Introducing the mini-review article category and the Journal of Avian Biology review award

IF 1.5 3区 生物学 Q1 ORNITHOLOGY
Michael Tobler, Theresa Burg, Dominique Potvin, Jan-Åke Nilsson
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To address this challenge and to offer a nimbler format to publish overviews of a particular field or aspect in avian biology, JAB introduced the ‘mini-review' article category in December 2022. As the name suggests, mini-reviews are shorter than standard reviews (about 6000 words) and can be used to highlight a sub-topic or ongoing debate within a broader research area. They provide a succinct and clear summary of the research topic and give readers a quick overview of the most recent and significant advances.</p><p>Journal of Avian Biology is an important outlet for young researchers. Of all the articles published in 2023, nearly 60% had a corresponding author with no more than 8 years of post-doctorate research experience. Most of the corresponding authors on these papers (close to 50%) were PhD students or early postdocs at the time of publication. To emphasize this and to highlight the mini-review category as a new outlet for early career researchers to synthesize their research, JAB announced the first ‘JAB review award' competition in spring 2023. The award is sponsored by the Nordic Society Oikos (NSO), the umbrella society for the ecological societies in the Nordic countries, who publishes JAB and four other scientific journals (Oikos, Nordic Journal of Botany, Ecography and Wildlife Biology).</p><p>The JAB review award is given to an early career research scientist who has an exceptional mini-review manuscript accepted for publication in JAB. The mini-review should focus on new developments and/or emerging concepts in the areas of avian research that fall within the scope of the journal. The winner of the JAB review award receives a 1000€ honorarium and the runner-up receives 500€. If the award is given for a paper with multiple authors (the lead and corresponding author(s) must be early career), those meeting the early career research criteria at the time of publication will share the monetary prize. All accepted papers that are entered in the competition will appear together in an issue in Journal of Avian Biology.</p><p>In this first ‘award issue', we briefly reiterate eligibility and submission criteria, and outline the assessment criteria for the award. We wish to be clear and transparent about these criteria as it recently has been highlighted that there is not enough transparency in scientific awards for early- and mid-career researchers in ecology and evolution (Lagisz et al <span>2023</span>). We briefly highlight the key takeaways from the accepted papers and provide a short evaluation of the winner and runner-up.</p><p>To be considered for the JAB review award, authors must submit their manuscript by the submission deadline for the award which is communicated on the journal webpage. Contenders for the award must communicate to the journal that they wish to enter their manuscript in the competition for the JAB review award. This can be done through the cover letter or by directly contacting the editorial office (the contact information can be found on the journal webpage). To be eligible the author(s) must have finished their PhD within 8 years prior to the deadline (MSc students and PhD students are also eligible). JAB realizes that life intervenes occasionally, so this cut-off is meant to be a suggestion and not a hard requirement. However, applicants should provide an explanation if they are requesting an exception (e.g. absence due to family leave, drastic shifts in research area, etc.). JAB particularly encourages submissions coming from underrepresented geographic areas and historically underrepresented groups.</p><p>As JAB is a full gold Open Access journal, the NSO charges an Article Processing Charge (APC) for all accepted papers. Although there are more and more funders and institutions that have agreements with our publisher Wiley that cover the APC (i.e. no direct cost to the author), we recognize that the open access costs may prevent some early career researchers from participating in the review competition. JAB participates in the Research4Life initiative, granting authors from over 100 countries worldwide waivers or significant reductions of the APC. In addition, we provide internal waivers to young researchers who cannot cover the APC. These waivers are limited and are given on a first come, first served basis. Waiver requests must be made to the editorial office before submission. This ensures that the decision for a waiver is independent from the editorial process (see below). For the first year of the competition, we received five internal waiver requests and four of those were granted.</p><p>Manuscripts that meet the basic criteria for a JAB review award paper go through the normal peer review process. JAB operates with double-blind peer review where the reviewers don't know the identity of the authors and vice versa. Reviewers are not made aware of that the submission is part of the competition. To be considered for the JAB review award a manuscript must be accepted in JAB for publication. Accepted articles are ranked based on two scores: a score based on the subject editor's and the reviewers' assessment (= scientific score) and a score based on the assessment of the award committee (= writing and readability score). The award committee consists of members of the JAB editorial board. Editors who have co-authored a manuscript that was entered in the current competition cannot be members of the award committee.</p><p>Scientific score: all reviewers who submit a review to JAB are asked to rate the priority for publishing the reviewed article (score 1-10, 1 is the highest priority, 10 is the lowest priority). Every manuscript is reviewed by at least two reviewers and may go through several rounds of revisions, and each review will result in a score. In addition, for the competition we ask the subject editor of the manuscript to rate it in the same format as the reviewers when it is accepted. The average of all reviewer' scores and the subject editor's score makes up the scientific score.</p><p>Writing and readability score: the award committee rates the accepted articles based on three criteria: 1) clarity of sentences, 2) flow between sentences and paragraphs, and 3) engagement (is the text engaging; no reader fatigue?). The committee members rate the accepted articles in the same way as the reviewers (score 1-10, 1 is the highest, 10 is the lowest). The average of the committee members' scores makes up the writing and readability score.</p><p>The scientific score and the writing and readability score are summed up and the article with the lowest score (i.e. highest rating) is pronounced as the winner, and the article with the second lowest score as the runner-up. Although the two scores are not independent, the reviewers/editors and the committee members have a different focus when rating the manuscripts/articles. Reviewers are not given the authors' names before rating the article and, hence, scoring is part of the double-blind peer review. Editors and committee members are asked not to factor into the evaluation who the authors are or where they are from.</p><p>Eleven manuscripts were submitted as part of the competition and five of those were accepted for publication. Needless to say, all manuscripts accepted for publication are valuable contributions to the field of avian biology. The submitted contributions covered a wide range of topics and this breadth is also reflected in the accepted articles. Below we provide short appraisals of the winning article and the runner-up as well as short summaries of all five contributions (the junior authors of the articles are highlighted in bold).</p><p>The winner of the 2023 JAB review award is <b>Violeta Caballero-Lopez.</b> Violeta's review on the current state of migration genetics, which she co-authored with Staffan Bensch (Caballero-Lopez and Bensch <span>2024</span>) recommends a shift in how we study migration moving from searching for specific genes to using gene expression. The paper does an excellent job bringing together different perspectives on migration ontogeny and highlighting the complexities of studying migration while also providing some great examples from the existing literature. The review obtained the highest scientific score of all the five accepted mini-reviews and the same writing and readability score as the runner-up. The article is well balanced, with a good structure and flow, and pointing towards future directions. Moreover, it is impressively engaging for a subject that can be considered a bit of a challenge to communicate to the broad readership of JAB.</p><p><b>Guillaume Dillenseger</b> is the runner-up of the 2023 JAB review award competition. Guillaume's review of brood parasite-host interactions and co-evolutionary trajectories offers a novel perspective on how sex-linked inheritance might contribute to assortative mating in parasitic bird species (Dillenseger <span>2024</span>). A compendium in and of itself, the manuscript discusses newly identified components of the relationships between hosts and their brood parasites that may act as selective pressures or contexts complementary to those previously outlined in the literature. The sentences, paragraphs and sections flow logically and keep the reader engaged.</p><p>The mini-review by <b>Grace Blackburn</b>, <b>Camilla Soravia</b> and Amanda Ridley highlights anthropogenic stressors and the paucity in evaluating such stressors simultaneously (Blackburn et al. <span>2024</span>). Multiple stressors may exacerbate their effects on wild birds compared to evaluating them alone. By reviewing effects of high temperatures and anthropogenic noise both as single stressors but more importantly how they interact to affect behaviour, reproduction and cognitive ability in birds, Blackburn et al take an important step to address this knowledge gap.</p><p><b>Heather Wolverton</b> and Rindy Anderson discuss challenges and opportunities associated with the definition and study of ‘syntax' in animal communication (Wolverton and Anderson <span>2024</span>). This analysis includes some important considerations for research into birdsong in particular, as well as other avian vocalizations, summarizing important terminology, perspectives and contexts for ongoing investigations that attempt to understand the structure of animal signals.</p><p>Finally, <b>Frank Muzio</b> and Margaret Rubega review almost 100 years of literature on how the structure of feathers affects their ability to repel water (Muzio and Rubega <span>2024</span>). They discuss how chemical and structural properties affect how feathers interact with water and the complexities involved in understanding what makes feathers repel water. A comprehensive synthesis about the current state of knowledge on the water repellency of feathers.</p><p>To sum up, we are very happy to present the first special issue of the JAB review award competition featuring five excellent mini-reviews and emphasizing JAB as an outlet for young researchers. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Journal of Avian Biology (JAB) publishes hypothesis-driven, high-quality research from all parts of the globe that advances our understanding of the ecology, evolution and behaviour of birds. Findings can be disseminated in research articles, short communications, viewpoint articles and reviews. Reviews perform an important function as vehicles to convey critical information in a synthesized way; they not only aggregate information, but also identify current research gaps and pave the way for future investigation. Comprehensive review articles, however, are major undertakings that may quickly go out of date. To address this challenge and to offer a nimbler format to publish overviews of a particular field or aspect in avian biology, JAB introduced the ‘mini-review' article category in December 2022. As the name suggests, mini-reviews are shorter than standard reviews (about 6000 words) and can be used to highlight a sub-topic or ongoing debate within a broader research area. They provide a succinct and clear summary of the research topic and give readers a quick overview of the most recent and significant advances.

Journal of Avian Biology is an important outlet for young researchers. Of all the articles published in 2023, nearly 60% had a corresponding author with no more than 8 years of post-doctorate research experience. Most of the corresponding authors on these papers (close to 50%) were PhD students or early postdocs at the time of publication. To emphasize this and to highlight the mini-review category as a new outlet for early career researchers to synthesize their research, JAB announced the first ‘JAB review award' competition in spring 2023. The award is sponsored by the Nordic Society Oikos (NSO), the umbrella society for the ecological societies in the Nordic countries, who publishes JAB and four other scientific journals (Oikos, Nordic Journal of Botany, Ecography and Wildlife Biology).

The JAB review award is given to an early career research scientist who has an exceptional mini-review manuscript accepted for publication in JAB. The mini-review should focus on new developments and/or emerging concepts in the areas of avian research that fall within the scope of the journal. The winner of the JAB review award receives a 1000€ honorarium and the runner-up receives 500€. If the award is given for a paper with multiple authors (the lead and corresponding author(s) must be early career), those meeting the early career research criteria at the time of publication will share the monetary prize. All accepted papers that are entered in the competition will appear together in an issue in Journal of Avian Biology.

In this first ‘award issue', we briefly reiterate eligibility and submission criteria, and outline the assessment criteria for the award. We wish to be clear and transparent about these criteria as it recently has been highlighted that there is not enough transparency in scientific awards for early- and mid-career researchers in ecology and evolution (Lagisz et al 2023). We briefly highlight the key takeaways from the accepted papers and provide a short evaluation of the winner and runner-up.

To be considered for the JAB review award, authors must submit their manuscript by the submission deadline for the award which is communicated on the journal webpage. Contenders for the award must communicate to the journal that they wish to enter their manuscript in the competition for the JAB review award. This can be done through the cover letter or by directly contacting the editorial office (the contact information can be found on the journal webpage). To be eligible the author(s) must have finished their PhD within 8 years prior to the deadline (MSc students and PhD students are also eligible). JAB realizes that life intervenes occasionally, so this cut-off is meant to be a suggestion and not a hard requirement. However, applicants should provide an explanation if they are requesting an exception (e.g. absence due to family leave, drastic shifts in research area, etc.). JAB particularly encourages submissions coming from underrepresented geographic areas and historically underrepresented groups.

As JAB is a full gold Open Access journal, the NSO charges an Article Processing Charge (APC) for all accepted papers. Although there are more and more funders and institutions that have agreements with our publisher Wiley that cover the APC (i.e. no direct cost to the author), we recognize that the open access costs may prevent some early career researchers from participating in the review competition. JAB participates in the Research4Life initiative, granting authors from over 100 countries worldwide waivers or significant reductions of the APC. In addition, we provide internal waivers to young researchers who cannot cover the APC. These waivers are limited and are given on a first come, first served basis. Waiver requests must be made to the editorial office before submission. This ensures that the decision for a waiver is independent from the editorial process (see below). For the first year of the competition, we received five internal waiver requests and four of those were granted.

Manuscripts that meet the basic criteria for a JAB review award paper go through the normal peer review process. JAB operates with double-blind peer review where the reviewers don't know the identity of the authors and vice versa. Reviewers are not made aware of that the submission is part of the competition. To be considered for the JAB review award a manuscript must be accepted in JAB for publication. Accepted articles are ranked based on two scores: a score based on the subject editor's and the reviewers' assessment (= scientific score) and a score based on the assessment of the award committee (= writing and readability score). The award committee consists of members of the JAB editorial board. Editors who have co-authored a manuscript that was entered in the current competition cannot be members of the award committee.

Scientific score: all reviewers who submit a review to JAB are asked to rate the priority for publishing the reviewed article (score 1-10, 1 is the highest priority, 10 is the lowest priority). Every manuscript is reviewed by at least two reviewers and may go through several rounds of revisions, and each review will result in a score. In addition, for the competition we ask the subject editor of the manuscript to rate it in the same format as the reviewers when it is accepted. The average of all reviewer' scores and the subject editor's score makes up the scientific score.

Writing and readability score: the award committee rates the accepted articles based on three criteria: 1) clarity of sentences, 2) flow between sentences and paragraphs, and 3) engagement (is the text engaging; no reader fatigue?). The committee members rate the accepted articles in the same way as the reviewers (score 1-10, 1 is the highest, 10 is the lowest). The average of the committee members' scores makes up the writing and readability score.

The scientific score and the writing and readability score are summed up and the article with the lowest score (i.e. highest rating) is pronounced as the winner, and the article with the second lowest score as the runner-up. Although the two scores are not independent, the reviewers/editors and the committee members have a different focus when rating the manuscripts/articles. Reviewers are not given the authors' names before rating the article and, hence, scoring is part of the double-blind peer review. Editors and committee members are asked not to factor into the evaluation who the authors are or where they are from.

Eleven manuscripts were submitted as part of the competition and five of those were accepted for publication. Needless to say, all manuscripts accepted for publication are valuable contributions to the field of avian biology. The submitted contributions covered a wide range of topics and this breadth is also reflected in the accepted articles. Below we provide short appraisals of the winning article and the runner-up as well as short summaries of all five contributions (the junior authors of the articles are highlighted in bold).

The winner of the 2023 JAB review award is Violeta Caballero-Lopez. Violeta's review on the current state of migration genetics, which she co-authored with Staffan Bensch (Caballero-Lopez and Bensch 2024) recommends a shift in how we study migration moving from searching for specific genes to using gene expression. The paper does an excellent job bringing together different perspectives on migration ontogeny and highlighting the complexities of studying migration while also providing some great examples from the existing literature. The review obtained the highest scientific score of all the five accepted mini-reviews and the same writing and readability score as the runner-up. The article is well balanced, with a good structure and flow, and pointing towards future directions. Moreover, it is impressively engaging for a subject that can be considered a bit of a challenge to communicate to the broad readership of JAB.

Guillaume Dillenseger is the runner-up of the 2023 JAB review award competition. Guillaume's review of brood parasite-host interactions and co-evolutionary trajectories offers a novel perspective on how sex-linked inheritance might contribute to assortative mating in parasitic bird species (Dillenseger 2024). A compendium in and of itself, the manuscript discusses newly identified components of the relationships between hosts and their brood parasites that may act as selective pressures or contexts complementary to those previously outlined in the literature. The sentences, paragraphs and sections flow logically and keep the reader engaged.

The mini-review by Grace Blackburn, Camilla Soravia and Amanda Ridley highlights anthropogenic stressors and the paucity in evaluating such stressors simultaneously (Blackburn et al. 2024). Multiple stressors may exacerbate their effects on wild birds compared to evaluating them alone. By reviewing effects of high temperatures and anthropogenic noise both as single stressors but more importantly how they interact to affect behaviour, reproduction and cognitive ability in birds, Blackburn et al take an important step to address this knowledge gap.

Heather Wolverton and Rindy Anderson discuss challenges and opportunities associated with the definition and study of ‘syntax' in animal communication (Wolverton and Anderson 2024). This analysis includes some important considerations for research into birdsong in particular, as well as other avian vocalizations, summarizing important terminology, perspectives and contexts for ongoing investigations that attempt to understand the structure of animal signals.

Finally, Frank Muzio and Margaret Rubega review almost 100 years of literature on how the structure of feathers affects their ability to repel water (Muzio and Rubega 2024). They discuss how chemical and structural properties affect how feathers interact with water and the complexities involved in understanding what makes feathers repel water. A comprehensive synthesis about the current state of knowledge on the water repellency of feathers.

To sum up, we are very happy to present the first special issue of the JAB review award competition featuring five excellent mini-reviews and emphasizing JAB as an outlet for young researchers. The mini-review competition is intended as a returning feature in JAB and we are looking forward to seeing many excellent mini-reviews published in the journal in the future.

介绍微型评论文章类别和《禽类生物学杂志》评论奖
这确保了豁免决定独立于编辑过程(见下文)。在竞赛的第一年,我们收到了五份内部豁免申请,其中四份获得了批准。符合 JAB 评审奖论文基本标准的稿件将通过正常的同行评审流程。JAB 采用双盲同行评审,即审稿人不知道作者的身份,反之亦然。审稿人不知道提交的论文是竞赛的一部分。要获得 JAB 评审奖,稿件必须被 JAB 接受发表。被录用的稿件将根据两项评分进行排名:一项是根据主题编辑和审稿人的评估(=科学性评分),另一项是根据评奖委员会的评估(=写作和可读性评分)。评奖委员会由 JAB 编辑委员会成员组成。科学评分:所有向 JAB 投稿的审稿人都要对所审文章的出版优先级进行评分(1-10 分,1 为最高优先级,10 为最低优先级)。每篇稿件至少由两名审稿人审阅,并可能经过多轮修改,每次审阅都会产生一个分数。此外,在竞赛中,我们会要求稿件的主题编辑在稿件被录用时以与审稿人相同的格式对稿件进行评分。写作和可读性评分:评奖委员会根据三个标准对录用文章进行评分:1) 句子的清晰度;2) 句子和段落之间的流畅性;3) 感染力(文章是否具有感染力;读者是否有阅读疲劳感?)委员会成员对录用文章的评分方式与审稿人相同(1-10 分,1 分最高,10 分最低)。科学性得分与写作和可读性得分相加,得分最低(即评分最高)的文章即为冠军,得分次低的文章为亚军。虽然这两项评分不是独立的,但审稿人/编辑和委员会成员在给稿件/文章评分时的侧重点不同。在给文章打分之前,审稿人不会知道作者姓名,因此打分是双盲同行评审的一部分。编辑和委员会成员被要求在评审时不要考虑作者是谁或来自哪里。作为竞赛的一部分,共提交了 11 篇稿件,其中 5 篇被接受发表。毋庸置疑,所有被录用发表的稿件都是对鸟类生物学领域的宝贵贡献。提交的稿件涵盖了广泛的主题,这种广泛性也反映在被录用的文章中。以下是我们对获奖文章和亚军文章的简短评价,以及所有五篇稿件的简短摘要(文章的小作者以粗体标出)。维奥莱塔与斯塔凡-本施(Staffan Bensch)合作撰写了关于迁移遗传学现状的综述(Caballero-Lopez and Bensch 2024),建议我们转变研究迁移的方式,从寻找特定基因转向利用基因表达。这篇论文很好地汇集了关于迁移本体的不同观点,并强调了研究迁移的复杂性,同时还从现有文献中提供了一些很好的例子。该综述在所有五篇被录用的小综述中获得了最高的科学得分,写作和可读性得分与亚军相同。文章结构均衡,行文流畅,并指出了未来的发展方向。Guillaume Dillenseger是2023年JAB评论奖的亚军得主。Guillaume 关于雏鸟寄生虫-宿主相互作用和共同进化轨迹的综述,从一个新的视角探讨了性连锁遗传如何可能有助于寄生鸟类的同类交配(Dillenseger 2024)。该手稿本身就是一个汇编,它讨论了宿主与其育雏寄生虫之间关系中新发现的成分,这些成分可能作为选择性压力或背景,对以前文献中概述的成分起到补充作用。文章的句子、段落和章节逻辑清晰,让读者读来津津有味。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Avian Biology
Journal of Avian Biology 生物-鸟类学
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
56
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Journal of Avian Biology publishes empirical and theoretical research in all areas of ornithology, with an emphasis on behavioural ecology, evolution and conservation.
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