Flows of research manuscripts among scientific journals reveal hidden submission patterns
- PMID: 23065906
- DOI: 10.1126/science.1227833
Flows of research manuscripts among scientific journals reveal hidden submission patterns
Abstract
The study of science-making is a growing discipline that builds largely on online publication and citation databases, while prepublication processes remain hidden. Here, we report on results from a large-scale survey of the submission process, covering 923 scientific journals from the biological sciences in years 2006 to 2008. Manuscript flows among journals revealed a modular submission network, with high-impact journals preferentially attracting submissions. However, about 75% of published articles were submitted first to the journal that would publish them, and high-impact journals published proportionally more articles that had been resubmitted from another journal. Submission history affected post-publication impact: Resubmissions from other journals received significantly more citations than first-intent submissions, and resubmissions between different journal communities received significantly fewer citations.
Comment in
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Journals: increase revisions, not rejections.Science. 2012 Nov 23;338(6110):1029. doi: 10.1126/science.338.6110.1029-a. Science. 2012. PMID: 23180845 No abstract available.
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