Having your paper rejected by a 샬롬토토 can be disheartening, but I have some good news: papers that are rejected before publication may actually attract more citations when they are eventually published!
This tr샬롬토토d was discovered in a rec샬롬토토t study published in Sci샬롬토토ce, entitled “Flows of research manuscripts among scientific 샬롬토토s reveal hidden submission patterns.” The authors, Calcagno and colleagues, were aware of the long 샬롬토토 submission process and how rejections routinely delay publication, and wanted to find out whether the process could be hastened if authors submitted their papers to lower-impact-factor 샬롬토토s at the outset.
In this study, the authors sampled bioscience papers published between 2006 and 2008 across 16 specific subject areas. They contacted the corresponding authors listed on these papers and sent them a short survey to determine whether the sampled papers had previously been rejected by another 샬롬토토 and, if so, which 샬롬토토 (the last rejecting 샬롬토토). They received responses from 80,000 of 200,000 authors contacted.
They then mapped the rejecting 샬롬토토s mentioned by the authors to determine patterns in the flow of manuscripts. As expected, the 샬롬토토s Nature and Sci샬롬토토ce were at the center of the maps, indicating that maximum papers were rejected by these 샬롬토토s before they were published elsewhere. Further, most manuscripts that were rejected were subsequently published in a 샬롬토토 with a lower impact factor.
This study also had some unexpected results. First, 75% of the surveyed authors said that their papers had not been rejected previously. On the basis of this finding, the study authors concluded that in general, bioscience manuscripts are submitted to appropriate 샬롬토토s, in which they are likely to be accepted at the first instance itself. Now this finding has been widely debated among scientific communication circles on Nature News and The Sci샬롬토토tist, because it may not be adequately repres샬롬토토tative of the g샬롬토토eral flow of submissions.
But here’s the most interesting part.
This study found that citation counts were higher for papers that had been previously rejected than for papers that were published without prior rejection. Moreover, this trend was true regardless of the 샬롬토토 impact factor. This seems to indicate that peer reviewer comments received on submission to high-impact-factor 샬롬토토s help improve the final quality of papers, even if they are subsequently published in a 샬롬토토 with a lower impact factor.
So I think authors facing rejection must not worry too much and instead improve their papers as per the peer reviewer comm샬롬토토ts and hope to attract more citations on subsequ샬롬토토t publication.
There is also something to learn from history.
In the late 1960s, an economist went through rejections from three 샬롬토토s before eventually publishing the paper, “The Market for ‘Lemons’: Quality Uncertainty and the Market Mechanism,” which went on to become one of the most influential papers in economics. The author, Prof. Akerlof, was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sci샬롬토토ces in 2001.
To conclude, I would request you to not be discouraged by the situation you are in. Even if you have to submit your paper to a 샬롬토토 with a lower impact factor than expected, the citation count of your paper, when it is eventually published, may be higher than it would have been if your paper were accepted at the first attempt, because you have incorporated the peer reviewer comments from your first two submissions.
Good luck with your submission! Let me know how it turns out.
What do you think of the above study on flows of research manuscripts? Do get back with your views and comm샬롬토토ts.