Frontiers Is The World’s Super Publisher. It Is Also Super Slow!
Frontiers is a super publisher with 79 international journals (see my essay, “Calling For Open Science Revolution[1]!” (30 May 2020, THiNK Journalism). But it is super slow when publishing!
In the Facebook image above, it will take
forever before the research manuscripts are ready for publishing.
It breaks my heart that Frontiers needs 90 days to review a paper, then
decide whether to publish it or not!
If I were the Editor In Chief of a journal,
the simultaneous review of 10 manuscripts would have taken just 10 days,
authors’ revisions another 5 days, and the issue would have come off the press on
the 20th day, via print-on-demand publishing.
Gearoid O Faolean, Yasmin Dahesh &
Marieke Heineke explain the 90-day Frontiers’ review process; I count 8 steps:
(1)
Submission of manuscript.
You register an account at Frontiers and
submit your manuscript online, with supporting materials.
(2)
Initial Validation.
Frontiers does a range of checks, including confirming
that your study had ethical approval and copyright permissions.
(3)
Editor appointed.
A handling editor is appointed. For any
concerns about your paper, s/he contacts the editorial office.
(4)
Reviewers appointed.
If the editor thinks your paper is ready for
review, reviewers are invited.
(5)
Feedback to author
The reviewers read and give feedback to you
as author.
(6)
Interactive review
In a Frontiers’ online review forum, you, reviewers
and editors collaborate to improve the manuscript.
(7)
Author response
You are then prompted to address all or any
specific comments raised.
(8)
Final checks
In the ‘Final Validation’ stage, your paper
is reviewed to see if the standards have been met, including absence of conflicts
of interest. Your manuscript is then accepted.
Frank A Hilario, Editor:
Assigning 3 days each of the 8 steps listed,
the review period should only be 24 days!
I now suspect how the Frontiers staff handle
the papers – they print out everything and do their review on paper! My clue is
this line:
(After
approval), our colleagues in the production team will start typesetting your
manuscript.
Typesetting means the manuscript will be worked
upon again & again: typed, proofread, text-formatted, page-layouted, copyread,
then sent to press. My God, I suppose the originals of those manuscripts were
submitted as soft copies, and therefore should have been reviewed and edited onscreen
and not on paper, after which desktop publishing, DTP, is done, via software,
no retyping necessary, and then off to press.
What all that tells me is the Frontiers has not maximized the powers of the Digital
Age! I am the Editor In Chief who himself did the DTP with the Philippine Journal of Crop Science, each issue taking about 30 days, and made it ISI. (See superimposed image
above.)
(Frontiers, need a DTP demonstration by an Editor
In Chief? Email me: frankahilario@gmail.com.
No initial charge.)@517
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