Those who are new to the field of academic publishing might have the impression that submitting research 라이브바카라 to journals and getting them published are orderly processes. The reality is, of course, different. In his book The Double Helix 20Skip to main content, Dr. Watson, the Nobel laureate who discovered the structure of DNA, gives a 라이브바카라-the-scenes account of events leading up to the publication of the famous Watson-Crick paper in Nature. Publishing research 라이브바카라, despite the aura of objectivity that surrounds the process, is very much a human endeavour. The choice of the journal, the reviewers’ personalities, prejudices, and preoccupations, and related work in progress elsewhere—all of these and more affect the chances of publication, and it is important to be aware of this.
Another interesting account, although of failure to get 라이브바카라 in Nature, is that given by Luca Turin [2]. 라이브바카라 book tells a story of a paper that was submitted, rejected, re-submitted, reviewed by a fresh set of reviewers, and rejected once again.
A particularly good source of such 라이브바카라 is the website ‘21Skip to main content’—a site well worth visiting. The site began as an archive of life 라이브바카라 told by some of the great scientists of our time. As the number of 라이브바카라 grew, it became obvious that some were on related topics, which gradually led to a web of connected 라이브바카라. Recently, when I typed ‘publishing papers’ in the search box of the website, the site returned as many as 467 라이브바카라 featuring renowned scientists from such diverse fields as biology, physics, computer science, and astronomy. The short video clips are recorded by the scientists themselves, and a transcript is provided for each clip.
[1] Watson J D. 1968. The Double Helix: a personal account of the discovery of the structure of DNA. 라이브바카라 York: Atheneum. 226 pp.
[2] Burr C. 2002. The Emperor of Scent: a true story of perfume and obsession. 라이브바카라 York: Random House. 332 pp.