How to publish - Springer Nature

BibliotecaSBUFRGS 2,886 views 49 slides Oct 29, 2018
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About This Presentation

Workshop de autores realizado em parceria com os editores da Springer Nature, Biblioteca Central e Biblioteca do Biociências da UFRGS, dia 25 de outubro de 2018. Ministrante Christina Eckey.


Slide Content

“How to Publish Your Research”
Workshop
Dr. Christina Eckey, Springer
October 2018
Cataloging homegarden biodiversity in Uganda

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1
“How to Publish” Workshop: Boas Vindas!
1 About Springer Nature
2 Copyright, Authors’ Rights, Open Access
3 Journal Publishing
4 Publication Ethics / Research Integrity
5 Book Publishing

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1.0
About Springer Nature
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3
Springer Nature
Springer Nature (SN) was formed in 2015 through the merger of Nature Publishing
Group, Palgrave Macmillan, Macmillan Education and Springer Science+Business Media.

•13,000 staff in over 50 countries
•Publishes around 300,000 articles across almost 3,000 journals
•Largest publisher of academic books (about 13,000 books per year)
•Largest open access research publisher (including Scientific Reports)
•Content platforms were visited almost 2 million times per day in 2017

4
Springer‘s Author Academy on www.springer.com

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2.0
Copyright, Authors’ Rights and Open Access
Section breaks
Section breaks are available in each
palette colour and in a neutral blue
grey.

In most cases one section break
colour should be used consistently
throughout the deck – ideally
following the colour of the Advancing
Discovery bookmark on the cover
page.

6
Copyright
In most countries of the world, authors enjoy protection of their intellectual property that
appears in books and journal articles.

Contents of copyright
•Moral Rights cover an author’s authority to decide whether his work should be
published and whether the published work should bear the author’s name.

•Exploitation Rights entitle an author to decide whether copies of the work should be
reproduced (Right of Reproduction) and whether these copies should be offered to the
public (Right of Distribution).

Authors are free to publish their work by themselves or transfer the exploitation rights to a
publisher.

7
What is Open Access?

Open access makes your work freely available online for
everyone, immediately upon publication.

•All open access publications are subject to high-quality peer review, editorial and
production processes.
•Author retains the copyright to the work.
•All open access publications are published under a Creative Commons license,
usually the liberal Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY) license.
It permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided
-appropriate credit is given to the original author(s) and the source
-a link to the Creative Commons license is included
-it is indicated if any changes were made
•A fee (book/article processing charge) needs to be paid by the author or its funder.

8
Predatory Journals
WIKIPEDIA: Predatory open-access publishing is an exploitative open-access academic
publishing business model that involves charging publication fees to authors without
providing the editorial and publishing services associated with legitimate journals
(open access or not).
https://predatoryjournals.com/journals/

9
Predatory Publisher?!

10
Predatory Pulishers Use False Impact Factors

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Different OA Options in Journal Publishing

Gold Open Access


Hybrid Open Access
Green Open Access
Authors’ Rights
•Self-archiving
•Deposit into PubMed
Central (funder
compliance)
•Open Access option
in majority of SN
titles
•“Open Choice” for
authors after
acceptance

•“Pure” OA Journals
•Article Processing
Charge (APC)

12
Self-Archiving Policy at SN: Pre-Print Servers
Author(s) are permitted to self-archive a pre-print version of their Article.


A pre-print is the author’s version of the Article before peer-review has taken place.

Prior to acceptance for publication, Author(s) retain the right to make a Pre-Print of their
Article available on any of the following:

•their own personal, self- maintained website

•a legally compliant, non-commercial pre-print server such as but not limited to arXiv
and bioRxiv

13
Self-Archiving Policy at SN: Author‘s Accepted Manuscript
Author(s) are permitted to self-archive an author’s accepted manuscript version of their
Article.

An Author’s Accepted Manuscript (AAM) is the version accepted for publication in a
journal following peer review but prior to copyediting and typesetting that can be made
available under the following conditions:

•Author(s) retain the right to make an AAM of their Article available on their own
personal, self- maintained website immediately on acceptance.

•Author(s) retain the right to make an AAM of their Article available for public release
on any of the following 12 months after first publication ("Embargo Period"):
-their employer’s internal website
-their institutional and/or funder repositories.

14
SHERPA/RoMEO Website
http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/

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3.0
Journal Publishing
Section breaks
Section breaks are available in each
palette colour and in a neutral blue
grey.

In most cases one section break
colour should be used consistently
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following the colour of the Advancing
Discovery bookmark on the cover
page.

16
Journal Publishing

What is your motivation?

•Present new and original results or methods, exchange ideas, communicate with
peers.
•Advance (not repeat) scientific knowledge, enhance scientific progress.
•Grant writing, research funding.
•Peer recognition and career advancement.
•Personal prestige, satisfaction and enjoyment.

17
Deciding which journal


•Check out the websites of research groups and researchers working in your
topic area and see where they have been publishing their research results.

•Talk to your colleagues/peers about their experiences with journals you are
considering.

•Follow the references in your own paper. Where were the original papers
published and read?

•Check publisher sites, you can often find useful information there in the ‘for
authors’ section.

•Read the journal product page and READ THE JOURNAL.

•Is an impact factor important to you? Or are you more concerned about
visibility?

•Use the “Journal Selector” tool

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Journal Suggester

https://journalsuggester.springer.com/

19
Eugene Garfield (1925-2017)
Founder of the Institute for Scientific Information (ISI) and
Inventor of Web of Science.

First mentioned the idea of an impact factor in Science in 1955.

Garfield E. “Citation indexes to science: a new dimension in
documentation through association of ideas”
Science 122(3159):108-11 (1955).


The Impact Factor
Source: http://www.garfield.library.upenn.edu/

20
The Impact Factor – The Formula


Impact Factor
There is much debate over Impact Factors in the scientific community, particularly with
regard to the fairness of the system. However, there is no doubt that the Impact Factor is
seen as a benchmark of quality of the journal in many academic communities.


Formula:
Number of citations in 2017 to articles published in 2015 + 2016
2017 IF = -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total citable articles published in 2015 + 2016

Example:
100 + 70
2017 IF = --------------- = 1.700
50 + 50

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Manuscript Submission: Mistakes to Avoid
•Not clear which publishing model to choose (Open Access?)

•Submission out of the scope of the journal

•Instructions for Authors not followed

•Sloppy abstract / manuscript

•“Key message” not clear

•Weak accompanying cover letter

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Instructions for Authors

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Submission: Include your ORCID iD
ORCID is an international, interdisciplinary, open, and not-for-profit organization created
in 2010.

An ORCID identifier (ORCID iD) is a unique, personal, persistent identifier for
researchers that distinguishes them from every other researcher and enables them to
link their publications to their unique record, ensuring their work is recognized.

Getting an ORCID iD is free and easy to do: https://orcid.org/register

24
Who’s Who in Journal Publishing?


•Editor-in-Chief
•Associate Editor
•Managing Editor/Editorial Office Assistant
•Reviews Editor
•Editorial Board members
•Reviewer

•Corresponding Author
•Publisher‘s side: Publishing Editor, Production Editor

25
Types of Peer Review


•Single-blind Peer Review: Reviewer knows author(s), not vice versa

•Double-blind Peer Review: Reviewer does not know the author(s)

•Transparent Peer Review: Peer review process files (anonymous reviews and author
response) are published next to the article

•Open Peer Review: Identity of peer reviewers is disclosed, pre-publication history of
the article may be posted online

26
Peer Review

Benefits of acting as a reviewer

•Opportunity to observe what constitutes both good and bad papers
• Enhances own competence and improves chances of publication success
• Makes familiar with cutting edge research before it is even in press
• New ideas and inspiration
• Raises your profile within the academic community
• Network with academic colleagues internationally
• Enhances your continuing professional development
• Become associated with a leading academic journal
• Active involvement adds to your cv
http://blogs.bournemouth.ac.uk/research/2011/06/22/the-benefits-of-reviewing-grant-proposals-
for-a-research-council-an-insiders-perspective/

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Peer Review: Publons

Easily import, verify, and store a record of every peer review you perform
for any journal in the world.

Aim: Turn peer review into a measurable research output, so that academics can use their
review record as evidence of their standing and influence in their field.
https://publons.com/home/
Offers peer review training course.

28
Manuscript Transfers (Cascading)
How does a manuscript transfer benefit the scientific
community?

•Helps authors to find a suitable journal
•No reformatting necessary
•Faster publication process if review reports are
included in the transfer
•Reduces the workload for the reviewer community

29
After Acceptance, Before Publication: Proofing
The purpose of the proof is to check for typesetting or conversion
errors.

The typesetter will insert queries in the proofs wherever clarifications
are required from the author.

Authors will receive a metadata sheet showing the header information
that will later appear online. This should also be checked, especially
the author(s) names and affiliations.

Substantial changes in content and changes of title and authorship are
not allowed without the approval of the responsible editor.

30
After Publication: Share Your Article
•Share content easily and legally
•Links to view-only, full-text subscription research articles
•Can be posted anywhere - including on social media platforms, author websites and in
institutional repositories
Example: https://rdcu.be/9Q9p

31
Correcting the Scientific Literature
Corrections/Errata. Standard procedure for handling a mistake in a publication. This is an
additional publication, with its own DOI, that is interlinked with the original, which itself
remains unchanged.

This procedure is in particular for the correction of mistakes in the scientific or factual
content, or the metadata.
Authorized update. In exceptional cases involving e.g. minor and/or typographical
errors in OnlineFirst publications, an authorized update may be possible.
In this procedure, the erroneous article or chapter is replaced by a corrected version
without any notification to readers.

Retraction of a publication. In exceptional cases, e.g., of copyright violation,
plagiarism, or legal disputes, a publication may be retracted.
https://retractionwatch.com
Retraction Watch blog

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4.0
Publication Ethics
Research Integrity
Section breaks
Section breaks are available in each
palette colour and in a neutral blue
grey.

In most cases one section break
colour should be used consistently
throughout the deck – ideally
following the colour of the Advancing
Discovery bookmark on the cover
page.

33
Publishing Ethics – Before Submission
•The work described has not been published before

•It is not under consideration anywhere else

•Publication has been approved by co-authors and responsible authorities

•Necessary permissions obtained from copyright owners

34
Obtaining Permission to Re-use Published Content

35
Research Data Policies - Open Data
•Materials described in a manuscript, including all relevant raw data, should be freely
available to any researcher wishing to use them for non-commercial purposes.

•Data should be submitted to a discipline-specific, community-recognised repository
where possible, or to generalist repositories (e.g. figshare) if no suitable community
resource is available.

•Some journals ask for data availability statements.

36
Compliance with Ethical Standards

To ensure objectivity and transparency in research and to ensure that accepted
principles of ethical and professional conduct have been followed, authors should
include information on

•sources of funding

•potential conflicts of interest (financial or non-financial)

•informed consent if the research involved human participants

•statement on welfare of animals if the research involved animals

37
Publication Ethics: Different Types of Misconduct

Data fabrication and falsification: Data fabrication means the researcher made up data. Data
falsification means the researcher did the experiment, but then changed some of the data.

Plagiarism: Taking the ideas and work of others without giving them credit is unfair and
dishonest. Copying even one sentence from someone else’s manuscript, or even one of your
own that has previously been published, without proper citation is considered.

Multiple submissions: It is unethical to submit the same manuscript to more than one journal
at the same time. Doing this wastes the time of editors and peer reviewers.

Redundant publications (or ‘salami’ publications): This means publishing many very similar
manuscripts based on the same experiment.

Improper author contribution or attribution: All listed authors must have made a significant
scientific contribution to the research in the manuscript and approved all its claims.

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Authorship Criteria
The ICMJE recommends the following 4 criteria:

•Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the acquisition,
analysis, or interpretation of data for the work; AND

•Drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content; AND

•Final approval of the version to be published; AND

•Agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions
related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately
investigated and resolved.
http://www.icmje.org/recommendations/browse/roles-and-responsibilities/defining-the-role-of-authors-
and-contributors.html

39
How to Make a Citation in an Article

Give the facts or ideas mentioned by the author and then attribute these facts or ideas to
him/her.
… The sun always shines on TV (Campos 2010).
According to Miller (2017), the cell cycle can be described as …

Quote the author exactly and be sure to put the quoted phrase between quotation marks.

40
Plagiarism Detection Tools

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Warning - Do not copy and paste!
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2011/03/01/AR2011030101323.html

42
The Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)


http://publicationethics.org/

43
COPE Resources


http://publicationethics.org/

44 44
5.0
Book Publishing
Section breaks
Section breaks are available in each
palette colour and in a neutral blue
grey.

In most cases one section break
colour should be used consistently
throughout the deck – ideally
following the colour of the Advancing
Discovery bookmark on the cover
page.

45
Publishing Books with Springer
•Global topics
•Regional topics of global interest
•International collaborations
•Textbooks, Contributed Volumes, Major Reference
Works, SpringerBriefs, Proceedings, …
•Book proposals are peer reviewed
•Published in different formats (print and online)

46
Any questions?

47 47
The story behind the image
Cataloging homegarden
biodiversity in Uganda
Creating food security in countries such as
Uganda often relies on the roll out of a national
plan, and yet these don’t necessarily take
account of the farmers’ voices or traditional food
systems that have adapted over many
generations to fit local cultural and ecological
conditions. This research followed a human
ecology approach to catalogue homegarden
biodiversity and related ethnobotany knowledge
in order to propose a more sustainable food
security model.

Obrigada!
Christina Eckey, Life Sciences
[email protected]
Luciana Christante de Mello
Life Sciences, Brazil
[email protected]

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Springer Nature Library Link Brazil
SN Library Link BR

48
Open Access for Books
Reference: The OA effect - how does open access affect the usage of scholarly books (White Paper), Springer Nature, 2017