Skip to main content

Timeline for How to speed up publishing papers?

Current License: CC BY-SA 3.0

11 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Apr 13, 2017 at 12:49 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://academia.stackexchange.com/ with https://academia.stackexchange.com/
Jun 2, 2015 at 1:46 answer added jakebeal timeline score: 7
Jun 2, 2015 at 1:36 history edited jakebeal CC BY-SA 3.0
cleanup
Jun 1, 2015 at 20:45 comment added Roger Fan @JeffE And I expose my lack of knowledge. I'm guessing it still does help the concurrency problem though, right? Though maybe not that much considering how long that is.
Jun 1, 2015 at 20:37 comment added Lazzaro Campeotti In pure mathematics, you can wait a year (or two, or more!) for some good journals to review your paper.
Jun 1, 2015 at 20:19 comment added JeffE @RogerFan The (theoretical) computer science conference review cycle takes 2.5–3 months (≈10-13 weeks) from submission to acceptance/rejection. Add another 1.5 months (≈6 weeks) to submit the camera-ready version, and yet another 2–3 months (≈10-13 weeks) for the proceedings to be published (when the conference starts). The conference I submit to most often meets in mid-June; its submission deadline is at the end of November.
Jun 1, 2015 at 20:09 comment added Cape Code There is one easy solution: lower your journal standards. There are plenty of journals that will publish your work in a few days for a fee. Now this is assuming you are solely interested in publishing as fast as possible, not things like advancing Human knowledge in your field or preparing a strong faculty application for a reputable institution.
Jun 1, 2015 at 19:15 comment added jakebeal Could you please say what field you are in?
Jun 1, 2015 at 19:13 comment added Roger Fan Good journals take around 12-20 weeks to review papers. This is very field dependent. In some fields, the norm is as short as a month (or less!). Some fields primarily rely on conferences instead of journals, which generally have very short turnaround times (and limits the concurrency issue).
Jun 1, 2015 at 18:56 review First posts
Jun 1, 2015 at 19:15
Jun 1, 2015 at 18:52 history asked Searcher CC BY-SA 3.0