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- What does reject and resubmit mean? - Academia Stack Exchange
Sometimes there's a difference, with reject and resubmit indicating a slightly less optimistic outlook (but still optimistic enough to be worth trying) There are also borderline dishonest reasons some journals prefer reject and resubmit Splitting a single submission into two submissions can make the journal look good in two different ways
- research process - what does Reject (revise and resubmit) mean . . .
More recently reject and resubmit has become a thing It is like a revise and resubmit, but the journal is going to count the manuscript as a new submission so their rejection rates go up and the time to final decision goes down Sometimes they try and use the same editor and reviewers and ask for a rebuttal letter, just like a revise and resubmit
- publications - Can you resubmit a rejected manuscript to the same . . .
Can you resubmit a rejected manuscript to the same journal if you have made many changes to improve the manuscript? Ask Question Asked 4 years, 10 months ago Modified 4 years, 10 months ago
- What words to describe revisions and resubmission to distinguish . . .
One should note that "revise and resubmit" is essentially a shenanigan invented by journals to make it look like their article processing time is lower than the real one The proper name would be "major revisions recommended"
- How to highlight changes made in the manuscript as part of a revise and . . .
How to highlight changes made in the manuscript as part of a revise and resubmit? Ask Question Asked 4 years, 3 months ago Modified 4 years, 3 months ago
- How to reply to a revise and resubmit review, saying is all good?
Closed 1 year ago I am a reviewer for a paper that has undergone three revision and resubmit stages - the paper has greatly improved - and the authors have made great efforts to address all the comments they received from fellow reviewers and me I have nothing more to say about it than "is all good for me"
- Can a paper be assessed again by the same journal after a retraction . . .
To resubmit your paper to the same journal, you go to the submission site and, well, submit it! But you probably actually want to something along the lines of: Is it unusual to resubmit a previously retracted journal to the same journal? Do you know of any instances where a journal has republished a revision of a previously retracted journal?
- How damaging is it to reapply a withdrawn faculty application?
The actual decision makers won’t be aware of the applicants, their submitted materials, or even how those must be handled by the university administration We only get the information of applicants that made it through HR, and retract-and-resubmit sounds like something they would prefer for sheer simplicity
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