injuryupdate
05-01-2004, 08:40 PM
December JSMS was disappointing wrt interest factor, but I thought September was actually not bad and a big improvement. JSMS is a big contrast to AJSM where the papers are always interesting but sometimes scientifically terrible.
Just heard that .... (paper) which won prizes at SMA was rejected outright from AJSM. Probably not revolutionary enough for them despite being very solid and hard to criticise at all from the methodology viewpoint. Shows what a lottery the process is and what a "buyer's market" the journal publication process is (i.e. the journals can always get enough papers so they can afford the false negative error of rejecting a worthy paper).
By all means, please register for the injury update forum and make comments, because I think email exchanges like ours, as long as they remain anoymous with respect to personal criticism, are very interesting for public viewing. The journal publication industry does need a bit of a shake up. However it is always going to suffer from the fact that profitability doesn't equate to acceptance on scientific merit. I see far more internet publications in the future where publishing cost = far less and the good papers can sink or swim based on number of hits to the website.
Just heard that .... (paper) which won prizes at SMA was rejected outright from AJSM. Probably not revolutionary enough for them despite being very solid and hard to criticise at all from the methodology viewpoint. Shows what a lottery the process is and what a "buyer's market" the journal publication process is (i.e. the journals can always get enough papers so they can afford the false negative error of rejecting a worthy paper).
By all means, please register for the injury update forum and make comments, because I think email exchanges like ours, as long as they remain anoymous with respect to personal criticism, are very interesting for public viewing. The journal publication industry does need a bit of a shake up. However it is always going to suffer from the fact that profitability doesn't equate to acceptance on scientific merit. I see far more internet publications in the future where publishing cost = far less and the good papers can sink or swim based on number of hits to the website.