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by mvonthron
2852 days ago
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reviewers are not paid by the publisher in the current system either basically: - authors pay to publish their work
- readers pay to read the articles
- reviewers review pro-bono
now you are thinking "well where the hell goes the money" and you are in the same situation as 99% of scientists |
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* Ensure that the content of a submission meets minimal guidelines for submission.
* Figure out who appropriate reviewers might be. This means figuring out which research areas are relevant, filtering out reviewers who might have conflicts of interest (same institution, previous advisor/advisee relationship, recent collaboration, etc.). You also need to ensure that you load balance reviews across reviewers.
* Appropriately double-blind the submission so that the reviewers don't know who submitted the paper, and the authors don't know who reviewed the paper. You are now an intermediary for all of this communication.
* Make a judgement call of which papers will be accepted for publishing.
* You need to facilitate necessary edits from the authors to get it ready to publish.
* Convert paper formats, supplementary data, etc. for uploading. Basically all the editing tasks that you probably thought was the only thing on this list.
* Oh, and reviewers and authors are likely professors who are horribly oversubscribed in terms of their time, so you need to play babysitter to make sure that the tasks actually get done in a reasonable manner.
When you consider how few papers actually get published, and just how much administrative work is required to publish a paper, costing hundreds or thousands of dollars to publish a paper is not unreasonable.