Title: Writing for publication An editorial perspective June2003
1Writing for publicationAn editorial perspective
June2003
- John Hoey
- Powerpoint available at
- cmaj.ca/misc/slides
2Editor, expert in anything?
3www.cmaj.ca
4What is this about?
- What do editors look for?
- How an editor reads a paper.
- Why do papers get rejected?
- How to pick a journal
- Writers block
- Responding to an editor
5The pleasures of editingLetters from readers
Dear Editor What are you smoking? Is our Journal
the garbage can of last resort? You conspire to
cover up government damage to health care from
abnegation of its responsibility Why do you do
that? Money? I enclose items from August CMAJ
which disturb me. After all the CMA blather
about excellence, how come you are so
sub-standard?
6The pleasures of editingLetters from readers
Hi, im doing this project in school about The E
Coli as an example of how water damages
thingsus. Can u send me info about E coli and
what it is and how it came into the waters and
stuff??? But not pages of stuff Just the
important points. Thanks, Vanessa Send to
fishy_000_at_.
7START
SUCCESS
8Choosing the appropriate journal
- Content of manuscript
- Journal prestige and quality
- Speed of editorial process
- Probability of acceptance
- Visibility of Journal
- Is it free full text?
- Publicity?
9Content
- Appropriateness of content
- NEJM publishes narrative reviews but few
meta-analyses - The Lancet and BMJ publish more international
material - The JAMA editor is a pediatrician
- CMAJ editor is an internist and public health
physician - CMAJ would love to publish more clinical research
10Journal prestige and quality
- CMAJ articles regularly picked up by the Canadian
press - Informal hierarchy (for a typical clinical
research study) - a1. General medical journals
- a2. Specialty journals
- a3. Epidemiologic journals
11Journal prestige and quality
- Impact factor ranking
- The impact factor is an index of journal quality
and (loosely defined) represents the number of
citations each journal article receives in the
first 1-2 years.
12Impact factors 2001Top 5 general med. journals
- NEJM 29.0
- JAMA 17.6
- Lancet 13.3
- BMJ 6.6
- CMAJ 2.8
13Impact factors for family medicine journals, 2000
- Arch F. Med 2.3
- J. Fam Practice 2.1
- Fam Practice 1.0
- Can Famil. Physician 0.9
- Am. Famil. Physcian 0.9
- Brit. J. Gen Practice 0.8
- 2001
14Impact factors for obstetrics gynecology
journals 2000
- Human Reprod 3.0
- Am J Obstet Gynecol 2.5
- Br J Obstet Gynecol 2.3
- Obstet Gynecol 2.1
15Speed of the editorial process
- Time to intercept 2-3 weeks
- Time to peer reviewed editorial response 8 weeks
- Time between acceptance and publication 6 issues
(i.e., 3 months) - Early online publication at the Lancet
16Probability of acceptance
- gt90 percent rejection rate at NEJM
- Approximately 85 percent at CMAJ
17Visibility
- Reporting in news media/government?
- Free, full text
18PubMed Central
pubmedcentral.nih.gov
19Biomedcentral.com
20Bottom line
- Determine likely journal
- Create a short list of 3-4 journals (better and
worse) - If you receive a rejection, resubmit within 2
weeks
21RejectionThe 5 steps of recovery
- 1. Read the reviews
- 2. If fair, redo manuscript and resubmit.
- 3. If unfair - redo manuscript to make it
clearer. - 4. Consider appeal.
- 5. Resubmit or appeal.
22Getting started 110 steps to writing a
paperpreparartion
- Instructions for authors
- Read the journal
- Read similar papers
23Readings
24Orwells 6 rules
- Never use a metaphor, simile or figure of speech
which you are used to seeing in print. - Never use a long word when a short one will do.
- If possible to cut out a word, always cut it out.
25Orwells 6 rules
Passive A retrospective cohort study was done.
Active We did a retrospective cohort study.
- Never use the passive where you can use the
active. - Never use a FOREIGN PHRASE, a scientific word or
a JARGON word if you can think of an everyday
English equivalent. - Break any of these rules sooner than say anything
outright barbarous.
We examined the records of all patients seen in
our clinic in 1998 and telephoned then in January
2002 to determine their compliance with our
previously offered advice on weight loss.
26Getting started 2
- Key results
- Construct the key table
- Discernible point
- Why did you do this study?
- What were your specific objectives?
27Getting started 3
Objectives
Discernible point
Key Result Table
Methods
Interpretation
What does your study add to literature ?
28Getting started 4Introduction
- Outline the discernible point
- Cite key literature - not all the literature
- End with your specific objective(s)
- Keep it short - 2 pages
29Getting started 5Methods
- Describe sample/subjects
- Exclusions
- Definitions
- Study instruments
- Questionnaires - validity, reliability, content
- Analysis
- Ethical approval of study
30Getting started 6Jargon
- We did a nested retrospective cohort study.
- Using the medical records of all patients with
bacterial conjunctivitis who visited the clinic
in 1999, we tracked their use of topical
antibacterial ointments over the over the next 2
years.
31Getting started 7Results
- Characteristics of Sample
- Main crude results
- Multivariate analyses
- Secondary analyses
- Tables/Figures self-explanatory
- Title
- Footnotes
- Column/row headings
32Getting started 8Interpretation
- Summarize the main result
- Describe limitations
- Describe what the results add to literature
- Implications (be modest and brief)
- for practice?
- For research?
- Conclusion
33Getting started 9And ...
- References
- Cover page
- Title, Authors, Contacts, Word count, sources of
funding, conflicts of interest - Other information
- Author contributions
- Financial disclosure
34Getting started 10Cover letter
- Pleasure to send this paper.
- Why is it important? Discernible point.
- Anything special?
- Length
- Tables
- Questionnaire
35Cover LetterExamples
- Please find enclosed 3 copies of a manuscript
entitled The manuscript conforms to the style
detailed in the uniform requirements. All authors
have read and agree with the papers content. The
paper has not been previously published in whole
or in part nor is it under consideration by
another journal.
36Cover LetterBe positive
- I have enclosed my manuscript, Alzheimers
Disease Update for consideration for
publication. - In the light of the announcement made late last
year by the University of Toronto, my manuscript
may be obsolete.
37Responding to an editor
- Be polite.
- Write well and carefully.
- Address all reviewer and editor questions.
- Explain responses to every item.
- Make changes and explain what they are.
- Be prompt.
38Responding to an editor
- Comment
- On page x you should mention the important study
by Groucho Marx. - Response
- We are aware of the Marx paper. However, this
paper addresses the rare situation of confused
identity with mirrors. Our paper does not discuss
this condition. Thus we have not included a
reference to the paper.
39So in summary...
- Remember the reader and the editor.
- Write clearly using plain language.
- Pick 4 journals and respond quickly.
- Be polite and thorough.
- Remember that the Journal needs your paper just
as much as you need the Journal.
40Thank you
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42GOOGLE
Gilles Paradis www.cmaj.ca 6 citations 0.1 seconds
43Eugene Garfield
44Freely available The full source code of CiteSeer
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46Hoey, J., St-Aubin, R., Hu, A., Boutilier, C.
SPUDD Stochastic planning using decision
diagrams. In Proceedings of the Fifteenth
Conference on Uncertainty in Articial
Intelligence. (1999) 279--288Home/Search
Document Details and Download Summary Related
Articles Check
4711 documents found. Order citations weighted by
year. Representation and Recognition of Complex
Human Motion - Jesse Hoey James (2000) (Correct)
(6 citations) and Recognition of Complex Human
Motion Jesse Hoey James J. Little Department of
Computer Science2 Jesse Hoey and James J.
Little. Representation andwww.cs.ubc.ca/nest/lci/
papers/2000/little-cvpr00.pdf
48One of the citations
Previous authors have described how to use
symbolic reachability analysis to solve
ondeterministic planning problems. But
nondeterministic planning does not consider the
probability of state transitions or their cost.
Hoey et al. 7 have described a symbolic dynamic
programming algorithm for Markov decision
processes. It does consider the probability of
state transitions and their cost, and uses ADDs
to aggregate states with the same value the same
approach to state abstraction we used for A .
However, their SPUDD planner
49(No Transcript)
50Citations vs. probability article is online
Lawrence S. Online or invisible. Nature
2001411521 http//external.nj.nec.com/lawrence/
papers/online-nature01/
51Authorship
- Important - accountability and credit
- Usually a group effort
- Vancouver group guidelines
- Save (and publish your own material)
52(No Transcript)