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HV: Research : SCS Transactions
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With a new editor-in-chief (Bernard Zeigler), the journal now has
a more well defined scope. In contrast to the Simulation Journal,
the Transactions will focus on articles that are methodological in
nature and whose application to general modeling and
simulation issues is clear. In particular, purely mathematical,
computational, or empirical results, however valuable, are
considered more appropriate to the many journals specializing
in these areas.
As referee, you have the most important task of all: enabling
us to produce a timely, high quality forum for research. Your
work will be acknowledged in an annual listing, but the
greatest reward is the ability to learn first hand of results of
interest to you and the role you play in shaping the progress of
the field. Once you receive the manuscript we will expect
feedback from you within 45 days. Only evaluations received
within this time window will be considered further in the process.
Some ways to meet this deadline are suggested below.
Please keep the following in mind when evaluating a paper.
- Is the content of the paper, independent of the
manner in which it currently expressed, worth publishing from
the standpoint of contribution to the methodology of modeling
and simulation?
- If not, recommend rejection and state why the content is
unworthy. This will speed up our turnaround time back to the
author.
- If yes, but there is one glaring problem, you may skip the
rest of the evaluation since the problem needs to be corrected
before anything else. In this case, state the problem with some
cogent evidence and recommend rewriting the whole paper
and resubmitting. This again will speed the turnaround to the
author.
- Otherwise, recommend acceptance (usually with revisions),
and state what has to be done to bring the paper up to the
standard of quality publication? Attached are some points to
consider at this stage.
You may write up your comments in any form you wish for
use by the author in revising the paper. Please provide
specific citations of the literature or handles on it wherever
you can. For example, instead of saying "this has all been
done before", give a concrete reference to the earlier work.
Remember a major function of refereeing is to expand the
perspectives of the author and thereby to enable us all to
appreciate the contribution. We will also allow the author to
request clarification of points (through an anonymous process).
Some points to consider in evaluating a manuscript for SCS
Transactions:
- Title -- would it attract the interest, and not mislead, a person
scanning a list or references?
- Abstract -- would it accurately convey the contents to a
browser in an abstracts information service?
- Introduction -- does it properly position the contribution of the
paper within the existing literature of modeling and
simulation methodology? Does it consider that many readers
will not be experts in the specific problem area and provide
explanation of such background.
- Content -- Does the body provide a good technical exposition,
Should the paper be made more readable and more
convincing about its general applicability. For example should
it:
- hide in an appendix, or omit altogether, long mathematical
expressions and proofs in favor of conceptual explanations
with the help of figures
- use a simple example, taken from a real application
context, to illustrate the approach. The context of the example
should be described and illustrated with figures in the
introduction. The example itself should be used in each
section to illustrate the main idea of that section.
- include a section that demonstates the results of the
approach applied to the example, and perhaps to more
complex examples
- discuss the practicality of the approach, review the
advantages/disadvantages in comparison with existing
methodology, and indicate where future research and
development needs to be done, not just for the sake of
mathematics, but for actual application.
- Language -- is the paper acceptable from the perspective of
English grammar, style and spelling.? If not, give an example
of such a problem and how it might be corrected.
Hans.Vangheluwe@rug.ac.be
--- November 16, 1998