I submitted to Journal X but all I got was this lousy revision
2018๋ 8์ 23์ผ
์ ์: Christopher Tancock
Why being given a โreviseโ decision is a beginning, not an endโฆ
ยฉ istockphoto.com/DNY59 You know the feeling all too well: youโve spent months, if not years on your beloved manuscript. Itโs the very best it can possibly be (even your supervisor says so!). Full of hope and the expectation of speedy publication, you submitted to journal X, waited seven weeks and โฆ received a โmajor revisionโ decision. With a long, long list of โdo this, delete that, rewrite all thisโฆโ, to boot. Why bother going any further? Might as well give up and either try another journal with a less draconian set of reviewers or maybe just ditch it completely, right?ย Wrong!
Try, try, try againโฆ
Peer review is about more than just rubber stamping, letโs not forget. As well as serving as a guarantor of final quality and acting as โgatekeeperโ for journals, a major function of peer review is toย improveย the quality of what is published. Thatโs why you should never consider your work as โfinishedโ โ thereโs always some way you can improve, refine or simplify. Peer review is the ultimate expression of this process. Ultimately, it is worthwhile bearing in mind that you have benefitted from the undivided attention of two or more experts in your area โ it makes sense to listen to what they have to say and to treat them respectfully when you respond.
Take a deep breath
But first, it probably makes sense to take a break and clear your head before you turn to the task of responding to the reviewersโ feedback. Itโs not a bad idea to leave at least a day, possibly even a week or longer. (Just donโt waitย tooย long and forget all about it โ as publishers we have observed that this tends to be the second slowest phase in the lifecycle of the average article).
A blueprint for responding to review feedback
So once youโve reconciled yourself to the task of responding to the refereesโ feedback, how best to go about this? We have heard many editors comment on their preferred format, style and content for receiving responses to reviewersโ comments, but there tends to be general agreement on the following:
Authors shouldย respond fullyย to each comment/issue raised by the reviewer(s). Thereโs no point in ignoring the two or three points you really dislike or donโt have an answer to as this will be painfully obvious. Furthermore, in your responses, try to avoid general statements such as โcomment acceptedโ or โnoted; changedโ etc.ย ย โ you need to specify exactly what youโve done.
In composing your response to the review,ย be methodological. One good technique is to create a table listing all the points made by the referees and then match each with your response signalling what you have done and what changes youโve made. Include line numbers if you can โ this will help the editor no end, and having a happy editor is no bad thing when youโre trying to get published, of course.
This could be your last chance to convince the editor that your manuscript is worth spending more time on, so you mustย beย clearย - the last thing you want is to leave your editor (or reviewers) guessing as to what you mean. Itโs easy to lose yourself with your revised paper and your response to the comments, so, as with your original manuscript, itโs always wise toย ask someone elseย to read your revised paper (and comments) to ensure youโre not going off piste, becoming unclear or dancing around the edges of courtesy.
If youโre unhappy with something the reviewers have said,ย donโt be afraid to disagreeย โ just do so politely and โscientificallyโ. There is no point declaiming angrily โthe reviewers are wrongโ or the like: you must explain exactly where the misunderstanding has arisen and why youโre (perhaps) right. After all, we all make mistakes. If you find yourself about to write โthe reviewer clearly does not understandโฆโ, ask yourself: could this be becauseย youโveย not explained the issue clearly enough? At the same time, if there is any confusion in the other direction and youโre unsure of whatโs being asked of you, thereโs no reason not toย ask for clarificationย if needed.
When composing your response to the editor and reviewers, try to do so in such a fashion that makes it easy for the editor to pass on your comments verbatim to the reviewers. In doing so, remember toย be courteous. Even if the feedback from the reviewers was less than kind, itโs good practice to remain polite and clinical (be the better person if necessary!). Incidentally, if youโre a reviewer reading this, then be sure to check outย the advice in this postย when providing feedback to your authors.
Above all,ย donโt ignore the adviceย and think you can just take your article elsewhere. Thereโs a better-than-average chance that the reviewers at the next journal will be the same. If they see your paper for the second time, having apparently ignored all their carefully-constructed advice, youโre not likely to get more than a swift โrejectโ decision this time round.
In conclusion
Hopefully the advice provided here will serve you well in your future dealings with revisions. Remember that youโve spent a significant amount of time in drafting the original manuscript. A โreviseโ decision shows that the editor believes thereโs something worthwhile in your article, so why risk that by ignoring the advice youโve been given? In any case, good luck and remember that โrevisionโ doesnโt mean the end, itโs a chance to get to an even better ending!
Further reading
Researcher Academy module on responding to reviewer commentsย ์ ํญ/์ฐฝ์์ ์ด๊ธฐ