Update

TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution

375

Vol.18 No.8 August 2003

| Research Focus

Publication rejection among ecologists Phillip Cassey1 and Tim M. Blackburn2 1 2

Ecole Normale Supe´rieure, Laboratoire d’Ecologie, Paris, France School of Biosciences, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, UK B15 2TT

Few people enjoy rejection under any circumstances, but if you are a scientist and you receive a rejection letter from a journal, then, is it time to abandon research, or do all scientists experience such rejection to some degree? Here, we quantify the extent to which a sample of ecologists with the most successful publication careers has experienced manuscript rejection. We show that publication success and manuscript rejection are not strangers, and we hope that this will encourage ecologists (particularly research students) to continue submitting their studies for publication. It is widely recognized that anyone pursuing a career in the arts needs a thick skin to cope with the frequent rejection that they face on the path to career success. Less widely appreciated is that rejection is also a fact of life for scientists. Here, we report the results of a survey (Box 1) aimed at revealing the extent to which scientists successful in our particular field of ecology encounter rejection. As publication rate is a commonly used measure of scientific success, our metric of rejection was the frequency with which scientists had papers declined by journals. Respondents to our survey are in the very top few percent of ecologists in terms of publication success during the 1990s, yet all have experienced rejection, and almost one quarter of their papers were rejected at least once. Respondents considered it harder to publish now than a decade ago, but whether they considered rejection to have been fair depends on how frequently they encountered it: rejection, it seems, increases disaffection with the review process. Nevertheless, the survey shows that rejection does not seem to hamper career advancement, at least among successful ecologists. Who gets rejected? Everyone. Only one respondent claimed that none of the papers that they published in the 1990s was first rejected and then subsequently accepted, but this scientist does still have at least one paper that remains unpublished from that period. Respondents published a total of 2907 papers in all scientific journals in the 1990s, of which 450 (15.5%) were rejected by at least one journal, and 224 (7.71%) by at least two. On average, 22% of a respondent’s papers were rejected at least once. Of respondents, 72% have at least one paper that they have not been able to publish anywhere.

Corresponding author: Phillip Cassey ([email protected]). http://tree.trends.com

Is publishing getting harder? We asked respondents whether they thought it was easier or harder to get their own papers published in 2002 compared with 1990. Of respondents, 35% thought that it was harder, 15% thought it was easier, and 50% noted no Box 1. A survey of publication rejection The aim of the survey was to quantify failure rates among scientists with successful careers, rather than to provide an unbiased estimate of rejection rates across the entire discipline of ecology. To identify scientists to consult, we collated a list of all authors of papers in five leading North American and European ecological journals (American Naturalist, Ecology, Journal of Animal Ecology, Journal of Ecology and Oikos) for the decade 1990–1999. This showed that ecological research during this decade was dominated by a large number of scientists with few publications. We identified 155 authors (out of a total of 7863) who had at least ten publications in these five journals during the 1990s (these publications comprised 19% of the total number of papers), and sent them a simple questionnaire to quantify the rejection that they experienced (see http://www.snv. jussieu.fr/minus/eem/papers/Questionaire.pdf). Our survey itself provided us with considerable experience of rejection, as we received valid responses from only 40.4% of the scientists contacted (Table I). However, these responses were unbiased with respect to sex or biogeographical region, and also with respect to the number of publications during the 1990s in the five journals surveyed. Therefore, as far as we can ascertain, our analyses are based on a representative sample of the ecologists whom we polled.

Table I. Characteristics of the ecologists who responded to the survey No. of questionnaires

No. of responses

%

Region of residence Australasia USA and Canada UK Rest of Europe

6 80 26 39

5 32 10 14

83 40 38 36 x2 ¼ 4:97; P ¼ 0:17

Gender Male Female

142 9

59 2

Mean no. of 1990s papers in the five journals

Standard deviation

42 22 x2 ¼ 1:31; P ¼ 0:25 N

15.96 13.34 Wilcoxon two-sample test, Z ¼ 1:51; P ¼ 0:13

7.81 3.84

Productivity Respondents Non-respondents

61 90

Update

376

TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution

change. Similar (and statistically indistinguishable: x2 ¼ 1:99; df ¼ 2; P ¼ 0:57) proportions of respondents thought that publishing for ecologists in general had become either easier or harder. Nevertheless, a scientist’s view is still related to their success. Publishing was more likely to be considered harder by respondents who had a smaller proportion of papers accepted without rejection (x2 ¼ 19:12; df ¼ 1; P , 0:001), and a greater proportion of papers submitted multiple times before publication (x2 ¼ 22:83; df ¼ 1; P , 0:001). Is rejection fair? We asked our respondents to comment on why they thought their papers were rejected: poor referee/editorial process, scientific grounds, insufficient importance, or inappropriate subject matter for the journal. Respondents with a higher proportion of papers accepted without rejection were of the opinion that the rejections that they did experience were on scientific grounds, whereas respondents with a lower proportion were more likely to blame poor refereeing or editorial processes (x2 ¼ 25:07; df ¼ 1; P , 0:001). Thus, rejection is still not easily taken among even the most successfully publishing ecologists, and appears to be swallowed with sour grapes. Is rejection a handicap? Apparently not. Rejection does not seem to have deterred our respondents, or to have hampered their career advancement. Ecologists who published more papers had a lower proportion accepted without rejection (x2 ¼ 50:09; df ¼ 1; P , 0:001). Those who are currently full professors have had a lower proportion of papers accepted without rejection than have current lecturers (77% versus 87%: x2 ¼ 4:76; df ¼ 1; P ¼ 0:029), and a higher proportion of

Vol.18 No.8 August 2003

papers submitted multiple times before acceptance (x2 ¼ 4:53; df ¼ 1; P ¼ 0:033). Although our respondents are undoubtedly successful in their field, the evidence suggests that a thick skin is as useful for a scientist as it is for an artist. We hope that this will be a source of solace for young ecologists experiencing rejection for the first time, or the more experienced researcher who is still having trouble coming to terms with it. Scientific peer review is a necessary and well established part of the publication process, but it can also be daunting and disheartening (and it is not free of criticism [1– 5]). However, manuscript rejection is not indicative of scientific inadequacy. It is a fact of life for even the most successful of publishing ecologists. The moral seems to be that if at first you don’t succeed, try try again. Acknowledgements We thank J. Baker, M. Bergman, J. Ewen, A. Gonzalez, A.P. Møller, W. Hadwen and all those scientists who took the time and trouble to respond to our survey.

References 1 Cole, S. et al. (1981) Chance and consensus in peer review. Science 214, 881 – 886 2 Wennara˚s, C. and Wold, A. (1997) Nepotism and sexism in peer-review. Nature 387, 341 – 343 3 Bonnet, X. et al. (2002) Taxonomic chauvinism. Trends Ecol. Evol. 17, 1–2 4 Tregenza, T. (2002) Gender bias in the refereeing process? Trends Ecol. Evol. 17, 349 – 350 5 Gura, T. (2002) Peer review, unmasked. Nature 416, 258 – 260

0169-5347/03/$ - see front matter q 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/S0169-5347(03)00160-5

Not so quiet on the high frontier Tomas Roslin Metapopulation Research Group, Department of Ecology and Systematics, Division of Population Biology, PO Box 65, FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland

In 1997, TREE announced the creation of the International Canopy Crane Network, which would link a set of large construction cranes, erected all over the globe and providing access to a previously poorly known part of terrestrial ecosystems: the forest canopy. What did it all result in? A new booklet published by UNEP summarizes recent findings from the 11 crane sites and draws up visions for future collaboration. During the past few decades, ecologists have directed an Corresponding author: Tomas Roslin ([email protected]). http://tree.trends.com

increasing number of questions towards the forest canopy [1]. Is this where the main part of biodiversity is hiding? What species can be found there, and what roles do they play in the forest? How do the treetops interact with the atmosphere, and how will this affect global climate change? Yet, solid answers have been hard to come by. A main obstacle to answering such questions is for researchers to get up to the forest roof without risking their lives in the process. There are several ingenious solutions, including hauling a construction crane into the forest and hitching a ride with the hook, a method that is now used at 11 sites across the globe.

Publication rejection among ecologists

It is widely recognized that anyone pursuing a career in the arts needs a thick skin to cope with the frequent rejection that they face on the path to career success.

69KB Sizes 0 Downloads 275 Views

Recommend Documents

Publication rejection among ecologists
Few people enjoy rejection under any circumstances, but if you are a scientist and you receive a rejection letter from a journal, then, is it time to abandon research, or do all scientists experience such rejection to some degree? Here, we quantify t

PUBLICATION ETHICS AND PUBLICATION MALPRACTICE ...
There was a problem previewing this document. Retrying... Download. Connect more apps... Try one of the apps below to open or edit this item. PUBLICATION ETHICS AND PUBLICATION MALPRACTICE STATEMENT-ACTA GEOBALCANICA.pdf. PUBLICATION ETHICS AND PUBLI

Ecologists and environmentalism
aged to spread disinformation regarding scientific findings – particularly about global warming – by conservative think tanks. The authors argue that these powerful entities seek to interfere with the sci- entific communication that is the basis

Rejection and valuations
Mar 30, 2009 - We can define validity more snappily, if we help ourselves to a bit of ... hyper-valuation which makes the premisses true and conclusion false, ...

PUBLICATION REQUEST
Allow 5-6 weeks for design/production to be completed. All copy and materials must be submitted with the form. [email protected]. Job Status. First-Time Job.

DEFENSIVE PUBLICATION
ing a photoconductive surface and a. receiver attached to a rollenln a third embodiment, image transfer is made from a ?exible photoconductive web to a ...

Rejection and valuations - Logic Matters
Mar 30, 2009 - of themes from that paper, though done in our own way, and then considers a putative line of objection – recently advanced by Julien Murzi and ...

Rejection and valuations - Logic Matters
Mar 30, 2009 - of themes from that paper, though done in our own way, and then considers a putative line of objection – recently advanced by Julien Murzi and Ole ... Greek letters indicate whole signed sentences and ∗α be the result of ...

Publication 5201 - IRS
THE HEALTH CARE LAW. AND YOUR TAXES. WHAT THE AFFORDABLE CARE ACT (ACA) MEANS FOR YOUR FEDERAL TAX RETURN. Almost everyone will need to do something to indicate health care coverage when filing a tax return this year. For each month in the year, ever

Accelerated Publication
tides, and cell culture reagents such as Geneticin (G418) and hygromy- cin B were ..... We also thank. Dr. S. E. H. Moore for critical reading of the manuscript.

Rejection of persistent bounded disturbances - Semantic Scholar
compensation does not improve the optimal rejection of finite-energy (i.e., £ 2) disturbances. .... solutions which gives the same value at k = O. [] .... One alternative is to consider the worst case performance over a given class of disturbances.

NRDC publication
The Soundfield microphone consists of four capsules in a tetrahedral array with electronic compensation to remove the effects of capsule spacing, designed to capture accurately the sounds that exist at a point in space. It may equally well be used fo

Publication
7. Smoothness Maximization via Gradient Descents: Published on. ICASSP 2007 ..... where v = (v1,..., vM )T . Note that the objective function and all constraints ...

ISSMGE Conference & Publication Manual
May 17, 2017 - The Publisher is empowered to make such editorial changes as may be necessary to .... the future, become available through ISSMGE's online database of papers. ... Conferences provides a source of income for the ISSMGE.

Publication Tanushree.pdf
Page 1 of 1. Paper Presentation. 1. Portrayal of women in Indian Advertising at national conference of media held at Alwar University. 2. Indian Arab Spring: A true uprising or a media driven movement at All India Media Educators. Conference 2015 hel

publication -
Oct 30, 2007 - Email address: [email protected] (Netta Cohen). tific research ...... inspection of the PSD, we have assigned all compo- nents on the ...

Honeypreet Bail Rejection Order.pdf
(Crl.) with Mr. Amit Ahlawat, APP for. the State and Mr.Jamal Akhtar,. Advocate. Mr. Anil Grover, AAG with Ms. Noopur. Singhal, Advocate for respondent No. 2/.

Honeypreet Bail Rejection Order.pdf
Page 1 of 6. Bail Appln. 1983/2017 Page 1 of 6. $~66. * IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI. + BAIL APPLN. 1983/2017. HONEY PREET INSAN .

Negation, denial, and rejection
Apr 19, 2011 - distinctions, but it serves as a good enough guide to get the gist.) ∗Published as [Ripley ..... this is precisely where. Price's account locates the importance of negation.) .... Saving Truth from Paradox. Oxford University. Press .

Publication 530 - IRS.gov
Jan 12, 2018 - and videos. If your SSN has been lost or stolen or you suspect you are a victim of tax-related identity theft, visit IRS.gov/ID to learn what.

Clinical data publication
4 days ago - vaccine H5N1. AstraZeneca. Pandemic influenza vaccine (h5n1) (live attenuated nasal). EMEA/H/C/003963/0000 AstraZeneca AB. 21/07/2017.

Publication 530 - IRS.gov
Jan 12, 2018 - Effect of Refinancing on Your. Credit. Keep for Your Records. IF you get a new (reissued) MCC and the amount of your new mortgage is .

Master's Thesis: - Chalmers Publication Library
Master's Thesis in Computer Science: Algorithms, Logic and .... amount of memory to store geometry, textures, shader programs and other assets needed.