesis being tested?
– Is the experimental/study design appropriate?
– Are the methods clearly described to enable full
assessment of the results?
– Is the analysis appropriate?
– Are the results presented effectively?
– Is the work discussed in the context of all relevant
literature?
– Does the discussion make clear the significance and
wider implications of the work?
– Are the conclusions supported by the data
presented?
Referees’ reports: what the author
sees (and what the editor sees)
What does the author see? What does the editor see?
Reviewer Number 1 Reviewer Number 2
Title XXX Title XXX
Authors YYY Authors YYY
Quality of the Science Quality of the Science
Mostly competent, suffering from serious flaws Experimentally and/or theoretically excellent,
reliable data, no flaws
Importance of the Science Importance of the Science
Important research on topic of broad
significance; novel aspects
Important research on topic of broad significance;
novel aspects
Quality of Science Rating 3 Quality of Science Rating 4
Importance of Science Rating 3 Importance of Science Rating 4
Overall Assessment Overall Assessment
Reject in present form, but encourage
submission of new manuscript
Accept after minor revision; no further referee
assessment
Reduction in Length Reduction in Length
Yes No
Responding to referees’ reports
• Read the editor’s letter first for instruction
• Take a deep breath: proceed to the reports
• Put them aside for a day, or two, a week…
• Re-read reports and discuss with coauthors …
• Revise paper and prepare response document
• Remember –
– Even comments that seem aggressive or ignorant can
be helpful
– Always view this as a chance to improve the paper
Good response to referees’
reports are ….
• Well organised
– Address common themes at start
– Use a ‘quote and response’ OR numbering
system of points raised by each referee
• Informative
• Provide full explanations
• Do not overlook or ignore any points
• Assertive (and polite)
Referee:
“Abstract – too long and too little about rationale;
some repetition and some jargon presented without
explanation (e.g. SL and age-0)”
Author:
“The rationale behind the study has been established
at the beginning of the abstract (L29-32). The abstract
has been shortened to 200 words and all jargon
except age-0 has been removed (we don’t agree that
this term will confuse readers as it is commonly used).
However, we have defined age-0 in the Introduction
(L62 revised MS)”
A good example
Referee:
“The presentation is not particularly clear, nor concise. I feel the paper
would benefit from being shortened, with more emphasis on the new
conclusions and differences from previous works.”
Author:
“As it is clearly apparent that you have not properly read or
understood the paper, comments on clarity are irrelevant. The paper
has been shortened.”
Referees:
Two three-page reports with many fixable, but major, criticisms.
Author:
“I have changed the MS in line with the referees’ comments.”
Not so good …
• Questions going through the editor’s mind:
– How good is the science in this paper?
– Is an important issue/area of study being addressed?
– Is the experimental design appropriate and
adequate?
– Are the analyses appropriate and competently done?
– Has the study been put in context?
– Does the paper contribute significantly to the
literature?
– Does the paper tell an interesting story?
– Will it be read and cited?
The decision:
accept, re-review, reject
The decision
• Remember –
• The editor will make a final decision based
on how well the referees’ reports have been
dealt with, so …
• Revise with care
• Respond fully to each of the referees’ comments
• Present cogent and complete arguments if you
have not followed a referee’s recommendation
• Make the editor’s job as easy as possible!
Summary
• Writing for successful publication
means
– having a well designed, original study to write
about
– selecting an appropriate outlet/journal
– knowing what you want to write
– writing clearly
– making the story interesting
– highlighting the significance of the results
– responding carefully and positively to
referees’ reports
Ten rules for getting published (1)
1. Read many papers, and learn from both
the good and the bad ones.
2. The more objective you can be about
your work, the better the work will
ultimately become.
3. Good editors and reviewers will be
objective about your work.
4. If you do not write well in the English
language, take lessons early; it will be
invaluable later.
5. Learn to live with rejection.
Ten rules for getting published (2)
6. Understand what makes good science
and what makes good science writing: be
objective about them.
7. Start writing the paper the day you have
the idea of what questions to pursue
8. Become a reviewer early in your career.
9. Decide early on where to try to publish
your paper.
10.Quality (not quantity) is everything.
Further information
• Getting your work published (Podcast)
– http://www.jobs.ac.uk/careers/whitepapers/640/Gettin
g_your_academic_work_published
• PLOS Computational Biology – ‘Ten simple rules
for getting published’
– http://compbiol.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get
-document&doi=10.1371/journal.pcbi.0010057&ct=1
• ‘How to get published in LIS journals: a practical
guide’
– http://www.elsevier.com/framework_librarians/Library
Connect/lcpamphlet2.pdf

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getting your work published 291107______.ppt

  • 1. RESEARCH METHODS Getting your work published The journal publishing process Writing a paper Refereeing and dealing with referees’ reports Ten rules for success
  • 2. Deciding whether to publish • Why publish? – to add knowledge to your field – to advance your career – to see your name in print! • Have I got something worth publishing? – Does the work add enough to existing knowledge? – Is it of interest to others in the field?
  • 3. Deciding where to publish • Conference proceedings, book chapters and journals • 26,000 journals – how to choose? • Different strategies – topic and journal coverage (check website) – Is it peer-reviewed? – Most appropriate readership – Prestige – Length of time from submission to publication – Highest ‘impact’ • Journal impact factors
  • 4. What are impact factors? • An impact factor attempts to provide a measure of how frequently papers published in a journal are cited in the scientific literature. • Calculated as the average number of times an article published in the journal in previous 2 years has been cited in all scientific literature in the current year. • So, if there were an average of 1000 citations in 2007 for 100 articles published in a journal in 2005 and 2006, the impact factor would be 10. • Most journals have impact factors that are below 2. • Journals with impact factors above 4 tend to be regarded as having a high impact factor, and those above 10 are stellar, – e.g. Nature = 28, TREE = 12, J. Applied Ecology = 4.5, MEPS = 2.3, Journal of Environmental Economics and Management = 1.6, Environmental and Resource Economics = 0.9.
  • 5. What editors look for in a manuscript • Quality – good science: well planned, well executed study – good presentation • Significance and originality • Consistent with scope of journal • Demonstrated broad interest to readership • Will it cite? • Well written ‘story’ • Author enthusiasm
  • 6. Writing the paper: key points • Strong Introduction – Engage the reader – Set the scene, explain why the work is important, and state the aim of the study • Clear, logically organised, complete Methods – Provide enough information to allow assessment of results (could someone else repeat the study?) • Results – Be clear and concise; avoid repetition between text, tables and figures • Relevant Discussion – Start strongly – were aims achieved? – Discuss significance and implications of results
  • 7. Thesis versus papers • “Your thesis is the kitchen sink.” • Your papers should be your jewels. • Revise and refine • … And then do it again
  • 8. Journal publishing process Submission Refereeing Reject Revision Acceptance Publication More revision Reject Reject Reject
  • 9. Attracting the editor/reader • There are lots of opportunities for rejection! • Remember: your paper is competing with many others for the attention of editors and readers • Title – Brief, interesting and accurate • Abstract – Attract readers to your paper – Aim for 4 sections: why, how, what and implications – Include important keywords for searching – Make it clear and easy to read
  • 10. Before you submit  Internal review – Ask your peers to read it to get an alternative perspective – Ask someone outside your field to read it • Read the Notice to Authors – Follow format and submission instructions • Write a covering letter to the editor – Should clearly explain (but not overstate) the scientific advance • Submit with the consent of all authors and to only one journal
  • 11. After you submit: the refereeing process • Referees are crucial to quality control – they play a vital role in the scientific process • Selection criteria – Knowledge of the field, expertise, reputation – Specific recommendations – Editor’s experience of referee’s style – Reliability • Referee selection: two or three referees – Referees hand-picked for each paper – Use cited references, keyword searches, related papers – ISI Web of Science, web (Google Scholar), journal/publisher databases – Editorial Board member recommendations
  • 12. Understanding reviews: what makes a good review • Good reviews provide the editor with the information on which a decision can be based • The best are insightful, articulate and constructive • They tell the editor: • What is interesting about the paper • How the results are significant • What contribution the paper makes to the field • What can be done to improve the paper • If the paper is not publishable and why
  • 13. Detailed comments in the review • A good review answers the following questions and provides suggestions for improvement: – Does the introduction explain why the work was done and the hypothesis being tested? – Is the experimental/study design appropriate? – Are the methods clearly described to enable full assessment of the results? – Is the analysis appropriate? – Are the results presented effectively? – Is the work discussed in the context of all relevant literature? – Does the discussion make clear the significance and wider implications of the work? – Are the conclusions supported by the data presented?
  • 14. Referees’ reports: what the author sees (and what the editor sees) What does the author see? What does the editor see? Reviewer Number 1 Reviewer Number 2 Title XXX Title XXX Authors YYY Authors YYY Quality of the Science Quality of the Science Mostly competent, suffering from serious flaws Experimentally and/or theoretically excellent, reliable data, no flaws Importance of the Science Importance of the Science Important research on topic of broad significance; novel aspects Important research on topic of broad significance; novel aspects Quality of Science Rating 3 Quality of Science Rating 4 Importance of Science Rating 3 Importance of Science Rating 4 Overall Assessment Overall Assessment Reject in present form, but encourage submission of new manuscript Accept after minor revision; no further referee assessment Reduction in Length Reduction in Length Yes No
  • 15. Responding to referees’ reports • Read the editor’s letter first for instruction • Take a deep breath: proceed to the reports • Put them aside for a day, or two, a week… • Re-read reports and discuss with coauthors … • Revise paper and prepare response document • Remember – – Even comments that seem aggressive or ignorant can be helpful – Always view this as a chance to improve the paper
  • 16. Good response to referees’ reports are …. • Well organised – Address common themes at start – Use a ‘quote and response’ OR numbering system of points raised by each referee • Informative • Provide full explanations • Do not overlook or ignore any points • Assertive (and polite)
  • 17. Referee: “Abstract – too long and too little about rationale; some repetition and some jargon presented without explanation (e.g. SL and age-0)” Author: “The rationale behind the study has been established at the beginning of the abstract (L29-32). The abstract has been shortened to 200 words and all jargon except age-0 has been removed (we don’t agree that this term will confuse readers as it is commonly used). However, we have defined age-0 in the Introduction (L62 revised MS)” A good example
  • 18. Referee: “The presentation is not particularly clear, nor concise. I feel the paper would benefit from being shortened, with more emphasis on the new conclusions and differences from previous works.” Author: “As it is clearly apparent that you have not properly read or understood the paper, comments on clarity are irrelevant. The paper has been shortened.” Referees: Two three-page reports with many fixable, but major, criticisms. Author: “I have changed the MS in line with the referees’ comments.” Not so good …
  • 19. • Questions going through the editor’s mind: – How good is the science in this paper? – Is an important issue/area of study being addressed? – Is the experimental design appropriate and adequate? – Are the analyses appropriate and competently done? – Has the study been put in context? – Does the paper contribute significantly to the literature? – Does the paper tell an interesting story? – Will it be read and cited? The decision: accept, re-review, reject
  • 20. The decision • Remember – • The editor will make a final decision based on how well the referees’ reports have been dealt with, so … • Revise with care • Respond fully to each of the referees’ comments • Present cogent and complete arguments if you have not followed a referee’s recommendation • Make the editor’s job as easy as possible!
  • 21. Summary • Writing for successful publication means – having a well designed, original study to write about – selecting an appropriate outlet/journal – knowing what you want to write – writing clearly – making the story interesting – highlighting the significance of the results – responding carefully and positively to referees’ reports
  • 22. Ten rules for getting published (1) 1. Read many papers, and learn from both the good and the bad ones. 2. The more objective you can be about your work, the better the work will ultimately become. 3. Good editors and reviewers will be objective about your work. 4. If you do not write well in the English language, take lessons early; it will be invaluable later. 5. Learn to live with rejection.
  • 23. Ten rules for getting published (2) 6. Understand what makes good science and what makes good science writing: be objective about them. 7. Start writing the paper the day you have the idea of what questions to pursue 8. Become a reviewer early in your career. 9. Decide early on where to try to publish your paper. 10.Quality (not quantity) is everything.
  • 24. Further information • Getting your work published (Podcast) – http://www.jobs.ac.uk/careers/whitepapers/640/Gettin g_your_academic_work_published • PLOS Computational Biology – ‘Ten simple rules for getting published’ – http://compbiol.plosjournals.org/perlserv/?request=get -document&doi=10.1371/journal.pcbi.0010057&ct=1 • ‘How to get published in LIS journals: a practical guide’ – http://www.elsevier.com/framework_librarians/Library Connect/lcpamphlet2.pdf