Circulation Research. 1996;79:1-3
(Circulation Research. 1996;79:1-3.)
© 1996 American Heart Association, Inc.
A Second Term for the Editors
Status and Goals for the Review Process
Stephen F. Vatner,
Bradford C. Berk,
Leslie A. Leinwand,
Peter Libby,
Ketty Schwartz,
Harold C. Strauss
Correspondence to Dr Stephen F. Vatner, Editor, Circulation Research, Harvard University/NERPRC, 1 Pine Hill Dr, Southborough, MA 01772.
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Introduction
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The Scientific Publishing Committee of the American Heart Association
(AHA) requested the Editors to continue for a second term of
3 years. We were told that this request was motivated by performance,
but we accepted with some ambivalence. Why the ambivalence,
particularly since the initial 5 years have been enormously
rewarding in terms of achieving our goals to publish excellent
articles in the fields of cellular and molecular biology along
with mechanistic, integrative, physiological studies? One of
the disadvantages of editing is the thanklessness of the task.
Authors, by nature, can never be thankful regarding the handling
of their manuscript. If the manuscript is rejected, the Editors
clearly did not appreciate the importance, quality, and novelty
of the work. If the reviewers request clarification or revision,
the Editors are delaying publication of their work unnecessarily.
If the manuscript is accepted for publication, it merely shows
that the Editors are intelligent enough to discern superb work.
A particularly unpleasant feature of editing is dealing with
issues of scientific fraud and related unethical practices.
In view of the extent of these problems, we will devote a future
editorial to this issue.
Despite these disadvantages of editing, in combination with the extensive commitment involved in dealing with 1000 manuscripts per year, it is still important to pursue our initial goals to enhance further the quality of Circulation Research by working closely with the authors, reviewers, and the AHA Scientific Publishing Committee. This journal should be the main forum for the presentation of the . . . [Full Text of this Article]