Actually the reputation of journals is
usually derived from its impact factor
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impact_factor
which is all about citation rates rather
than acceptance/rejection rates.
Acceptance rates are sometimes used for newer
journals as citation rates aren’t available. But it doesn’t follow
that a new journal must reject reasonable papers in order to achieve some
desired acceptance rate. A new journal (properly advertised) will probably
attract a lot of papers that have been rejected elsewhere so you probably end
up with plenty of worthy-of-rejection material.
There is no way to get an immediate “great
reputation” for a new journal. But I think a clear focus on topic, a
hard-working international editorial team, and a firm but fair reviewing process
and reviewers will yield good-quality papers and will attract more good quality
papers in response
Kerry
From:
wiki-research-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:wiki-research-l-bounces@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Aaron Halfaker
Sent: Friday, 9 November 2012 1:51
AM
To: Research into Wikimedia
content and communities
Subject: Re: [Wiki-research-l]
Wiki Research Journal? - Why?
"Highly rated" is an interesting property. One of the
ways that a publication venue becomes highly rated is by being highly
restrictive. In fact, the primary measurement of the quality of a
publication venue is the acceptance rate of that conference.
WikiSym is not considered highly rated because a high proportion of the
submitted papers are accepted. Would a wiki journal be more restrictive
in order to gain a "highly rated" status?
I think it's interesting to ask why WikiSym needs improvement and why
attendance has been falling. If a WikiSym is a wiki conference that is
struggling to maintain participation, how might a wiki journal surmount such
trouble? Assuming that the answer to my question above is "yes, the
wiki-journal would be more restrictive", how would such a journal gather
more submissions than an established conference like WikiSym -- enough to both
produce regular issues and maintain a high rejection rate?
-Aaron
On Thu, Nov 8, 2012 at 9:12 AM, Joe Corneli <holtzermann17@gmail.com>
wrote:
On Thu, Nov 8, 2012 at
3:02 PM, Aaron Halfaker <aaron.halfaker@gmail.com> wrote:
> To state it plainly, why do we need yet another publication venue specific
to wiki software?
I think people want a "highly rated" publication venue.
Also,
«The reason why WikiSym is changing is for the same reason. People
are
not going to the conference! I think the attendance has been below
100 for some time now. That's not a sustainable number for the amount
of work that goes into organizing a conference.»
But what you're saying suggests that maybe work should be done to
improve existing venues rather than creating a new one.
_______________________________________________
Wiki-research-l mailing list
Wiki-research-l@lists.wikimedia.org
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wiki-research-l