Correlations between submission and acceptance of papers in peer review journals
Abstract
This paper provides a comparative study about seasonal influence on editorial decisions for papers submitted to two peer review journals. We distinguish a specialized one, the Journal of the Serbian Chemical Society (JSCS) and an interdisciplinary one, Entropy. Dates of electronic submission for about 600 papers to JSCS and 2500 to Entropy have been recorded over 3 recent years. Time series of either accepted or rejected papers are subsequently analyzed. We take either editors or authors view points into account, thereby considering magnitudes and probabilities. In this sample, it is found that there are distinguishable peaks and dips in the time series, demonstrating preferred months for the submission of papers. It is also found that papers are more likely accepted if they are submitted during a few specific months—these depending on the journal. The probability of having a rejected paper also appears to be seasonally biased. In view of clarifying reports with contradictory findings,... we discuss previously proposed conjectures for such effects, like holiday effects and the desk rejection by editors. We conclude that, in this sample, the type of journal, specialized or multidisciplinary, seems to be the drastic criterion for distinguishing the outcomes rates.
Keywords:
Constraints of editors / Editor work load / Paper acceptance / Paper submission / Peer review / Peer review management in scientific publishing / Rejection–submission ratios / Seasonal effectsSource:
Scientometrics, 2019, 119, 279-302Publisher:
- Springer Nature
DOI: 10.1007/s11192-019-03026-x
ISSN: 0138-9130
WoS: 000463637600014
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85062018602
Collections
Institution/Community
IHTMTY - JOUR AU - Ausloos, Marcel AU - Nedić, Olgica AU - Dekanski, Aleksandar PY - 2019 UR - https://cer.ihtm.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2641 AB - This paper provides a comparative study about seasonal influence on editorial decisions for papers submitted to two peer review journals. We distinguish a specialized one, the Journal of the Serbian Chemical Society (JSCS) and an interdisciplinary one, Entropy. Dates of electronic submission for about 600 papers to JSCS and 2500 to Entropy have been recorded over 3 recent years. Time series of either accepted or rejected papers are subsequently analyzed. We take either editors or authors view points into account, thereby considering magnitudes and probabilities. In this sample, it is found that there are distinguishable peaks and dips in the time series, demonstrating preferred months for the submission of papers. It is also found that papers are more likely accepted if they are submitted during a few specific months—these depending on the journal. The probability of having a rejected paper also appears to be seasonally biased. In view of clarifying reports with contradictory findings, we discuss previously proposed conjectures for such effects, like holiday effects and the desk rejection by editors. We conclude that, in this sample, the type of journal, specialized or multidisciplinary, seems to be the drastic criterion for distinguishing the outcomes rates. PB - Springer Nature T2 - Scientometrics T2 - Scientometrics T1 - Correlations between submission and acceptance of papers in peer review journals VL - 119 SP - 279 EP - 302 DO - 10.1007/s11192-019-03026-x ER -
@article{ author = "Ausloos, Marcel and Nedić, Olgica and Dekanski, Aleksandar", year = "2019", abstract = "This paper provides a comparative study about seasonal influence on editorial decisions for papers submitted to two peer review journals. We distinguish a specialized one, the Journal of the Serbian Chemical Society (JSCS) and an interdisciplinary one, Entropy. Dates of electronic submission for about 600 papers to JSCS and 2500 to Entropy have been recorded over 3 recent years. Time series of either accepted or rejected papers are subsequently analyzed. We take either editors or authors view points into account, thereby considering magnitudes and probabilities. In this sample, it is found that there are distinguishable peaks and dips in the time series, demonstrating preferred months for the submission of papers. It is also found that papers are more likely accepted if they are submitted during a few specific months—these depending on the journal. The probability of having a rejected paper also appears to be seasonally biased. In view of clarifying reports with contradictory findings, we discuss previously proposed conjectures for such effects, like holiday effects and the desk rejection by editors. We conclude that, in this sample, the type of journal, specialized or multidisciplinary, seems to be the drastic criterion for distinguishing the outcomes rates.", publisher = "Springer Nature", journal = "Scientometrics, Scientometrics", title = "Correlations between submission and acceptance of papers in peer review journals", volume = "119", pages = "279-302", doi = "10.1007/s11192-019-03026-x" }
Ausloos, M., Nedić, O.,& Dekanski, A.. (2019). Correlations between submission and acceptance of papers in peer review journals. in Scientometrics Springer Nature., 119, 279-302. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-019-03026-x
Ausloos M, Nedić O, Dekanski A. Correlations between submission and acceptance of papers in peer review journals. in Scientometrics. 2019;119:279-302. doi:10.1007/s11192-019-03026-x .
Ausloos, Marcel, Nedić, Olgica, Dekanski, Aleksandar, "Correlations between submission and acceptance of papers in peer review journals" in Scientometrics, 119 (2019):279-302, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11192-019-03026-x . .