© 2015 ASIS & T. In this article we use a stated choice experiment to study researcher preferences in the information sciences and to investigate the relative importance of different journal characteristics in convincing potential authors to submit to a particular journal. The analysis distinguishes high quality from standard quality articles and focuses on the question whether communicating acceptance rates rather than rejection rates leads to other submission decisions. Our results show that a positive framing effect might be present when authors decide on submitting a high quality article. No evidence of a framing effect is found when authors consider a standard quality article. From a journal marketing perspective, this is important inf...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
Contains fulltext : 155016.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: To ...
Academic journals provide a key quality-control mechanism in science. Yet, information asymmetries a...
In this article, we report on a discrete choice experiment to determine the willingness-to-wait (WTW...
180 students from the University of Canterbury were randomly assigned to reading and evaluating 4 co...
In analysing whether there is an editorial bias in favour of positive studies, researchers have made...
In this paper, we address the problem faced by researchers attempting to decide the appropriate jour...
Seriously—PLEASE! Journals want us to revise and resubmit papers that are rejected because it benefi...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
I compare two possible extreme hypotheses regarding submission of papers to journals: the Q hypothes...
When researchers complete a manuscript, they need to choose a journal to which they will submit the ...
Building upon previously published articles from 18 different disciplines, this research delves into...
Academic journals provide a key quality-control mechanism in science. Yet, information asymmetries a...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
Contains fulltext : 155016.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: To ...
Academic journals provide a key quality-control mechanism in science. Yet, information asymmetries a...
In this article, we report on a discrete choice experiment to determine the willingness-to-wait (WTW...
180 students from the University of Canterbury were randomly assigned to reading and evaluating 4 co...
In analysing whether there is an editorial bias in favour of positive studies, researchers have made...
In this paper, we address the problem faced by researchers attempting to decide the appropriate jour...
Seriously—PLEASE! Journals want us to revise and resubmit papers that are rejected because it benefi...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
I compare two possible extreme hypotheses regarding submission of papers to journals: the Q hypothes...
When researchers complete a manuscript, they need to choose a journal to which they will submit the ...
Building upon previously published articles from 18 different disciplines, this research delves into...
Academic journals provide a key quality-control mechanism in science. Yet, information asymmetries a...
In this article we examine what motivations influence academic authors in selecting a journal in whi...
Contains fulltext : 155016.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access)OBJECTIVES: To ...
Academic journals provide a key quality-control mechanism in science. Yet, information asymmetries a...