jesús santamaría
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Taller de Autores (Elsevier). Biblioteca de la Universidad de Zaragoza. Mayo 2012TRANSCRIPT
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Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering JournalJournal
Jesus Santamaria, EditorJesus Santamaria, Editor
(with invaluable help from (with invaluable help from Angela Welch, Publishing Editor)Angela Welch, Publishing Editor)
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Bibliometry (2007-2010)Bibliometry (2007-2010)
ISI ranking* (2010 IF):
Engineering, Environmental: 8/45
Engineering, Chemical:10/135
*Thompson ISI, Journal Citation Report, © 2011
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ScienceDirect Usage: Downloads (2008-2011)ScienceDirect Usage: Downloads (2008-2011)
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Geographical breakdown of Authors (2011)Geographical breakdown of Authors (2011)
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Final Decisions (2007-2011)Final Decisions (2007-2011)
Presented by: Title: Date:
Make decision
Submit Cover Image?
Accept
Revise
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Breakdown of rejected manuscripts from Chemical Engineering Journal in 2011 based on decision terms in EES. The difference between the total rejected articles (green) and the rejected without review (blue) indicates the number of articles that were rejected post-review. The majority of manuscripts were rejected for not meeting the journal’s standards for research/experimental quality.
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Publication speed (2007-2011)Publication speed (2007-2011)
average editorial time for Elsevier chemical engineering journals (approx 20 weeks)
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Journal HomepageJournal Homepage
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Common author mistakesCommon author mistakes
Overlookaims & scope
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Common author mistakesCommon author mistakes
Overlook guide for authors
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Guide for AuthorsGuide for Authors
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Some useful tips (often overlooked)Some useful tips (often overlooked)
Choose well your Journal Why Chemical Engineering Journal?
Choose well your type of manuscript
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Some useful tips (often overlooked)Some useful tips (often overlooked) Choose well your Editor
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Some useful tips (often overlooked)Some useful tips (often overlooked)
Spend time on your cover letter (and abstract)
Explain the main findings and motivation of the work Highlight the novelty and significance of the results
Choose well the suggested reviewers The Editor will be more likely to use some of them:
If they are obviously experts in the field If they are from a different country without
obvious link to the authors (If he/she has difficulties finding candidates)
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Some useful tips (often overlooked)Some useful tips (often overlooked)
Introduction is especially important! You are telling a story. Introduction sets the scenario Quote what is necessary for background and to give credit to previous works. Do not add superfluous references.
Editors will often choose reviewers from cited work Give a clear motivation for the work. Explain what is novel compared to what is already available in the literature
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Some useful tips (often overlooked)Some useful tips (often overlooked)
Results and discussion Together or separate? You are telling a story. Keep the narrative flowing, concise, well organized. Be rigorous. Do not make statements that are not supported by your data.
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Some useful tips (often overlooked)Some useful tips (often overlooked)
Conclusions Not the same as a summary! Give conclusions that are supported by your resuts Do not overreach. Statements such as “this method can be potentially used…” do not belong to
the conclusions (and often irritate referees)
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Once you receive your reviewsOnce you receive your reviews
Minor revision Good job. Just do what you are told and resubmit quickly.
Rejection It may be disappointing, but most of the times the reviewers
are right (and yes, they did understand the paper; and no, they are not biased against you)
If you think you have been unfairly treated you may appeal. But this should be exceptional.
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Once you receive your reviewsOnce you receive your reviews
Major revision Major is “major”. Take it very seriously. Answer all the comments received, one by one, explaining the
changes made to the manuscript in response to the remarks (or the reason why a modification is not required).
Go straight to the point. Refer to what the comment is about, and not something else.
If you feel a remark is not justified or a request is unreasonable, say so, but substantiate your response.
If in doubt, the Editor is likely to send it back to the referees. Submit a revised version where the changes have been highlighted.
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After acceptanceAfter acceptance
Be diligent with any last minute requests (e.g. Quality of figures, format adjustments)
Return the proofs quickly. But make sure you revise them thoroughly (it is your last chance to correct any mistakes before your manuscript is published)
Decide whether or not to submit a figure for the Journal cover. Decision will be based on both paper quality and figure impact.
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Journal Covers & Featured ArticlesJournal Covers & Featured Articles
Featured Articles (2012) FREE on ScienceDirect until 8 August 2012Submission details available on the CEJ homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/cej
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THANKS FOR YOUR
ATTENTION!THANKS FOR YOUR
ATTENTION!