“Tips & Tricks on how to publish articles in international journals” Gamze Keskin Customer Marketing Manager Turkey, Iran, Middle.

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Presentation transcript:

“Tips & Tricks on how to publish articles in international journals” Gamze Keskin Customer Marketing Manager Turkey, Iran, Middle East and Central Asia

| 2

| 3 Scholarly publishing today Scientific, technical and medical (STM) publishing 2,000 STM publishers 1.4 million peer-reviewed articles 20,000 peer-reviewed journals

| 4 The publisher’s role Registration Certification Dissemination Preservation Use How do Publishers add value to the scientific and health community?

Research in Kazakhstan SciVal Analysis, based on Scopus data

Research in Kazakhstan since 2010

Research in Nazarbayev University since 2010

Comparison of Published Articles

The most profilic Authors in terms of publishing

Biggest Universities in terms of publishing

| 11 Academic publishing The publishing cycle Solicit & manage submissions % rejected by > 13,000 editors Manage Peer Review 557,000 + reviewers Edit & prepare 365,000 articles accepted Production 12.6 million articles available Publish & Disseminate >700 million downloads by >11 million researchers in >120 countries! January 2015

Literature Review

| 13 Scopus is the largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature: scientific journals, books and conference proceedings. Delivering a comprehensive overview of the world's research output in the fields of science, technology, medicine, social sciences, and arts and humanities, Scopus features smart tools to track, analyze and visualize research.

| 14 ScienceDirect is Elsevier’s leading information solution for researchers, teachers, students, health care professionals and information professionals.

| 15 Mendeley is a free reference manager and academic social network that can help you organize your research, collaborate with others online, and discover the latest research: Automatically generate bibliographies Collaborate easily with other researchers online Easily import papers from other research software Find relevant papers based on what you're reading Access your papers from anywhere online Read papers on the go, with our new iPhone app

| 16 Planning your article Are you ready to publish? Not ready Work has no scientific interest Ready Work advances the field Incorrect conclusions Duplication of published work Outdated work Up-to-date review of a subject or field Significant enhancement of published work Original results or methods

…your published papers, are a permanent record of your research, are your passport to your community… Always keep in mind that…

However, editors, reviewers, and the research community don’t consider these reasons when assessing your work. …??? Get promoted? Get funding? PhD degree? Your personal reasons for publishing?

| 19 Choosing the right journal Best practices  Aim to reach the intended audience for your work  Choose only one journal, as simultaneous submissions are prohibited  Supervisor and colleagues can provide good suggestions  Shortlist a handful of candidate journals, and investigate them: Aims Scope Accepted types of articles Readership Current hot topics Articles in your reference list will usually lead you directly to the right journals.

| 20 How to choose Journal By Using Scopus

| 21 How to choose a Journal By Using Scopus

| 22 Bibliometric indicators Impact Factor Eigenfactor SJR SNIP H-Index

Impact Factor [the average annual number of citations per article published] For example, the 2011 impact factor for a journal would be calculated as follows:  A = the number of times articles published in 2009 and 2010 were cited in indexed journals during 2011  B = the number of "citable items" (usually articles, reviews, proceedings or notes; not editorials and letters-to-the-Editor) published in 2009 and 2010  2011 impact factor = A/B  e.g. 600 citations = articles Impact Factor

SJR- SCImago Journal Rank SCImago Journal Rank (SJR), is a measure of the scientific prestige of scholarly sources: value of weighted citations per document. A source transfers its own 'prestige', or status, to another source through the act of citing it. A citation from a source with a relatively high SJR is worth more than a citation from a source with a lower SJR.

| 25 Devised at the University of Leiden, currently the most sophisticated journal performance indicator Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP)  Freely available online via Scopus  Similar to Impact Factor, but considers 3 years  Measures contextual citation impact  Citations weighted by the likelihood of citation in the subject field of source Year 3Year 2Year 1Citing Year

Determine the level of your achievements: h index impact factor and the SJR: based on journal evaluation h-index: accounts for a researcher’s body of work without the influence of other factors Dr. Jorge E. Hirsch, University of San Diego

H-Index in Scopus

| 28 Choosing the right journal Journal Finder Tool

| 29 Guide for Authors  Find it on the journal homepage of the publisher, e.g. Elsevier.com  Keep to the Guide for Authors in your manuscript  It will save your time

| 30 Full articles Substantial, complete and comprehensive pieces of research Is my message sufficient for a full article? Letters or short communications Quick and early communications Are my results so thrilling that they should be shown as soon as possible? Review papers Summaries of recent developments on a specific top Often submitted by invitation Planning your article Types of manuscripts Your supervisor or colleagues are also good sources for advice on manuscript types.

| 31  Clear and useful message  A logical manner  Readers grasp the research Planning Your Article What makes a strong manuscript? Editors, reviewers and readers all want to receive well presented manuscripts that fit within the aims and scope of their journal.

Publishing Ethics

| 33 Why do we need originality and ethical conduct? Unethical behavior by Researchers degrades the scientific record and the reputation of science and medicine in the broader community. It can unfairly affect the reputation and academic record of individual researchers/authors. A Massive Case Of Fraud Chemical & Engineering News February 18, 2008 Journal editors are left reeling as publishers move to rid their archives of scientist's falsified research William G. Schulz A CHEMIST IN INDIA has been found guilty of plagiarizing and/or falsifying more than 70 research papers published in a wide variety of Western scientific journals between 2004 and 2007, according to documents from his university, copies of which were obtained by C&EN. Some journal editors left reeling by the incident say it is one of the most spectacular and outrageous cases of scientific fraud they have ever seen. …

| 34 The most serious issues to avoid 1.Fabrication Making up research data 2.Falsification Manipulation of existing research data 3.Plagiarism Previous work taken and passed off as one’s own These are the 3 most common forms of ethical misconduct that the research community is challenged with:

A recent example of what can happen

| 36 What does it mean to be an Author?  An “author” is generally considered to be someone who has made substantial intellectual contributions to a published study.  Being an author comes with credit but also with responsibility.  Decisions about who will be an author and the order of authors should be made before starting to write up the project.

| 37 Authorship: Do’s and don’ts First Author:  Conducts and/or supervises the data analysis and the proper presentation and interpretation of the results  Puts paper together and submits the paper to journal Co-Author(s):  Makes intellectual contributions to the data analysis and contributes to data interpretation  Reviews each paper draft  Must be able to present the results, defend the implications and discuss study limitations General principles for who is listed first: Ghost Authors:  Leaving out authors who should be included Scientific Writers and Gift Authors:  Including authors when they did not contribute significantly Abuses to be avoided:

| 38 What is plagiarism? “Plagiarism is the appropriation of another person’s ideas, processes, results, or words without giving appropriate credit, including those obtained through confidential review of others’ research proposals and manuscripts.” Federal Office of Science and Technology Policy, 1999 “Presenting the data or interpretations of others without crediting them, and thereby gaining for yourself the rewards earned by others, is theft, and it eliminates the motivation of working scientists to generate new data and interpretations.” Professor Bruce Railsback, Department of Geology, University of Georgia

| 39 What may be plagiarised? Work that can be plagiarised includes…  Words (language)  Ideas  Findings  Writings  Graphic representations  Computer programs  Diagrams  Graphs  Illustrations  Information  Lectures  Printed material  Electronic material  Any other original work Higher Education Academy, UK

| 40 Correct citation is key  To place your own work in context  To acknowledge the findings of others on which you have built your research  To maintain the credibility and accuracy of the scientific literature Crediting the work of others (including your advisor’s or your own previous work) by citation is important for at least three reasons:

| 41 How can plagiarism be detected?  Huge database of 30+ million articles, from 50,000+ journals, from 400+ publishers  Software alerts Editors to any similarities between the article and this huge database of published articles  Many Elsevier journals now check every submitted article using CrossCheck

| 42 Paraphrasing It is unacceptable:  Using exact phrases from the original source without enclosing them in quotation marks  Emulating sentence structure even when using different words  Emulating paragraph organization even when using different wording or sentence structure Paraphrasing is restating someone else's ideas while not copying their actual words verbatim. – Statement on Plagiarism Department of Biology, Davidson College.

| 43 Can you plagiarise your own work? Text re-cycling/self- plagiarism A grey area, but best to err on the side of caution: always cite/quote even your own previous work For example You publish a paper and in a later paper, copy your Introduction word- for word and perhaps a figure or two without citing the first paper Editors may conclude that you intentionally exaggerated your output

Article Retraction

Publication ethics – How it can end

| 46 Who is really responsible for Ethics? All Stakeholders Authors Institutions/Companies/Agencies/Funding Bodies Publishers/Journal Editors All Elsevier journals are members of:

How to get published Using proper scientific language

| 48 Why is language important?  Poor language quality can delay or block publication of work  Proper English should be used throughout the manuscript

| 49 Do publishers correct language? No! It is the author’s responsibility......but resources are available Visit for translation and language editing services.

| 50

The reviewing process

| 52 Peer review  Helps to determine the quality, validity, significance, and originality of research  Helps to improve the quality of papers  Publishers are outside the academic process and are not prone to prejudice or favour  Publishers facilitate the review process by investing in online review systems and providing tools to help Editors and Reviewers January 2015

| 53 What is peer review?  Peer review places the reviewer, with the author, at the heart of scientific publishing  Reviewers make the editorial process work by examining and commenting on manuscripts  Without peer review there is no control in scientific communication  Reviewers are the backbone of the whole process

| 54 Online peer review systems Online peer review systems accept manuscript submissions and facilitate online peer review Online systems can handle hundreds of thousands of submissions and reviews per year January 2015

Michael Derntl. Basics of Research Paper Writing and Publishing. So how does it work?

| 56 Reviewer’s recommendationAccept / Minor Revision / Major Revision / Reject Overall manuscript rating1  100 (poor  perfect) 1.Is the subject matter suitable for publication in JCR?Y/N 2.Is the paper acceptable in its present form?Y/N 3.Is the paper better suited for another journal?Y/N If “Yes”, which other journal? 4.Does it contain material that might well be omitted?Y/N 5.Does it give adequate references to related work?Y/N 6 Is the English satisfactory?Y/N 7.Is the presentation of the work well organized?Y/N 8.Rate the paper using the following scale (4 = Very good, 3 = Good, 2 = Marginal, 1 = Poor) a.Originality b. Scientific quality c.Significance of findings Example of a reviewer checklist for editor’s eyes only

| 57

| 58 Further reading at publishingcampus.com elsevier.com/authors elsevier.com/reviewers elsevier.com/editors Get Published – top tips on writing, reviewing and grant writing etc. Publishing Ethics brochure – top reasons to publish ethically Get Noticed – new ways to promote your article and research Understanding the Publishing Process with Elsevier – complete guide Open access – definitions and options Career Planning Guide – download in 12 languages

| 59

Elsevier Publishing Campus Information about publishing in journals Thank you