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Publishing in journals Nick Sangster Faculty of Veterinary Science.

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1 Publishing in journals Nick Sangster Faculty of Veterinary Science

2 I am the Editor-in-Chief of the International Journal for Parasitology and this talk is information gained during my editorship. It is my opinion and other people may have different opinions.

3 The IJP Sponsored by the Australian Society for Parasitology Editorial office in Fac of Vet Science, Univ of Sydney 30 Specialist Editors in 13 countries Authors from over 100 countries Increasing trend for multi-nation papers All papers peer refereed Impact factor 2.88 meaning … 14 issues per year, web and printed For published papers mean time from submission to acceptance = 61 days Editor-in-Chief has complete editorial control Review articles and Thematic issues Elsevier publishes and allows special access to scientists in developing nations and special research groups.

4 Editor’s backgound Veterinary Science Clinical Science Parasitology, esp. helminthology Teach protozoology, ectoparasitology Research in biochemistry, physiology, molecular biology and therapeutics Training in statistics and epidemiology

5 Let’s compare how “true” a range of publications are: Newspapers Magazines University teaching notes Specialist Magazines Scientific Journals

6 Scientific publication Reputable journals Peer review (refereeing) process Editor who knows the field Editor is independent Careful checking Contract between author and journal Copyright of article

7 Types of scientific publications Non-refereed –General review and popular science –Industry journals –Reports (but may be endorsed by authorities) –Electronic/printed summaries of papers –Conference abstracts –Books –Text books

8 Types of scientific publications Refereed –Primary research papers (original data) –Case reports (primary) –Meta data (take existing data and reanalyse) –Review (interpretation of literature) –Clinical review –Open access (refereed, author pays, but access to readers is free on the web)

9 Sources differ in freshness Type of publicationImmediacy At the bench/fieldImmediate Conference presentationMonth Electronic journalMonths Refereed research paperSeveral Months Refereed review paperMonths-years BookYears to decades

10 The future of scientific publishing Electronic (searched by keyword) Links to supplementary data, gene, microarray, proteomic databases Reader pays (Open access – author pays) Rapid production Peer refereed In English

11 The peer review process (IJP) Takes 1-2 months (by email or web) Editors find at least 2, referees with different backgrounds Referees should be peers but independent of the authors and their institutions Refereeing is confidential Referees check the paper for: Title, historical context, content, accuracy, completeness, experimental design, suitability of techniques, analysis, validity, rigour, conclusions, writing, ethics, slant, bias. EiC has final decision and may consult further We accept just 25% of papers submitted The system is not perfect, but it is pretty good

12 After review The paper is corrected by the EiC (writing, remove ‘maybes’ and ‘possiblys’) It might be sent to an expert to check the stats Corrected by authors and rechecked Proofs sent to author for checking Final corrections Paper posted on the web Paper printed and listed in databases

13 Electronic trail for 1 paper

14 How do you compare peer reviewed journals Impact factor –Reflects how often papers from a journal are cited in subsequent papers in all journals. –IJP = 2.881 –Trends in Parasitology = 6.788 –AVJ = 0.668 Electronic downloads –20,000 electronic copies of IJP papers are downloaded each month

15 What matters about a journal Journals do vary in quality. Is it peer reviewed? It contains what you need to read. The AVJ is not so widely cited but is widely read. Impact factors reflect the size and activity of a research field. They are valid comparator within a field. You might consider a journal that assists with English. (eg. Vet Para., Parasitology)

16 Getting your work published 1. Make sure your work: –Addresses an important issue –Tests a hypothesis –Is well designed, including replication and controls –The techniques are sound –You obey rules on ethics (animal, human, gene manipulation)

17 Getting your work published 2. Before you start: –Search the literature for other work in the field –Develop a reference database (eg. ENDNOTE) Then –Analyse your results with appropriate methods –Draw conclusions that are supported by the results –Prepare tables and Figures of the results –Consider the broader issues

18 Getting your work published 3. Decide on a journal that has a suitable: –Readership (look at other papers in the journal) –Look at the impact factor and quality –Different work will have different impact Read the guidelines Contact the Editor if you are in doubt Do you need help with English? – some journals will help with your writing (Publishing in English word journals is essential)

19 How a paper is structured Title Authors and addresses Abstract Keywords Introduction Materials and Methods Results (including Figures and tables) Discussion Acknowledgements References

20 Title etc. The words in the title, address, keywords and abstract are added to databases. For Keywords use same categories as Medline Decide on authors before you write a paper The first author is the one who writes the first copy Only people who made direct contributions should be authors The Abstract is the most important part of the paper

21 Introduction Give the overall picture Cite the particular problem Say how you are approaching it, state your hypothesis (Briefly provide your conclusions)

22 Methods Keep in a logical order (Materials then methods) Give clear descriptions Detail should be enough for a skilled person with the same materials to repeat the work Include ethics approval details Give your statistical methods including replication For some journals methods go in Figure legends

23 Results Present results in a logical order, the same as the M&M Do not repeat your method descriptions Choose the data that you will present. Tables should be clear Figures - the best you can make and have large labels Colour printing generally costs money Some journals allow additional material (eg. videos) to go onto their website.

24 Discussion Start with a comment on whether your methods and analysis were appropriate to test your hypothesis? Discuss your results, preferably in the order they appear, then link them to each other Compare your data with other published work Draw your conclusions based on the whole body of knowledge. Say how to proceed from here, what is your new hypothesis Make broad comments on the impact of your work.

25 Writing style Write in direct language. ‘We then investigated…’ Use past tense Do not use vague words, especially two together (We thought that maybe…something was possible and could contribute…’) Use one idea per sentence and one topic per paragraph. Keep sentences short. Interpret your data without bias Be honest.

26 Submitting your paper Most papers have web-based submission The web is used to correspond with authors too Have your details and files (authors, addresses, Abstract, Paper, Figures and tables) ready.

27 So… Read widely, the IJP is a good journal and, I hope, and example of excellence Submit where you think best If your paper is rejected it may be published in another journal Seek collaborators in research and in writing. Employ English writers until you gain confidence Good luck


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