- Publishing is part of the process
- The general flow goes something like the following
30 January 2023
Example
P 7 L 21-23: Here the authors say they used data from 3 sites, but the first paragraph of the methods section mentions 4 sites were sampled. Why was one of the sites excluded?
We thank the reviewer for catching what was an error on our part. We did, in fact, use the data from all 4 sites and have made the appropriate edit to the sentence.
Example
P 13 L 11-12: It’s simply absurd to think that an increase in water temperature of 1.9 degrees C could elicit the change in growth you observed.
Our findings are very much in line with previous studies showing the effect of temperatuure on growth. For example, the reference we cited (Smith 2020) presents rather compelling evidence that a difference of only 1.5 degrees C increased growth by 20%.
Example
P 9 L 4-6: It would seem that in addition to the growth study, the authors could also add an analysis of the diet data to examine possible relationships between shifts in composition accompanied the observed changes in growth.
We agree with the reviewer that such an analysis could reveal some interesting patterns, but it is simply out of scope for this project given the resources and time required to undertake it.
if not rejected, paper is revised along the lines suggested by editor & reviewers
lead author writes letter summarizing and detailing changes made
should reference & address every comment point-by-point; be as polite & flattering as possible
Professor X and new graduate student Y are developing a research project for Y. Y is interested in a project that Z, a graduate student colleague/professor in the department, is conducting. Y discusses project concepts with X, and decides to conduct a project descended from and closely related to Z’s project. The questions, methods, and analysis were developed solely by X and Y, and all physical work was conducted by Y. Y and Z met a few times to discuss methods for analysis, but Z contributed nothing to manuscript preparation.
Should Z be included as an author?
Who should be first author?
Survey responses
25% of respondents thought that Z deserved authorship
84% of respondents indicated that Y should be first author, whereas 16% of respondents indicated that X deserved to be the first author
Principal Investigator X developed the intellectual ideas, wrote a proposal, and received monies for a new, well-funded project. X hires technician T to handle project logistics, and to ensure that the project follows X’s original vision; T collects much of the empirical data, and supervises undergraduate students who assist during data collection. Research assistant A is responsible for manipulation, analysis, and interpretation of data collected by T et al.
Survey responses
78% of respondents thought all three characters should be included as authors
78% chose X as first author
14% chose A as first author
82% included T as an author
Respondents listed 10 unique combinations for authorship order
Professor X initiates writing of a synthesis paper with graduate student Y on their favorite topic. After the two meet several times to outline a paper, Y takes the task of writing the first draft. X and Y pass the manuscript back and forth several times before X does the final revision and submits the manuscript for publication.
Survey responses
46% of respondents thought that X should be the first author
46% thought that Y should be the first author
8% could not decide
A project involves data collected as part of a routine monitoring program funded by public taxes and the data can be downloaded freely. Although the data did not involve any specific project, you discover some seemingly important patterns that apply to a particular interest of yours. Is there an obligation to determine who initiated the specific study or can the data be simply used?
A faculty member is coming up for promotion and insists on being first author on a paper from a graduate student’s dissertation. Does the student object and come into conflict with the supervisor, who will be relied upon for letters of reference and other forms of professional support, or say nothing and not get appropriate credit for the work?
Undergrad C does a really nice job working on a data set that no one else was working on but that had been collected by some agency. Faculty member D supervised C and was closely involved in the project. C graduates, gets a job, moves away, and the project stalls. D moves it along, making many rounds of edits, revisions, fixing graphs, getting references, etc. When it is ready to submit to a journal, does D include C as second author, as first, or neither? Does the decision to list C and the order or authorship depend on how involved C was in the final stages of preparation, or not?
Title
Abstract
Body
as with a proposal, it should include elements of
Broadest perspective
Progressively
more
specific
“We captured a total of 137 fish, 68 of which were females and 49 of which were juveniles too young to be sexed (Table 1).”
versus
“We found a strong positive effect of temperature on fish growth (Figure 1).”
narrative should stand on its own with support from figures & tables
begin with most notable (exciting) result
avoid explicit statements about where to find results
“We found a significant positive relationship between nitrogen concentration and algal growth (Figure 2).”
versus
“Figure 2 shows the relationship between nitrogen concentration and algal growth.”
Specific findings
Interpretation
In light of other studies
Implications & next steps