Conference | A gathering of scientists for the purpose of presenting their own work to each other. |
Workshop | Conferences often have workshops on selected topics. These draw crowds from 8-40 people, depending on the size of the conference. Typically papers submitted to workshops are published in the conference proceedings. |
Conference Proceedings | A publication of all the work presented at the conference, in the form of scientific papers. |
Journal | A professional outlet/publication for scientific work. |
Technical report | Anything can be published a technical report. Tech reports published by university departments are typically not peer-reviewed. |
Measuring scientific prestige | Scientists compete. They compete for prestige, as measured by: 1. Number of publications. 2. Number of publications they are listed as first author on. 3. Number of publications per year. 4. Number of quotations by others to their work. 5. Quality of publications that papers get published in. |
Prestige of scientific outlets | From low to high: * Tech report * Workshop paper * Conference paper * Book authored * Journal paper |
The currency of Science | The scientific paper appearing in a peer-reviewed publication is the “currency” of science. |
Date of publication, reception, acceptance | In addition to having a particular date of publication, many journals publish the date a paper was first received by the editors, before the revies and revision process started. |
Ethics - Misaccreditation (plagiarism) | It is unethical to repeat verbatim from another author without proper accreditation. It is unethical to accredit oneself for work done by others. |
Conference paper | Typically limited to 8 or 10 pages (given a specific line space, margin, and font size) |
Conference poster | Offered by some conferences. Typically one A-0 poster with complete information about the work done, yet in an “at a glance” format (for attracting people from across the room). Content has same outline as a standard scientific paper. |
Conference short paper | Sometimes offered. Sometimes alternative if an interesting paper did not get sufficiently good review to be included in its entirety. |
Conference position paper | Presents a particular argument; does not include data or results |
Journal paper | The “big brother” of conference papers – typically also longer and more thorough; higher page limit than conferences (30 or 50 as max - often not nailed down) |
Books | Books are a good option for material that (1) is solid and should be conveniently collected in one compact reference, (2) requires more space than is typically offered by journals (>50 pages), (3) is of general interest and should be distributed to the general public. |
Authorlist | Either alphabetical or in order of level of contribution. |
Alphabetical list | All authors contributed at a similar level (at least in theory). |
First author | This is the main author of the work described in the paper, that is, the person who: - is the driving force behind the work presented - is the author of the ideas presented in the paper - did most of the work and implementation. Ideally it is also the person who wrote most of the paper. |
Reality | First author is often a professor who sticks their name on every paper published by a laboratory or department or group. |
Second author | This is the “second person in command” for the work presented in the paper |
Third, fourth, fifth, etc. author | Typically a list of people who did some of the work; sometimes these are also people who had a hand in the writing of the paper, but very often they are not (mostly for practical reasons). |
Extremely long authorship lists | Becoming increasingly common in group projects |
Last author | Increasingly advisors/professors are putting themselves at the end of the authors' list on papers describing the work of their students. |
Acknowledgment vs. author? | If a person is not the authors' list (for whatever reason) but contributed something to the work, it is customary to put in a thank-you note in the Acknowledgment section. |
What is it? | Before replication of results can be undertaken by the scientific community, results must be published. When a scientist reviews another scientist's current work, it's called “peer review”. |
The peer | A scientist should be an authority in his/her field – is there anyone who has a higher authority? Yes, the scientific method, in other words the scientific community. To review their work current work scientists enlist the practical embodiment of this community – their peers. |
How current scientific work gets evaluated | Via replication of results – but first results must be published. Deciding what gets published, and how, is the role of the peer review process. |
Step 0 | Scientist does research, writes up results and submits a scientific paper to a selected outlet. |
Step 1 | Editor or conference chair receives submission, decides who should review. The selected review group, typically 3 or more scientists knowledgeable in the field in question, is called the peer review group. |
Step 2 | Paper sent to peer review group (typically 3 reviewers) with a deadline for returning their review, along with instructions. |
Step 3 | Editor gets reviews back from reviewers. |
Step 4 | Editor has to decide, based on reviews, whether to (1) accept paper as-is, with no changes (very rare!); (2) accept paper with minor revisions; (3) accept paper with major revisions; (4) reject paper. |
Step 5 | Editor sends result of reviews along with his decision for 1, 2, 3 or 4 above. |
Step 6 | Conclusion 1, great! You're done. Your paper will be published as-is. Conclusion 2: Use the reviews to improve your paper, send back to editor. Editor may request a shortlist of how you improved the paper. Your paper will be published with your changes. Conclusion 3: You will need to do major work to improve the paper (e.g. more experiments or compare more algorithms or systems). Your paper will probably be reviewed by the same 3 reviewers. The editor may ask you for a shortlist of how you addressed the reviewers' concerns. |
Several categories are used when reviewing | Overall quality of the work; Novelty/Significance of the contributions to the field in question; Clarity of the writing; Language/writing quality; Adherence to guidelines (paper length, abstract length, etc.) for the publication in question. |
Quality of Work | Use your experience with the subject, and of course with other papers. Look at the content, not where the author comes from or where he/she does the work. Be honest. Be fair. If it's bad, say so. You do not do anyone a favor by trying to “be nice” – in fact, being “nice” in this context translates to being cruel to all the readers, as well as the author (who will then not know that the quality is not good enough!). Always give reasons and examples to back up your comments. |
Novelty/Significance | Sometimes papers are written that hardly make a dent in propelling science forward; sometimes papers are breakthrough. Here it is important to think about examples of work you know very well, and try to place this work in that context, to see where it fits in impact. |
Clarity of writing | This is a prerequisite to getting a paper published. It doesn't matter how revolutionary the work is, if it's not communicated properly nobody will read it. |
Language quality | Nothing is as annoying as a good paper that falls flat on bad use of English (which, let's face it, is the language of science, at least until China overpowers us with Mandarin). Be brutal! Do not be nice to badly written papers. NB: There is always room for improvement in this regard. |
SEE ALSO: http://cadia.ru.is/wiki/public:rem4:rem4-16:submitting_to_conferences_and_journals
Rule number one | When you are requested to be a peer reviewer, accept. Firstly, it is your duty as a scientist to help out, even if it is not paid work! Secondly, it can really improve your own writing to read other people's papers! |
When you get the paper + instructions | Note the deadline, then block out 1/2 day well before the deadline to do the review. |
Follow the instructions | If you don't get any instructions, use the above that I gave you. |
First mistake | Thinking it's “really easy”. Sometimes a paper is obviously flawed – but that is not the most common case. Most of the time it requires a lot of work, careful analysis and careful reading to see whether a paper is worthy of publication. Nevertheless, the bottom line is always that the author is ultimately responsible. |
Second mistake | Thinking it's not so important. Your review could affect a fellow scientist's career! |
Competitive Research Grants | The major method for funding scientific research |
Sources | Rannís: NSN Rannis: Technology Development Fund Rannis: Research Fund EU:FP7 EU:H2020 EU:Marie Curie EU:ERC etc. |
Research Proposals | The major method for getting competitive funding for scientific research |
Sources | Rannís (Iceland), Cordis (EU), NSF (USA) |
Content | All the same information that appears in a scientific paper will typically have to appear in a research proposal. Additional material includes researchers' CV, financial plans, names of student researchers, and a description of where and how the research will be conducted. |
Application process | Find a 'call for proposals'. Carefully read the description. Note the proposal due date. Get the forms. Write the application, fill in the forms. Send everything in before the due date. Cross your fingers. |
H2020 Format | Main sections specified as Scientific Approach, Methodology, Beyond State-of-the-art, Workpackages; language: English |
Rannis format | Fairly specific; exact format grant-dependent; Language: English (but all require an Icelandic summary) |
If you get the grant | Congratulations! Now you must do the work and write progress reports, typically once per year. |
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