Title: How to submit
1???????
- ???
- ????????????????
- ?????????????
- 11-05-2006
- ???????,????,??????,???????????,?????????????????
???
2Scope Bias
- Sources of this presentation
- Bias of personal research paradigm potential
target journals
3Sources of this presentation
- Personal experiences
- Experiences from fellow researchers
- Interactions with current past editors
- Sternberg, R. (2000, eds.)
Guide to Publishing in Psychology Journals
4Bias of research paradigm potential journals
- More psychology oriented
(v.s. education oriented) - Empirical quantitative research
(v.s. review qualitative paper) - Experimental in nature
- Mainly in domains of cognition
5Outline
- Conduct research
- Plan writing
- Analyze data
- Choose journals
- Write papers
- Submit papers
- Respond to reviews
- Rewrite papers
- Resubmit
6Conduct research
- Topics issues are important
- Major general issue
- Timely issue
- Local issue
- Topics that contain spice
- Your own perspective/theory
7Conduct research
- Fit into the research community is a good
strategy to keep up topics - Attend conference to promote yourself
- Exchange ideas through e-mails
- Search for collaborations
8Plan writing
- Can not plan write everything up and leave
blank space for the results to be filled
9Analyze data
- Analyze data before we write
- Know what data tell provides an outline of the
overall story of the article - Many experiences writers write the results
section first
10Analyze data
- Need to explore the data in general
- Think of data as a jewel
- You need to cut polish it !
11Choose journals
- Choose 2-3 relevant journals
- Some suggest from the most important
influential ones, others dont - Choose journals that make sense for your data,
not the journal you planned earlier - Write with those journals in mind
12Types of Educational Psychology Journals I have
in Mind
- ??????
- ??????
- ?????????
- ??????
- ????
13Types of Educational Psychology Journals I have
in Mind
- British Journal of Educational Psychology
- Cognition Instruction
- Discourse Processes
- Journal of Educational Psychology
- Journal of the Learning Sciences
- Reading Research Quarterly
- Scientific Study of Reading
14Types of Educational Psychology Journals I have
in Mind
- Memory Cognition
- Journal of Memory and Language
- Journal of Experimental Psychology Learning,
Memory, Cognition - Behavior Research Methods
15Types of Educational Psychology Journals I have
in Mind
- Applied Psychological Measurement
- British Journal of Mathematical and Statistical
Psychology - Educational and Psychological Measurement
- Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics
- Journal of Educational Measurement
- Psychometrika
16Types of Educational Psychology Journals I have
in Mind
- Many developmental, special education, individual
difference journals
17Some citation index for 2005
Abbreviated Journal Title 2005 Impact Immediacy 2005 Cited
Abbreviated Journal Title Total Cites Factor Index Articles Half-life
BEHAV RES METHODS 1632 1.124 0.115 61 9.7
BRIT J EDUC PPSYCHOL 805 0.81 0.054 37 gt10.0
COGNITION INSTRUCT 583 1.16 0.214 14 gt10.0
DISCOURSE PROCESS 608 0.643 0.6 25 8.9
J EDUC PSYCHOL 4133 2.235 0.089 56 gt10.0
J EXP PSYCHOL LEARN 6680 2.812 0.229 105 gt10.0
J LEARN SCI 401 2.792 0.231 13 gt10.0
J MEM LANG 3633 2.815 0.246 69 8.9
MEM COGNITION 4311 1.566 0.165 109 10
READ RES QUART 996 0.859 0.136 22 gt10.0
SCI STUD READ 339 1.529 1.647 17 5
18Write papers
- Good writing make a big difference
- APA journals accept 15-20 submitted manuscripts
- Among those, the differences are in writing
- Probably more than 60 depends on writing
- No one formula for good writing
19Write papers
- Good writing is good teaching
- Write for PSY 101
- Or write one level less specialized than your
targeted audience - Do not think that your audience are all experts
although we write for professional journals
20Write papers
- Write with referees in mind
- Think the way your referees will think
21Write papers
- Proofread
- Ask colleagues to read the articles the way a
referee would - State clearly the problem and organize the
article around it - Cite likely referees
22Write papers
- Make clear up front what the new contribution
- Make clear how your work builds on that of others
- Anticipate likely objections to your
interpretations of the data
23Write papers
- Analyze the data first
- Be accurate, clear readable
- Informative, scientific in spirit
- Tell a story on what you have learn from your
study - Do not tell not your personal history of still
born thought
24Write papers
- Write simply and directly
- a short story with a single, linear narrative,
not a novel - omit needles words
- If your article is interesting and with style
even better but not crucial - Good organization
- in a shape of an hour glass
-
25Write papers
- Organization of a paper
- The introduction begins broadly
- It becomes more specific
- Until you are ready to introduce your own study
in conceptual terms - The method and results sections are the most
specific - The discussion section begins with the
implications of your study - It becomes broader
26Write papers
- Titles Abstract
- To capture attention
- For databases
- For Summaries
- First impression
- Should be self-explanatory
27Write papers
- Titles should include
- keywords
- theoretical issue addressed
- IV DV
- 12-15 words in length
28Write papers
- Abstract should include
- The problem
- Major hypotheses
- A summary of method
- A synopsis of the main results
- Conclusions implications
- Be 100-150 words
- Be coherent
29Write a title
- Limitations on Information-Processing capacity
A Review of the Literature - versus
- The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two
Some limit on our capacity for Processing
Information
30Write an abstract
- Abstract
- The complexity of text comprehension
demands a computational approach to describe the
cognitive processes involved. In this paper we
present the computational implementation of the
Landscape Model of reading. This model captures
both on-line comprehension processes during
reading and the off-line memory representation
after reading is completed, incorporating both
memory-based and coherence-based mechanisms of
comprehension. The overall architecture and
specific parameters of the program are described
and a running example is provided. Several
studies comparing computational and behavioral
data indicate that the implemented model is able
to account for cycle-by-cycle comprehension
processes and memory for a variety of text types
and reading situations.
31Follow APA publication manual for other parts of
writings
- Introduction
- Methods
- Results
- Discussions
32Submit papers
- Do not submit until everything is ready
- Spelling
- Grammar
- Graphs
- References
- And everything
33Submit papers
- Never, never think to revise papers after been
accepted - Cover letter
34An example of cover letter
- Date
- Dr. XXXXXX
- Department of XXXXX
- University of XXXXX
- Official department address
- Dear XXXX,
- Enclosed please find five (5) copies of a
manuscript entitled The effects of questioning
on comprehension of narrative texts as a function
of grade and questioning timing, which we would
like to submit to the Journal of Educational
Psychology. The research presented in this
manuscript has not been published elsewhere. All
data were collected in accordance with the
ethical standards of the APA and those of the
Institutional Review Board. The manuscript
consists of 35 pages, including five tables, one
figure, and two appendices. It you would need
further information, please contact me at the
address below. - Sincerely,
- My name
- Name of my university
- Name of my university
- My official address here
- My e-mail
35Rewrite a paper
- Do not expect reviewers to discern your
brilliance through the smog of polluted writing - Not just change words or reorder sentences
- Sometimes discard a whole section
- Or start from a different perspective
36Rewrite a paper
- Rewriting is difficult
- Hard to edit ones own writing because of being
unable to notice ambiguities and gaps
37Rewrite a paper
- Strategies to cope with rewriting
- Lay the manuscript aside for a while and come
back later - Read it out loud
- Role-play a novice reader
- Have I been told what this concept means?
- Has the logic of this step been demonstrated?
- Would I know what the independent variable is at
this point?
38Rewrite a paper
- Give a polished copy to a colleague for a
critical reading - Do not argue with them if they find something
unclear - If you can have more than one critical reader,
you are simulating reviewing processes
39Respond to reviews
- rejection is common
- For every paper published, there are likely to
have been multiple submissions - only 2 straight acceptance manuscript
- If receive a rejection letter
- Write a letter to the editor that says exactly
what you want to say, then delete it
40Respond to reviews
- Sense the light behind the cloud
- Look at reviews to see if they contain anything
of value - Reviewers come in all varieties
- They would say different things about the same
manuscript - Editors base their decisions on the reviews but
they are not bound by them
41Respond to reviews
- Respect reviewers
- Be humble to the point
- Sometimes need more experiments or reanalysis
- Rewrite, revise, revise and revise!
42Respond Resubmit
- If you earn an invitation of resubmission,
consider a mild celebration - Editors do not invite an author to revise and
resubmit if the manuscripts chance of
publications are less than 50
43Respond Resubmit
- Be polite in tone
- Be specific and considerate to the editor
- Be comprehensive
- Cover letter again
44Respond Resubmit (1 of 6)
- Dr. XXXXXX
- Editor-in-Chief, Behavior Research Methods
-
- Dear XXXXX,
- Attached please find the revision of
Manuscript ID BR-Org-04-063 entitled "The
computational implementation of the Landscape
Model Modeling inferential processes and memory
representations of text comprehension". We very
much appreciate the constructive comments by the
reviewers and by you. In the revision, we have
taken into account all the comments and made
changes accordingly. We believe that, as a
result, the paper is much stronger.
-
-
45Respond Resubmit (2 of 6)
- Reviewer 1
- Reviewer 1 pointed out that we needed to
clarify whether the paper is about the conceptual
Landscape Model, the computational model, or both
(the reviewer correctly inferred it is the
computational implementation). We agree that this
was indeed not clear and have edited the paper
throughout to be clear about the distinction and
about the fact that that the focus is indeed on
the computational implementation. - We appreciate the reviewers comment
about the lack of journal publications on the
computational model (and did not think the
comment was nasty!). Here, the distinction
between the Landscape Model and the computational
implementation that the Reviewer mentioned is
important. The conceptual Landscape Model has
been very influential (as noted by Reviewer 2).
The lack of journal publications relates to the
use of the computational program, hence the
purpose of this paper. Our aim is to present the
computational implementation of the Landscape
model. Given the wide acceptance of the
conceptual Landscape Model, we believe that a
computational implementation of this theory will
provide much value to the scientific community. -
46Respond Resubmit (3 of 6)
- We did want to respond directly to this
concern, however, and have followed the
reviewers suggestion to help readers see the
potential of the LS implementation. Specifically,
in the Conclusion section (p. 20-22) we have (a)
provided more detail on the empirical support for
the model and (b) included a brief discussion of
the benefits of the implementation of the LS
model as well as g a few concrete examples. - In response to this Reviewers other
comments we have made several minor modifications
in the manuscript. We have included information
about how users can obtain the software. We also
clarified that in Figure 1 the symbols m and so
on have predefined meaning (How to use the
Landscape Model section (p.9-12). In addition, we
clarified how the symbols in the program are
defined and how the input units in Unit Area
map onto the arrays in Activation Type Area. - Reviewer 1 asked us to clarify whether
the LS program indeed makes predictions. We
revised the Conclusion section (p. 20-22) to make
it clear that in the provided examples the
implementation of the LS model is used to make
predictions that are then compared with empirical
data.
47Respond Resubmit (4 of 6)
- Reviewer 2
-
- In response to Reviewer 2s comments we
have made it explicit in the Architecture section
(p.6-8) that cohort activation follows a Delta
rule. We chose to use the Delta rule because it
is a supervised learning rule, unlike Hebbian
learning which is an instance of the family of
unsupervised learning rules, and therefore allows
for asymmetrical connections between text
elements in the final associative network. -
- We agree with Reviewer 2s point
concerning the alignment between constructionist
theory and coherence-based retrieval and have
made sure that none of our points contradict this
(Architecture section, p. 6-8). - Upon rereading the description of text
units in the How to use the Landscape Model
section (p. 9-12), we agreed with the Reviewers
assessment that this was confusing. We revised
this section to make it clear how text units are
parsed and included in the model by giving
concrete examples. We also clarified how the
connection strengths are computed in the
Activation Type Area. Furthermore, we defined
the delta rule and sigmoid function in the Model
Architecture section (p. 14-15), as suggested by
the reviewer. -
48Respond Resubmit (5 of 6)
- In trying to balance the comments between
Reviewers 1 and 2, we decided to keep the
examples of the empirical support for the
computational model at the beginning of the
paper, rather at the end. The primary purpose of
this paper is to present the model and its basic
functions and operations. For this reason, we
have included data from sample simulations at the
end. However, if the reviewers and editor feel
that moving this to the front of the paper is
preferable then we would be happy to do so. - Finally, we appreciate the comment to make
sure that the quality of the figures is good
enough for printing and have double-checked this.
49Respond Resubmit (6 of 6)
- Reviewer 3
-
- The paper was revised according to the
Reviewers suggestions concerning long sentences
and repetitiveness (e.g., p.4-5, p.9). Also, we
followed this Reviewers suggestions to explain
cohort activation by giving conceptual
descriptions and citing well-known research using
the same leaning mechanism Architecture section
(p.6-7) and in the Model Architecture section
(p.13-14). - Finally, in response to the Reviewers
comment on the distinction between levels of
representation and between cohort activation and
coherence-based retrieval, we have clarified
these relations in the last paragraph of the
Architecture section (p. 8)
50Cover letter for Resubmission (1 of 4)
-
- Name of editor, Editor
- Address affiliated institute of editor
- Date
-
- Dear XXX,
- Enclosed please find four copies of the
revised manuscript 99-021, with the slightly
changed title Inferential questioning Effects
on comprehension of narrative texts as a function
of grade and timing. We would like to thank you
again for your patience in our returning this
manuscript to you. We also would like to thank
the reviewers for their comments. We found them
to be very helpful and constructive. We have
addressed every comment and we believe that the
result is a much more focused and much stronger
paper. In doing so, we also have shortened the
manuscript by several pages. -
51Cover letter for Resubmission (2 of 4)
- We have thoroughly revised the
Introduction section. We provide an extensive
review of the most recent literature. As a
result, we have placed the current study in the
context of recent research on questioning and on
reading comprehension. Moreover, we have
followed Dr. Graessers advice to make a stronger
statement about the possible role of attentional
resource allocation/management. We strongly
agree with his suggestion that such
allocation/management is central to the observed
effects of questioning. We have extensively
modified the Discussion section in the same ways.
In doing so, we also have provided an
explanation of the finding that the younger
children experienced interference from the
questions. In formulating our explanation, we
refer to other studies with similar findings and
to the attentional resources, as suggested by the
anonymous reviewer. Finally, we have heeded the
cautions by both reviewers about conclusions that
are too strong.
52Cover letter for Resubmission (3 of 4)
- In response to comments by each of the
reviewers, we have clarified several other
aspects of the current study. These include the
use of recall and other measures to assess
comprehension, the selection of questions and
their locations in the text, the reasons for
choosing the during- and after-reading
questioning times, and the fact that causal
relations are just one -albeit an important- type
of semantic connections in narrative texts.
Likewise, we have clarified various aspects of
the design of materials, as requested by the
reviewers. - The Results section is thoroughly
rewritten. The reviewers had provided several
very useful suggestions for improving the flow of
this section. Following these suggestions we have
eliminated redundancies, rearranged the analyses
to focus directly on the most central issues,
and, in the process, eliminated the tables. The
result, we feel, is a much crisper and more
readable Results section. We also have
double-checked the standard deviations. The
reported values are correct and in line with
those reported by other researchers. Moreover,
the largest standard deviations were obtained for
the youngest children, where the largest number
of significant differences were observed. Thus,
if anything, the standard deviations would have
reduced the likelihood that we would have
observed significant effects. -
53Cover letter for Resubmission (4 of 4)
-
- We have reduced the footnotes and have
included the questions used in this study in the
text (in the Appendix) rather than as a separate
table. - In summary, the changes recommended by
the reviewers have resulted in a shorter, tighter
paper, that is much more strongly grounded in
current theory. Again, we would like to thank
the reviewers for their thoughtful and
constructive comments. - I am looking forward to hearing from
you. - Best regards for the new year.
- Sincerely,
-
- My name
- My e-mail contact phone number
-
54Handling rejections with grace if youve
experienced it
- Actually rejections happen very often!
55Publishing papers need tacit knowledge of how
to which might be quite different from that of
conducting good research
56A published paper is not necessarily a good paper
but an unpublished paper is generally not a
credible paper
- Publish, Publish, Publish!