Last week we enjoyed a favourite blog post from the past on Creating Figures for Your Manuscript. It seems appropriate to review the corresponding post on Figure Legends this week. I hope you’ll find this information helpful. According to my Twitter feed, a number...
Creating Figures for Your Manuscript
One of my most popular blog posts is this early one on Creating Figures for Your Manuscript. I’ve been told again and again how useful this information is. So I thought it was time to re-post it. Enjoy! “A picture is worth a thousand words.” Perhaps. A good...
Addressing Reviewer Comments
You’ve submitted your manuscript, and the decision was “revise and resubmit” – the journal has requested “major” revisions. Sometimes the reviewers’ comments are a single page of relatively positive comments that can be addressed fairly easily, along with one or two...
Developing the Response to Reviewers
You’ve submitted your manuscript and have been anxiously following along with the peer-review process. “Under review.” “Reviewer comments received.” “Editorial decision.” Here we go – what will they say? The best case scenario is “Accept” with no revisions, but...
The Best Worst Reviewer Comments
Reviewer comments are the most fundamental component of the peer-review process for publishing scientific manuscripts. They are also the most anxiety-laden, occasionally joyful, hopefully constructive, but often disheartening, painful, and sometimes cruel and...
Writing Abstracts that Get Accepted
By Guest Contributor Miranda A. L. van Tilburg, PhD A Google search on how to write an abstract for submission to a medical conference will give you millions of hits. Most of these tell you what to write where, advise you to know the conference requirements...
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