This editorial provides an overview of the editorial process at one peer-reviewed publication. The editorialstarts by explaining the role of the players (the editors, the review team, the area editor). The editorial then covers each step in the review process, from how reviewers are selected to how authors should respond to different outcomes. The editorial ends by discussing citation metrics, appointments to the editorial board and copyrights. This article argues that (1) requesting more reviews yields a faster, more informative review process; (2) publishing more articles can raise citations per article; (3) for many submissions, some reviewers should evaluate procedures, whereas others should evaluate contribution; (4) reviewers should n...
No formal investigations have been conducted into the efficacy or potential influence of reviewer re...
Since becoming actively involved in the work of the Centre for Education in the Built Environment, I...
In this article we respond to the key points made by Macdonald and Kam (2007) in relation to journal...
By now most of us are familiar with the mantra ‘‘publish or perish’’. Publishing in peer-reviewed jo...
Editors and publishers of scholarly journals rarely agree on what makes for a good publication; they...
Peer review is a critical part of the publishing process at JM3, as it is for most science journals....
ABSTRACT—The present article focuses on ways to make the peer-review and editorial process more effi...
More than 50% of academic libraries' budgets are spent on peer review journal subscriptions [1]. One...
Not only has the number of scholarly journals worldwide increased substantially in recent years but ...
Peer review is one way scholarly journals can maintain rigor and increase the quality of published m...
Following our previous editorials on the publication process, in this edition, we aim to present som...
The peer review process can be challenging. In this essay, the journal’s editor and editorial assist...
Scholarly journals provide a record of the research, issues, and concerns of a field. Authors have t...
Publishing in peer-reviewed journals is essential to scientific research. ‘‘A scientific experiment,...
Peer review is an important element of scientific communication but deserves quantitative examinatio...
No formal investigations have been conducted into the efficacy or potential influence of reviewer re...
Since becoming actively involved in the work of the Centre for Education in the Built Environment, I...
In this article we respond to the key points made by Macdonald and Kam (2007) in relation to journal...
By now most of us are familiar with the mantra ‘‘publish or perish’’. Publishing in peer-reviewed jo...
Editors and publishers of scholarly journals rarely agree on what makes for a good publication; they...
Peer review is a critical part of the publishing process at JM3, as it is for most science journals....
ABSTRACT—The present article focuses on ways to make the peer-review and editorial process more effi...
More than 50% of academic libraries' budgets are spent on peer review journal subscriptions [1]. One...
Not only has the number of scholarly journals worldwide increased substantially in recent years but ...
Peer review is one way scholarly journals can maintain rigor and increase the quality of published m...
Following our previous editorials on the publication process, in this edition, we aim to present som...
The peer review process can be challenging. In this essay, the journal’s editor and editorial assist...
Scholarly journals provide a record of the research, issues, and concerns of a field. Authors have t...
Publishing in peer-reviewed journals is essential to scientific research. ‘‘A scientific experiment,...
Peer review is an important element of scientific communication but deserves quantitative examinatio...
No formal investigations have been conducted into the efficacy or potential influence of reviewer re...
Since becoming actively involved in the work of the Centre for Education in the Built Environment, I...
In this article we respond to the key points made by Macdonald and Kam (2007) in relation to journal...