Editorial Policies
The
CSCHOLAR Editorial Process
CSCHOLAR
operates a rigorous and transparent peer review process that aims to maximize
quality; it is handled by researchers and scholars.
We
believe that peer review should be efficient, rigorous, and fair for everyone
involved.
For
most CSCHOLAR journals, peer review is a double-blind assessment with at least
two independent reviewers, followed by a final acceptance/rejection decision by
the Editor-in-Chief or another academic editor approved by the Editor-in-Chief.
The Editor-in-Chief is responsible for the academic quality of the publication
process, including acceptance decisions; the approval of external editors and
topics for article collections, such as Special
Issues, Topics, and Topical
Collections; and appointing new Editorial Board members.
A
summary of the editorial process is given in the flowchart below.
The
CSCHOLAR editorial process.
More
about CSCHOLAR Editorial Process
The
following provides notes on each step.
Pre-check
Pre-check
The
pre-screening stage consists of two main steps: a technical pre-check performed
by the Editorial Office and an editorial pre-check performed by an academic
editor.
Immediately
after submission, the journal’s Managing Editor will perform the technical
pre-check to assess:
-
The overall
suitability of the manuscript to the journal/section/Special
Issue/Topic/Topical Collection;
-
Manuscript
adherence to high-quality research and ethical standards;
-
Standards of rigor
to qualify for further review.
The
academic editor (i.e., the Editor-in-Chief in the case of regular submissions,
the Guest Editor in the case of Special Issue submissions, the Topic Editor in
the case of Topic submissions, the Collection Editor in the case of Topical
Collection submissions, and an Editorial Board member in the case of a conflict
of interest and regular submissions if the Editor-in-Chief allows) will be
notified of the submission and invited to perform an editorial pre-check.
During the editorial pre-check phase, the academic editor will assess the
suitability of the submission with respect to the scope of the journal, as well
as the overall scientific soundness of the manuscript, including the relevance
of the references and the correctness of the applied methodology. The academic
editors can decide to reject the manuscript, request revisions before peer
review, or continue with the peer review process and recommend suitable
reviewers.
Peer Review
Peer
Review
From
submission to final decision or publication, one dedicated CSCHOLAR staff
member coordinates the review process and serves as the main point of contact
for authors, academic editors, and reviewers.
The
process is double-blind peer review, where in addition to the author not
knowing the identity of the reviewer, the reviewer is unaware of the author’s
identity. Conference journals (https://www.cscholar.com/about/proceedings)
operate a different peer review standard. The peer review process is handled by
the conference committee, and the review method as well as the number of
reports is decided by the conference organizers' requirements.
At
least two review reports are collected for each submitted article. The academic
editor can suggest reviewers during pre-check. Alternatively, CSCHOLAR
editorial staff will use qualified Editorial Board members, qualified reviewers
from our database, or new reviewers identified by web searches for related
articles.
If
the journal has a reviewer board, these reviewers could apply to review a
submitted manuscript should the authors agree to this option during submission.
The
following criteria are applied to all reviewers:
-
They should hold no
conflicts of interest with any of the authors;
-
They should not
come from the same institution as the authors;
-
They should not
have published together with the authors in the last three years;
-
They should hold a
PhD or be a MD (applicable for medical journals);
-
They should have
relevant experience and have a proven publication record in the field of
the submitted paper (Scopus or ORCID);
-
They should hold an
official and recognized academic affiliation.
Reviewers
who are accepted to review a manuscript are expected to:
-
Have the necessary
expertise to judge manuscript quality;
-
Provide quality
review reports and remain responsive throughout peer review;
-
Maintain standards
of professionalism and ethics.
Reviewers
who accept a review invitation are provided 14–21 days to write their review
via our online platform.
When
reviewing a revised manuscript, reviewers are asked to provide their report
within 15 days. Extensions can also be granted on request.
To
assist academic editors, CSCHOLAR staff handle all communication with
reviewers, authors, and the external editor. Academic editors can check the
status of manuscripts and the identity of reviewers at any time, and are able
to discuss manuscript review at any stage with CSCHOLAR staff.
Open Peer Review
Open
Peer Review
CSCHOLAR
journals allow authors to choose "open peer review". Choosing open
peer review means that review reports and author responses to reviewers will be
published alongside the manuscript. Publishing the reviewer reports and author
responses together with the article provides greater transparency and trust for
readers as they can track and check the peer review process. The Open Peer
Review model also encourages reviewers to provide high quality comments as they
will be made public if the article is accepted for publication.
To
promote open communication further and increase the robustness of the peer
review process, we encourage reviewers to sign their reports so that their name
appears on the review report (referred to as open identity). By signing the
reports, reviewers receive direct credit for their contribution to the peer
review process and also shows their commitment towards open science. The
default option is for reviewers to remain anonymous. If an article is rejected
no details will be published.
Revision
Revision
In
cases where only minor or major revisions are recommended, CSCHOLAR staff will
request that the author revise the paper before referring to the academic
editor. Where conflicting review reports are present, or where there are one or
more recommendations for rejection, feedback from the academic editor is sought
before a decision about revisions is communicated to the authors. Additional
reviewers or further review reports may be requested by the academic editors at
this stage.
Revised
versions of manuscripts may or may not be sent to reviewers, depending on
whether the reviewer requested to see the revised version. By default,
reviewers who request major revisions or recommend rejection will be sent the
revised manuscript. All reviewers can access the most recent version of the
manuscript via SuSy.
A
maximum of two rounds of major revision per manuscript are normally provided.
If more rounds are required according to the reviewers, CSCHOLAR staff should
request a decision from the academic editor.
Editor Decision
Editor
Decision
Acceptance
decisions on manuscripts can be made by the academic editor after peer review
once a minimum of two review reports have been received. Acceptance decisions
are made by an academic editor (the Editor-in-Chief, a Guest Editor/Topic
Editor/Collection Editor, or another suitable Editorial Board member). Guest
Editors/Topic Editors/Collection Editors are not able to make decisions on
their own papers which will instead be assigned to a suitable Editorial Board
member. When making a decision, we expect the academic editor to check the
following:
-
The suitability of
the selected reviewers;
-
The adequacy of
reviewer comments and author response;
-
The overall
scientific quality of the paper.
The
academic editor can select from the following options: accept in its current
form, accept with minor revisions, reject and decline resubmission, reject but
encourage resubmission, ask the author for a revision, or ask for an additional
reviewer.
The
academic editors should alert the Editorial Office to any potential conflicts
of interest that may bias, or be perceived to bias, decision making. More
details about CSCHOLAR's conflicts of interest policy for academic editors can
be found at https://www.cscholar.com
Reviewers
make recommendations, and the Editors-in-Chief or academic editors are free to
disagree with their views. If they do so, they should justify their decision
for the benefit of the authors and reviewers.
In
some instances, an academic editor supports a decision of manuscript acceptance
despite a reviewer recommendation to reject. CSCHOLAR staff will seek a second
independent opinion (double decision) from an Editorial Board member or the
Editor-in-Chief before communicating a final decision to the authors. The
double decision, provided by an Editorial Board Member or the Editor-in-Chief,
is the final decision.
Articles
can only be accepted for publication by an academic editor. Employed CSCHOLAR
staff then inform the authors. CSCHOLAR staff never make paper acceptance
decisions.
CSCHOLAR
staff or Editorial Board members (including Editors-in-Chief) are not involved
in the processing of their own academic work. Their submissions are assigned
and revised by at least two independent reviewers. Decisions are made by other
Editorial Board members who do not have a conflict of interest with the
authors.
Author Appeals
Author
Appeals
Authors
may appeal a rejection by sending an e-mail to the Editorial Office of the
journal. The appeal must provide a detailed justification, including
point-by-point responses to the reviewers' and/or Editor's comments using an appeal form.
Appeals can only be submitted following a “reject and decline resubmission”
decision and should be submitted within three months from the decision date.
Failure to meet these criteria will result in the appeal not being considered
further. The Managing Editor will forward the manuscript and related
information (including the identities of the referees) to a designated
Editorial Board Member. The academic editor being consulted will be asked to
provide an advisory recommendation on the manuscript and may recommend
acceptance, further peer review, or uphold the original rejection decision.
This decision will then be validated by the Editor-in-Chief. A reject decision
at this stage is final and cannot be reversed.
Production
Production
CSCHOLAR’s
in-house teams perform production on all manuscripts, including language
editing, copy editing, and conversion to XML. Language editing is carried out
by professional English editing staff. In the small number of cases where
extensive editing or formatting is required, we offer authors an English
editing service for an additional fee (with the authors’ prior approval). The
authors are also free to use other English editing services, or consult a
native English-speaking colleague—the latter being our preferred option.
Publishing Standards and Guidelines
Publishing
Standards and Guidelines
CSCHOLAR
follows the following guidelines and standards for its journals:
ICMJE: Medically-related CSCHOLAR journals follow the
recommendations of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. The
guidelines comprehensively cover all aspects of editing, from how the journal
is managed to details about peer review and handling complaints. The majority
of the recommendations are not specific to medical journals and are followed by
all CSCHOLAR journals.
The CONSORT statement
covers the reporting of randomized, controlled trials. We encourage authors to
verify their work against the checklist and flow
diagram and upload them with their
submission.
TOP covers
transparency and openness in the reporting of research. Our journals aim to be
at level 1 or 2 for all aspects of TOP. Specific requirements vary between
journals and can be requested from the editorial office.
FAIR
Principles cover guidelines to
improve the Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability and Reuse of data.
PRISMA covers systematic
reviews and meta-analyses. Authors are recommended to complete the checklist and flow
diagram and include it with their
submission.
ARRIVE contains
guidelines for reporting in vivo experiments. Authors are recommended to verify
their work against the checklist and include it with
their submission.
CrossCheck is
an industry-standard software for plagiarism detection. Used during the first
screening of a manuscript or pre-check, it can also be used at any stage of the
peer review process and especially before the acceptance of a manuscript for
publication.
Compliance
with the standards and guidelines above will be taken into account during the
final decision and any discrepancies should be clearly explained by the
authors. We recommend that authors highlight relevant guidelines in their cover
letter.
Editorial Independence
Editorial
Independence
All
articles published by CSCHOLAR are peer-reviewed and assessed by our
independent Editorial Boards, and CSCHOLAR staff are not involved in decisions
to accept manuscripts. When making a decision, we expect the academic editor to
make it based solely upon:
-
The suitability of
the selected reviewers;
-
The adequacy of the
reviewer comments and author’s response;
-
The overall
scientific quality of the paper.
In
all of our journals and in every aspect of our operation, CSCHOLAR policies are
informed by the mission to make science and research findings open and
accessible as widely and rapidly as possible.