Re-submission of rejected manuscript without informing co-authorsWhat do I do when a co-author takes too long...
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Re-submission of rejected manuscript without informing co-authors
What do I do when a co-author takes too long to give feedback during the peer review process?How to ask the editor of a journal whether our manuscript fits the scope or notPaper get rejected despite positive recommendations from both reviewersIs it ethical for a journal editor to use a generic rejection response when desk rejecting a manuscript?How can one prevent a co-author from publishing without consent?Can one prevent a co-author from publishing on arXiv without consent?What to do if a colleague is reviewing an unchanged paper that has been rejected before on my recommendation?Submitting a rejected paper to the same editor in a different journalFirst author submits manuscript before final approval of all co-authorsCo-authors decided to remove most of my contributions from a Nature paper without my consent
A paper we submitted was rejected without a review because of journal scope issues. After the rejection, I decided to send the same manuscript content (changed formats only according to the journal's guidelines) to another journal where I believe it fits. However, I missed informing other co-authors about the rejection as I presumed it is unnecessary because I am submitting the same version of the MS and we are not particular of the journal and its metrics as long as it is fitting. I experienced the same thing before where the primary and corresponding author did not inform us of the rejection rather send it to another journal without our consent (for me that time it was fine). However, this time one of the co-authors scolded me because of the actions I made and I realised it was wrong. Any advice on how will I handle and respond to this?
peer-review paper-submission authorship
add a comment |
A paper we submitted was rejected without a review because of journal scope issues. After the rejection, I decided to send the same manuscript content (changed formats only according to the journal's guidelines) to another journal where I believe it fits. However, I missed informing other co-authors about the rejection as I presumed it is unnecessary because I am submitting the same version of the MS and we are not particular of the journal and its metrics as long as it is fitting. I experienced the same thing before where the primary and corresponding author did not inform us of the rejection rather send it to another journal without our consent (for me that time it was fine). However, this time one of the co-authors scolded me because of the actions I made and I realised it was wrong. Any advice on how will I handle and respond to this?
peer-review paper-submission authorship
3
most of these questions belong to a psychology forum...apologize and say you are learning by doing :-)
– Michael Schmidt
8 hours ago
@MichaelSchmidt only part of your comment is useful, maybe it should be turned into answer?
– aaaaaa
1 hour ago
For future readers - the reasons why it's wrong to not inform co-authors about a resubmission to different journal is that (1) they may have strong opinions about the next journal to submit to (2) they may want to appeal the decision (3) they may want the manuscript modified after learning about hte rejection, etc. - always error on the side of oversharing. OP acknowledges this, but just in case future readers may not understand why such an action is a problem I thought it was important to include this info in a comment
– WetlabStudent
6 mins ago
add a comment |
A paper we submitted was rejected without a review because of journal scope issues. After the rejection, I decided to send the same manuscript content (changed formats only according to the journal's guidelines) to another journal where I believe it fits. However, I missed informing other co-authors about the rejection as I presumed it is unnecessary because I am submitting the same version of the MS and we are not particular of the journal and its metrics as long as it is fitting. I experienced the same thing before where the primary and corresponding author did not inform us of the rejection rather send it to another journal without our consent (for me that time it was fine). However, this time one of the co-authors scolded me because of the actions I made and I realised it was wrong. Any advice on how will I handle and respond to this?
peer-review paper-submission authorship
A paper we submitted was rejected without a review because of journal scope issues. After the rejection, I decided to send the same manuscript content (changed formats only according to the journal's guidelines) to another journal where I believe it fits. However, I missed informing other co-authors about the rejection as I presumed it is unnecessary because I am submitting the same version of the MS and we are not particular of the journal and its metrics as long as it is fitting. I experienced the same thing before where the primary and corresponding author did not inform us of the rejection rather send it to another journal without our consent (for me that time it was fine). However, this time one of the co-authors scolded me because of the actions I made and I realised it was wrong. Any advice on how will I handle and respond to this?
peer-review paper-submission authorship
peer-review paper-submission authorship
asked 9 hours ago
xavierxavier
633319
633319
3
most of these questions belong to a psychology forum...apologize and say you are learning by doing :-)
– Michael Schmidt
8 hours ago
@MichaelSchmidt only part of your comment is useful, maybe it should be turned into answer?
– aaaaaa
1 hour ago
For future readers - the reasons why it's wrong to not inform co-authors about a resubmission to different journal is that (1) they may have strong opinions about the next journal to submit to (2) they may want to appeal the decision (3) they may want the manuscript modified after learning about hte rejection, etc. - always error on the side of oversharing. OP acknowledges this, but just in case future readers may not understand why such an action is a problem I thought it was important to include this info in a comment
– WetlabStudent
6 mins ago
add a comment |
3
most of these questions belong to a psychology forum...apologize and say you are learning by doing :-)
– Michael Schmidt
8 hours ago
@MichaelSchmidt only part of your comment is useful, maybe it should be turned into answer?
– aaaaaa
1 hour ago
For future readers - the reasons why it's wrong to not inform co-authors about a resubmission to different journal is that (1) they may have strong opinions about the next journal to submit to (2) they may want to appeal the decision (3) they may want the manuscript modified after learning about hte rejection, etc. - always error on the side of oversharing. OP acknowledges this, but just in case future readers may not understand why such an action is a problem I thought it was important to include this info in a comment
– WetlabStudent
6 mins ago
3
3
most of these questions belong to a psychology forum...apologize and say you are learning by doing :-)
– Michael Schmidt
8 hours ago
most of these questions belong to a psychology forum...apologize and say you are learning by doing :-)
– Michael Schmidt
8 hours ago
@MichaelSchmidt only part of your comment is useful, maybe it should be turned into answer?
– aaaaaa
1 hour ago
@MichaelSchmidt only part of your comment is useful, maybe it should be turned into answer?
– aaaaaa
1 hour ago
For future readers - the reasons why it's wrong to not inform co-authors about a resubmission to different journal is that (1) they may have strong opinions about the next journal to submit to (2) they may want to appeal the decision (3) they may want the manuscript modified after learning about hte rejection, etc. - always error on the side of oversharing. OP acknowledges this, but just in case future readers may not understand why such an action is a problem I thought it was important to include this info in a comment
– WetlabStudent
6 mins ago
For future readers - the reasons why it's wrong to not inform co-authors about a resubmission to different journal is that (1) they may have strong opinions about the next journal to submit to (2) they may want to appeal the decision (3) they may want the manuscript modified after learning about hte rejection, etc. - always error on the side of oversharing. OP acknowledges this, but just in case future readers may not understand why such an action is a problem I thought it was important to include this info in a comment
– WetlabStudent
6 mins ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
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You should apologize and admit you were wrong. Don't try to defend your actions. It is a head-slapping error. Send the apology to everyone. Offer to immediately withdraw the submission if anyone desires it. Ask for advice going forward. That should cover it.
All authors need to be on the same page for actions on their work.
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You should apologize and admit you were wrong. Don't try to defend your actions. It is a head-slapping error. Send the apology to everyone. Offer to immediately withdraw the submission if anyone desires it. Ask for advice going forward. That should cover it.
All authors need to be on the same page for actions on their work.
add a comment |
You should apologize and admit you were wrong. Don't try to defend your actions. It is a head-slapping error. Send the apology to everyone. Offer to immediately withdraw the submission if anyone desires it. Ask for advice going forward. That should cover it.
All authors need to be on the same page for actions on their work.
add a comment |
You should apologize and admit you were wrong. Don't try to defend your actions. It is a head-slapping error. Send the apology to everyone. Offer to immediately withdraw the submission if anyone desires it. Ask for advice going forward. That should cover it.
All authors need to be on the same page for actions on their work.
You should apologize and admit you were wrong. Don't try to defend your actions. It is a head-slapping error. Send the apology to everyone. Offer to immediately withdraw the submission if anyone desires it. Ask for advice going forward. That should cover it.
All authors need to be on the same page for actions on their work.
answered 8 hours ago
BuffyBuffy
56.7k17178274
56.7k17178274
add a comment |
add a comment |
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3
most of these questions belong to a psychology forum...apologize and say you are learning by doing :-)
– Michael Schmidt
8 hours ago
@MichaelSchmidt only part of your comment is useful, maybe it should be turned into answer?
– aaaaaa
1 hour ago
For future readers - the reasons why it's wrong to not inform co-authors about a resubmission to different journal is that (1) they may have strong opinions about the next journal to submit to (2) they may want to appeal the decision (3) they may want the manuscript modified after learning about hte rejection, etc. - always error on the side of oversharing. OP acknowledges this, but just in case future readers may not understand why such an action is a problem I thought it was important to include this info in a comment
– WetlabStudent
6 mins ago