Academic literature on the topic 'Editors Authors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Editors Authors"

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Cohen, Andrew J., German Patino, Puneet Kamal, et al. "Perspectives From Authors and Editors in the Biomedical Disciplines on Predatory Journals: Survey Study." Journal of Medical Internet Research 21, no. 8 (2019): e13769. http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/13769.

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Background Predatory journals fail to fulfill the tenets of biomedical publication: peer review, circulation, and access in perpetuity. Despite increasing attention in the lay and scientific press, no studies have directly assessed the perceptions of the authors or editors involved. Objective Our objective was to understand the motivation of authors in sending their work to potentially predatory journals. Moreover, we aimed to understand the perspective of journal editors at journals cited as potentially predatory. Methods Potential online predatory journals were randomly selected among 350 publishers and their 2204 biomedical journals. Author and editor email information was valid for 2227 total potential participants. A survey for authors and editors was created in an iterative fashion and distributed. Surveys assessed attitudes and knowledge about predatory publishing. Narrative comments were invited. Results A total of 249 complete survey responses were analyzed. A total of 40% of editors (17/43) surveyed were not aware that they were listed as an editor for the particular journal in question. A total of 21.8% of authors (45/206) confirmed a lack of peer review. Whereas 77% (33/43) of all surveyed editors were at least somewhat familiar with predatory journals, only 33.0% of authors (68/206) were somewhat familiar with them (P<.001). Only 26.2% of authors (54/206) were aware of Beall’s list of predatory journals versus 49% (21/43) of editors (P<.001). A total of 30.1% of authors (62/206) believed their publication was published in a predatory journal. After defining predatory publishing, 87.9% of authors (181/206) surveyed would not publish in the same journal in the future. Conclusions Authors publishing in suspected predatory journals are alarmingly uninformed in terms of predatory journal quality and practices. Editors’ increased familiarity with predatory publishing did little to prevent their unwitting listing as editors. Some suspected predatory journals did provide services akin to open access publication. Education, research mentorship, and a realignment of research incentives may decrease the impact of predatory publishing.
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Wilks, Scott E., and Christina A. Spivey. "Views of Reference List Accuracy from Social Work Journal Editors and Published Authors." Advances in Social Work 5, no. 2 (2004): 172–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.18060/66.

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Objective:The study’s purpose was to answer two research questions: (1) In the opinion of social work journal editors, how important is reference list accuracy? and (2)Who is primarily responsible for the accuracy of reference lists published in social work journals? Method: A sample of 119 authors and 26 journal editors was surveyed to ascertain their views on the above questions and additional items. Results: Regarding the importance of reference list accuracy, editors’ responses (Likert scale) averaged between moderately and extremely important. Fifty-three percent of responding editors and 36.5% of authors reported that responsibility is shared between the editor/staff and manuscript authors; the remaining 47% and 63.5%, respectively, responded that responsibility falls upon manuscript authors. Responses from authors, mostly educators, revealed a greater-than-moderate importance (Likert scale) given to instructing students on the accurate construction of reference lists. Implications for social work education and journal publishing are discussed.
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Chilton, Adam, Jonathan Masur, and Kyle Rozema. "Political Ideology and the Law Review Selection Process." American Law and Economics Review 22, no. 1 (2020): 211–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aler/ahaa005.

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Abstract We investigate the role that political ideology plays in the selection process for articles in law reviews. To do so, we match data on the political ideology of student editors from 15 top law reviews from 1990 to 2005 to data on the political ideology of the authors of accepted articles. We find that law reviews with a higher share of conservative editors accept a higher share of articles written by conservative authors. We then investigate potential explanations for this pattern. One possibility is that editors have a preference for publishing articles written by authors that share their ideology. Another possibility is that editors are objectively better at assessing the contribution of articles written by authors that share their ideology. We find evidence that the latter explanation drives the relationship between editor and author ideology.
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Mathews, R. Mark. "EDITORS AS AUTHORS: PUBLICATION TRENDS OF ARTICLES AUTHORED BY JABA EDITORS." Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis 30, no. 4 (1997): 717–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1901/jaba.1997.30-717.

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Amelia, Diah. "EDITORS' COMMUNICATION PATTERNS IN THE PROCESS OF BOOK MANUSCRIPTING AT POLIMEDIA PUBLISHING." Jurnal Komunikasi Ikatan Sarjana Komunikasi Indonesia 2, no. 1 (2017): 33. http://dx.doi.org/10.25008/jkiski.v2i1.87.

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Editors have a responsibility for editing the manuscripts. Editing is a process to improve a manuscript to be eligible for publication. The purpose of this study is to understand and describe the editors' communication patterns. Editors must communicate with the authors, publishing companies, and readers. This study may help to understand and describe the editors' communication patterns, including the influence of knowledge and education in the process of work. This study is a qualitative study using phenomenological study. Phenomenological study is a study that seeks the essence of the meaning of phenomena experienced by some individuals. Researcher can conduct communication research and examine the symptoms of humanities. Informants in this study are editors at Polimedia Publishing. Polimedia Publishing is one of university publishers. The theory used is interpersonal communication theory, supported by the knowledge of editor who explained about a mutual communication between editors and authors as well as publishers. The result of the study is that an editor should have specific communication patterns, knowledge, as well as proper education in completing a manuscript as a part of literacy.
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Terkhanova, O. "Editor’s in traditional and online media." Communications and Communicative Technologies, no. 19 (May 5, 2019): 76–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.15421/291911.

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The editor functions in traditional and online media are considered. In the duties of editors who work there, there is a number of common and different features.In online and traditional media, it is the editor who directs all editorial processes: examines the needs of the consumer of information, builds up the agenda and the general policy of the publication in accordance with them. In addition, the editor prepares materials for publication, gives the authors recommendations for improving the conceptual and linguistic aspects of the articles; monitors the compliance of the materials with regulatory requirements, the format of the publication, its ideological orientation.As in the traditional and online editions, the editor checks the spelling of the cited numerical data and quotations, the writing and use of scientific and technical terms, names, units of measurement, the correspondence of symbols; determines the form of the material feed.The editors of traditional and network media are responsible for the timely provision of information, the observance of the publication schedule, and the coordination of the actions of all the employees. In any media the editor is the author’s assistant. In fact, composition and presentation style are also the subject of editor’s close attention.However, the transition to the online format has put forward additional requirements for all employees of mass communication activities. The terms of reference for the network media editor have considerably expanded. Now the content should be updated around the clock and seven days a week. It should be done according to the requirements of the audience.The transprofessionalism of the online media editor has become common. Such specialist has the knowledge and skills that traditional media have inherent to journalists and managers. Considering that the web resources have absorbed the characteristics of various media formats, the editor has to think in terms of hypertextuality, super-operativeness, multimedia, focus on individual user requests.All this puts forward new requirements for the preparation of editorial staff in specialized universities.
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Kawana, Sari. "Write on Demand: Editors, Authors, and the Labor of Literary Publishing in Prewar Japan." East Asian Publishing and Society 4, no. 2 (2014): 125–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22106286-12341259.

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During the first half of the twentieth century, the role of the editor in Japanese literary publishing was defined and refined concurrently with the role of the author. As the professionalization of authorship proceeded, the role of the editor also became an independent function within the publishing industry. The new generation of editors that came of age in the late 1920s and 1930s in particular used their new-found independence to try to control the conditions of modern literary production and color the end products, literary works. For authors writing literature and for editors pushing them to produce on time, the tasks involved in publishing a book came to be considered distinct forms of labor. This article investigates the material conditions that were necessary for literary production and examines the ways in which authors and editors collaborated—negotiating conflict, confusion, and quirkiness—to produce many of the canonical works of modern Japanese literature.
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Hanks, Roma S. "Editors' Tips to Authors:." Marriage & Family Review 18, no. 1-2 (1993): 13–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1300/j002v18n01_03.

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Bressler, Neil M. "Reviewers, Authors, and Editors." Archives of Ophthalmology 117, no. 4 (1999): 524. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/archopht.117.4.524.

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Murphy, Elaine, and George Alexopoulos. "Editors' note to authors." International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry 8, no. 9 (1993): 785. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gps.930080912.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Editors Authors"

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McDonell, Margaret. "The invisible hand : cross-cultural influence on editorial practice /." St. Lucia, Qld, 2004. http://www.library.uq.edu.au/pdfserve.php?image=thesisabs/absthe18021.pdf.

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El-Khoury, Masumi Abe. "Editors' intentions and authors' desires : how junbungaku affects the Akutagawa Prize and Japan's commercial literary world." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39835.

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In this thesis I explore the current literary culture of Japan by examining the commercialization and politicization of junbungaku, “pure” literature. In particular, I focus on the most prominent award for new authors, the Akutagawa Prize, which is widely acknowledged as authoritative. My intention is to shed some useful light on the role of publishing company editors as the masterminds of the publishing industry. Chapter One provides an overview of issues surrounding junbungaku and taishū bungaku (“mass-oriented literature”). At present, junbungaku is defined in opposition to taishū bungaku, but ambiguities and boundary issues remain. This survey will enable us to identify the situations where the notion of junbungaku is defended as authoritative and how its relationship with the Akutagawa Prize increases its legitimacy. Chapter Two examines the origin and history of junbungaku, and discusses how the notion has changed over time. I also address questions such as what junbungaku is and how it can be defined, and uncover how junbungaku came under question as the Akutagawa Prize became more successful and began to overshadow junbungaku itself. The ultimate purpose of the Prize is to sell books and magazines; this affects not only literature but to some extent Japanese society as a whole. Chapter Three therefore deals with the Akutagawa Prize and junbungaku as a business. I examine the “Akutagawa Prize industry” led by the editors and Bungeishunju Ltd., including the nomination, selection, and announcement processes; distribution and sales; winning works; and judging. I analyze the process from the viewpoint of the publishing houses and editors. Finally, in the Conclusion I argue that the Akutagawa Prize endangers the very concept of pure literature by tying it to a commercial enterprise, compromising writers by making them dependent upon the financial goals of a corporation, which trains a reading public conditioned to accept the Prize as authoritative to receive the work in particular ways through the process of commercialization and commodification. As a result, “amateurization” is inevitable. I also examine the implications of this project for future research on Japanese literature and on the intersections of Japanese literary culture and commercial literary awards.
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Cheung, Iva. "The editorial handbook: a comprehensive document to guide authors through the editorial process at Douglas & McIntyre Publishing Group /." Burnaby B.C. : Simon Fraser University, 2005. http://ir.lib.sfu.ca/handle/1892/2320.

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Hill, Georgina Ellen O'Brien. "The woman author-editor and the negotiation of professional identity, 1850-1880." Thesis, University of Chester, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/10034/109456.

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This thesis examines the professional identities of three Victorian novelists, George Eliot (1819-1880), Charlotte Yonge (1823-1901) and Florence Marryat (1837-1899), all of whom worked as editors between 1850 and 1880. I explore the practices that these women adopted as journalists in order to survive, and indeed thrive, within a male-dominated literary marketplace, revealing a number of strategies in common as well as some important differences. I also consider how these author-editors represented the experience of the female artist-professional in their fiction, demonstrating that each woman figured the mid-Victorian ideal of domesticity as useful when seeking to negotiate a public identity within a challenging professional climate. Working in the press during a period which has been described as a ‘golden age of women’s journalism,’ these writers nevertheless faced numerous challenges. The purpose of this thesis is to examine why George Eliot, Charlotte Yonge and Florence Marryat found useful the particular practices they chose when editing and writing fiction within the context of this rapidly changing climate. By examining this very diverse sample of writers, I demonstrate how women responded to the demands of the mid-Victorian periodical press, and their role within it, through the practices of anonymity, male pseudonyms, signature and posing as amateurs. The Introduction examines the nature of the professional/amateur divide at mid-century, and demonstrates how women could usefully subvert domestic ideology to position themselves as amateurs and thus covertly enter the public sphere. I offer an overview of research into the periodical press, as well as the position of the woman journalist. In the second part of my Introduction, I introduce the magazines that Eliot, Yonge and Marryat edited, describing a typical issue and offering important contextual information. Chapter One looks at George Eliot’s editorship of The Westminster Review (1852-1854), arguing that while Eliot adopted the tactic of anonymity and pseudonymity she nevertheless developed the persona of an ‘editress’ through her private correspondence. Chapter One examines the ideal of women’s literary professionalism that Eliot developed through the articles she published in The Westminster Review, based upon the values of hard work, training and excellence, and how this was then reflected in her representation of the female artist-professional in her fiction in texts as diverse as Scenes of Clerical Life (1858) and Daniel Deronda (1876). Chapter Two explores Charlotte Yonge’s editorship of The Monthly Packet (1851-1899) and the lesser-known privately circulated magazine The Barnacle (1863-1867). I examine Yonge’s practice of signature and posing as an amateur, as well as her editorial character of ‘Mother Goose,’ arguing that Yonge shared many of Eliot’s ideals of literary professionalism and that this is reflected in novels such as Dynevor Terrace (1857) and The Clever Woman of the Family (1865). In Chapter Three, I examine Florence Marryat’s editorship of London Society (1872-1876). I explore Marryat’s practice of signature, posing as an amateur when new to her profession and her editorial character of the ‘spiritualist editress,’ arguing that like Yonge, Marryat’s vision of women’s professionalism was similar to that of Eliot and that this was reflected in her representation of the female artist-professional in texts such as Her World Against a Lie (1878) and My Sister the Actress (1881). Despite writing for very different markets, what emerges from the fiction of all three author-editors is an idealised combination of posing as an amateur and skilful performance as an artist. Drawing on original archival research, this thesis recovers their hitherto under-researched editorial work, prompting a reconsideration of the canonical work of George Eliot, stressing the significance of the more familiar work of Charlotte Yonge and introducing Florence Marryat as an important but neglected literary figure.
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Gosney, Renee M. "The Evolving Role of the Editor in the Age of Digital Publishing." Kent State University Honors College / OhioLINK, 2017. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ksuhonors1494583608662509.

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Brown, Diane. "Publishing Culture : Commissioning Books in Australia, 1970-2000." Connect to this title online, 2003. http://eprints.vu.edu.au/304/1/Brown_Diane.pdf.

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This study primarily examines the cultural and commercial practices of editors and publishers who commission and acquire content in independent Australian publishing houses. My research spans a 30-year transitional period in book publishing from 1970 to 2000 - a period marked by rapid and unstable shifts in publishing culture, reflecting wider social, political, economic and technological change. In a global market economy, more than ever before, the acquisition of local content is critical in fostering original ideas and works by Australian authors. A series of semi-structured interviews with editors and publishers provides a direct source of personal experience and professional industry-based knowledge. These narratives address and engage with individual and collective values, beliefs, assumptions and attitudes which reflect particular personalities and publishing styles. They also contribute to an understanding of the editors' and publishers' commissioning role, where knowledge and content are taken up and developed and publishing decisions are made. An analysis of editors' and publishers' responses further explores the diversity of commissioning and acquisitions environments in which they live and work. Publishing houses are profiled and works of fiction and non-fiction are identified and discussed in an attempt to unpack how and why they were commissioned and developed for publication, and to what social and cultural effect. The dynamics of organisational structure and publishing culture are explored by analysing general and specific publishing models. Editors and publishers discuss how publishing companies operate and offer insights into, and perceptions of, organisational structure and publishing culture and, importantly, how both impact on commissioning practice. Issues of identity, representation and institutionalisation are identified as they relate to developments and trends within publishing and public culture, as a whole, and the ways in which they intersect. This nexus of culture and power is explored through the cultural production of Australian content, and in particular, in Chapters Five and Six, with the impact of second-wave feminism on Australian publishing culture and cross-currents in the production and publication of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander works.
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Wakely, Alice Elizabeth. "Author and editor in the works of Samuel Richardson." Thesis, University of Oxford, 2000. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.342761.

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Huffman, Ashley S. "Editor and Author Relationships in the Evolving World of Publishing." Kent State University Honors College / OhioLINK, 2015. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ksuhonors1431033725.

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Taaffe, Benjamin James Stewart Douglas. "Douglas Stewart poet, editor, man of letters /." Connect to full text, 1995. http://hdl.handle.net/2123/5765.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Sydney, 1996.<br>Title from title screen (viewed December 9, 2009) Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy to the Dept. of English, Faculty of Arts. Degree awarded 1996; thesis submitted 1995. Includes bibliographical references. Also available in print form.
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Thornton, David. "Mr Mercury : a biographical study of Edward Baines with special reference to his role as editor, author and politician." Thesis, University of Leeds, 1999. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/441/.

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This thesis investigates the life and work of Edward Baines, editor of the Leeds Mercury from 1801 to 1848 and Member of Parliament for Leeds from 1834 to 1841. It considers his political, journalistic and literary achievements and it investigates why no authoritative complete study of his life has been carried out since his son's filial biography written in 1851. The thesis examines the confusion which has arisen because Edward Baines Senior and Junior were both journalists editing the Leeds Mercury, both campaigning Dissenters, both Members of Parliament for Leeds and that much of their political and journalistic lives ran concurrently and not consecutively. Consideration is given to Baines's antecedents, his early years and the influences that helped shape his thinking. Baines's philosophy is examined, particularly as it was expressed in both his newspaper editorials and his academic writings. It shows that his fundamental beliefs were rooted in Protestant Christianity and how this was reflected in his views by his opposition to war and slavery, his lifelong support for individual freedom as expressed through Whig-Liberalism and the cause of Nonconformism. The thesis then follows a chronological approach. The years 1801 to 1815 witnessed his campaign on behalf of the merchants and manufacturers of the West Riding and the active political role he adopted from the election of 1807 onwards. The years 1815 to 1829 revealed Baines at the apotheosis of his journalistic career, with the revelations of the Government Spy scandal, his involvement in the campaigns for Parliamentary Reform, the commencement of his literary career and the launch of his strategy to establish a Whig power base in Leeds by taking control of the Parish Church vestry. The years 1830 to 1841 demonstrated Baines as an active politician, becoming the Member for Leeds and using his parliamentary position to campaign for the rights of the Dissenters. His final years 1841 to 1848 showed him still active in politics locally; an examination is also made of his final commitment to evangelical Congregationalism. Primary source material has been used throughout to illustrate Baines, his beliefs and the views his contemporaries held of him. Although few manuscript primary sources are available a considerable amount of printed primary source material is to be found in Baines's books and almost fifty years of his LessisMercury. The newspapers of his opponents, which cover the same period, offer a diverse range of views on the man and these enable a more balanced view of him to be reached than that found in his son's biography.
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Books on the topic "Editors Authors"

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Golz, Jochen, and Manfred A. Koltes, eds. Authors and Writers as Editors. Walter de Gruyter – Max Niemeyer Verlag, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783484970793.

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An insider's guide for medical authors & editors. ISI Press, 1986.

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Sages, stories, authors, and editors in rabbinic Babylonia. Scholars Press, 1994.

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Kafka, Franz. Letters to friends, family, and editors. Schocken Books, 1987.

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Basu, Hena. Vaisnava periodicals in Bengal, 1856-1983: Authors, editors, publishers. Basu Research & Documentation Service, 2009.

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Basu, Hena. Vaisnava periodicals in Bengal, 1856-1983: Authors, editors, publishers. Basu Research & Documentation Service, 2009.

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1954-, Stewart Tony K., ed. Vaisnava periodicals in Bengal, 1856-1983: Authors, editors, publishers. Basu Research & Documentation Service, 2009.

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Basu, Hena. Vaisnava periodicals in Bengal, 1856-1983: Authors, editors, publishers. Basu Research & Documentation Service, 2009.

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Weiss, Jaqueline Shachter. Profiles in children's literature: Discussions with authors, artists, and editors. Scarecrow Press, 2001.

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Association, American Medical, ed. AMA manual of style: A guide for authors and editors. Oxford University Press, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Editors Authors"

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"Authors and editors." In Pluralisation and social change. De Gruyter, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110569810-024.

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"Editors and Authors." In Changing Federal Constitutions. Verlag Barbara Budrich, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvddzh07.25.

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"Authors and Editors." In Nordic Associations in a European Perspective, edited by Risto Alapuro and Henrik Stenius. Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft mbH & Co. KG, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/9783845225944-327.

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"Authors and editors." In Addiction Medicine. Oxford University Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780199539338.002.0009.

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"Authors and Editors." In Contemporary Curating and Museum Education. transcript-Verlag, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.14361/9783839430804-026.

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"Editors and authors." In Encounters and Positions. Birkhäuser, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783035607154-021.

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"Authors and Editors." In Being Jewish in 21st-Century Germany. De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110350159-017.

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"Authors and Editors." In European Fans in the 17th and 18th Centuries. De Gruyter, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110661736-019.

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"Authors And Editors." In BEING PROFILED. Amsterdam University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9789048550180-025.

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"Editors and authors." In Yeasts in Food. Elsevier, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/b978-1-85573-706-8.50005-8.

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Conference papers on the topic "Editors Authors"

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Lai Meng Looi. "Responsibilities of Authors." In Workshop on Publishing for Biomedical Journal Editors and Reviewers. Department of Biomedical Imaging, University of Malaya, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2349/biij.2.4.e54-1.

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Arnout Jacobs. "The Publishing Cycle: Interface between Authors, Editors and Reviewers." In Workshop on Publishing for Biomedical Journal Editors and Reviewers. Department of Biomedical Imaging, University of Malaya, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2349/biij.2.4.e54-11.

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Gureyev, Vadim, Irina Lakizo, and Nikolay Mazov. "Unfair authorship in science publications and approaches to eliminate it." In The Book. Culture. Education. Innovations. Russian National Public Library for Science and Technology, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.33186/978-5-85638-223-4-2020-71-76.

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Unfair authorship is one of the most common violations of the publication ethics. These violations comprise «guest», «donated» and «invisible» authorship when the author line indicates the persons that actually are not the authors, or, instead lacks actual executors of studies. This phenomenon is characteristic for the world as a whole; however the developing states striving to carry science to a new level, are the most vulnerable. This is due to inefficient science management, in particular due to formal approach to researcher efficiency evaluation, due to the citation and publication activity indicators use when employing staff, career promotion, giving grants, etc. Scientific and publication communities develop approaches to fight unfair authorship, including implementation of special authorship indicators, new regulations and instructions for editors, reviewers and authors. The bibliometrical approaches are also seen as promising ones. The current status of the problems and solutions are characterized.
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Hanson, Brooks, and Shelley Stall. "BEST PRACTICES FOR AUTHORS, DATA REPOSITORIES, EDITORS, AND PUBLISHERS TO ENABLE GEOINFORMATICS USING THE SCHOLARLY LITERATURE AND TO EMPOWER PUBLISHED DATA." In GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017. Geological Society of America, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2017am-300094.

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Oancea, Theodora, Joachim Pollmann, and Jonas Spieker. "Kollaborateure – Involvierte – Profiteure. Erarbeitung eines Online-Lexikons zur Musik in der NS-Zeit." In Jahrestagung der Gesellschaft für Musikforschung 2019. Paderborn und Detmold. Musikwissenschaftliches Seminar der Universität Paderborn und der Hochschule für Musik Detmold, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.25366/2020.67.

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Since 2018 a group of musicology students at the Department of musicology of the University of Paderborn and the University of Music Detmold has been developing an online database called Kollaborateure – Involvierte – Profiteure. Musik in der NS-Zeit. Integral part of this database are articles on musicians, composers, employees in ministries and organisations affiliated to the party, musicologists, music editors and publishers from the Nazi era. In addition to the source-based biographical key data, the prosography focuses on the current research situation related to the respective person, a detailed description of the networks in the denazification processes and presents comprehensive lists of all writings, musical works, speeches and a list of his or her memberships. In future, further authors are to be won over to the project in order to create new articles or to update existing ones.
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Fuge, Mark. "A Scalpel Not a Sword: On the Role of Statistical Tests in Design Cognition." In ASME 2015 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2015-46840.

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The number of design studies using statistical testing has increased dramatically over the past decade. While this has benefits, statistical testing requires scrutiny to protect against common errors and misconceptions. To illuminate how these issues affect design, this paper provides a comprehensive analysis of the past decade of studies within the DTM community. Specifically, the paper 1) reviews the background of statistical testing across multiple fields, highlighting recommended practices, 2) discusses its use in the Design community, and 3) provides concrete methods for authors and reviewers to evaluate statistical tests employed in Design Cognition studies. The analysis identifies recurring issues with: ignoring multiple comparisons; deficiencies in study and result reporting; inadequate defense of modeling assumptions; unavailable plots, data, and analysis files for replication; and lack of interpretation of statistical results with respect to practical outcomes or alternate forms of scientific inquiry. Based upon practices already adopted in other research communities, we put forth: 1) checklists that help authors and reviewers verify data reporting, analysis, and statistical assumptions; and 2) design guidelines for creating more reproducible design experiments. Ultimately, we argue that design researchers, reviewers, and editors should view statistical testing less like a sword and more like a scalpel — a specialized tool best used in concert with other techniques — to gain a more complete picture of Design Cognition.
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7

Jasim, Kawthar Hasan. "The Critical Care Medicine Research: A Systematic Review." In Qatar University Annual Research Forum & Exhibition. Qatar University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.29117/quarfe.2020.0205.

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Objectives: The cost-effectiveness terminology is a common term used in the critical care medicine research. A systematic review analysis was conducted to study the patterns of the use and misuse of the cost-effectiveness terminology in the critical care medicine literature between 1998 and 2018. Methods: A search in the inCite journal citation report was done to identify all the critical care medicine journals. An independednt search done to identify all the articles between 1980 to 2018 that claimed in their abstracts/article to perform a cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA). Eligible articles were included and analyzed using x2-test. The articles were categorized into four different levels based on the appropriateness of CEA terminology use. The analysis performed to assess the association between the appropriateness of CEA terminology and the journal impact factor (IF), author background, and the publication year (5-year time points). Results: Out of 7,835 articles in targeted subject category, 76 met the inclusion criteria, but 50 of them were analyzed. Of these 50 articles, 32 (64.0%) met the appropriate criterion of CEA terminology use. 71.4% of articles published in journals with IF: 3.0 - 21.4 were appropriately using CEA term compared to 54.5% studies that are published in journals with IF: 0.4 - 2.8. Of these articles, which are appropriately use CEA terminology, 56.2% of the articles have at least one author with health economics expertise. Conclusion and recommendation: The preliminary data suggest that there is an association between the level of appropriateness and journal impact factor and the author health-economic background authorship. However, we did not demonstrate changes in the level of appropriateness with time. Decision-makers, authors, and editors should pay better attention in seeking ways to monitor the appropriate use of “cost-effectiveness” terminology. More future studies should be done in this context.
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8

Stocker, D. J. "Technical communication: a collaborative effort between author and editor." In International Conference on Professional Communication,Communication Across the Sea: North American and European Practices. IEEE, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ipcc.1990.111141.

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9

Niles, David W., and Ronald W. Kee. "Success! > 90% Yield for 65nm/40nm Full-Thickness Backside Circuit Edit." In ISTFA 2010. ASM International, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.31399/asm.cp.istfa2010p0348.

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Abstract The authors present a detailed analysis of a full-thickness backside trenching and contact level circuit editing methodology used to achieve a success yield of greater than 90%. The methodology involves both full-thickness backside trenching and contact level circuit modifications on flip-chip parts produced with 90nm, 65nm, and 40nm foundry processes and mounted on laminated package technology. Having successfully edited &amp;gt;150 parts with this methodology, the authors prove that full-thickness trenching is a viable alternative to a traditional die-thinning process, and that circuit edits at the contact layer, to avoid milling into the copper metal layers, greatly reduces risk and uncertainty.
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10

Melecký, Lukáš. "How has time progressed with the EU Regional Competitiveness Index? Continued number 2. What change did the last edition of RCI 2019 bring?" In XXIII. mezinárodní kolokvium o regionálních vědách / 23rd International Colloquium on Regional Sciences. Masaryk University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5817/cz.muni.p210-9610-2020-5.

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Regional Competitiveness Index (RCI) has been measuring the significant factors of competitiveness over the past ten years for all the NUTS 2 level regions across the European Union (EU). RCI measures with more than 70 comparable indicators the ability of a region to offer an attractive and sustainable environment for firms and residents to live and work. RCI results are standardly illustrated with interactive maps and a range of interactive web tools, which is attractive as well as for the public. The scorecards make it easy to compare any region with the EU and regions with a similar level of GDP per head. Users can easily see where their region stands on aspects such as governance, infrastructure, including the digital networks, health, human capital and labour market and innovation. RCI results confirm a polycentric pattern with a strong performance of most capitals and regions with large cities, that benefit from agglomeration effects, better connectivity and high levels of human capital. Other regions in the same country in some cases, score much worse. The north-west and south-east divide across the EU is still clear and visible. The paper aims at comprehensive analysis of RCI approach is performed by the systematic review across the editions. Results show that comparing RCI over time is complicated because all editions incorporate slight modifications. The authors of RCI try to keep changes to a minimum so as not to affect its overall structure and to maintain a high degree of comparability across the editions. However, despite all its shortcomings, RCI proved to be a robust way to summarise many different indicators into one index.
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Reports on the topic "Editors Authors"

1

Zhytaryuk, Maryan. UKRAINIAN JOURNALISM IN GREAT BRITAIN. Ivan Franko National University of Lviv, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.30970/vjo.2021.50.11115.

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Professor M. Zhytaryuk’s review is about a book scientific novelty – a monograph by Professor M. Tymoshyk «Ukrainian journalism in the diaspora: Great Britain. Monograph. K.: Our culture and science, 2020. 500 p. – il., Them. pok., resume English, German, Polish.». Well-known scientist and journalism critic, Professor M. S. Tymoshyk, wrote a thorough work, which, in terms of content, is a combination of a monograph, a textbook and a scientific essay. This book can be useful for both students and practicing journalists or anyone interested in the history of the Ukrainian diaspora, Ukrainian journalism and Ukrainian culture. The author dedicated his work to Stepan Yarmus from Winnipeg, Canada – archpriest, journalist, editor, professor. As the epigraph to the book were taken the words of Ivan Bagryany: «Our press, born under the sword of Damocles of repatriation», not only survived and survived to this day, but also showed a brilliant ability to grow and develop. It was shown that beggars that had come to the West without money at heart can and know how to act so organized. It was also an example of how a modern «enbolshevist» and «denationalized» by the occupier man person is capable of a combined mass action».
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2

‘Relative Age and Specific Learning Disorder Diagnosis’ – In Conversation with Dr. Bianca Arrhenius. ACAMH, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.13056/acamh.15518.

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With the launch of our third journal, JCPP Advances, we're bringing you a series of podcasts that focus on the papers and editors featured in the publication. In this podcast we speak to Dr. Bianca Arrhenius, medical doctor from Helsinki, Finland, and PhD student at the University of Turku, who is lead author on the paper 'Relative Age and Specific Learning Disorder Diagnosis'.
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