{"title":"JAWRA——展望未来","authors":"Momcilo Markus","doi":"10.1111/1752-1688.13154","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>In the capacity of the recently appointed Editor-in-Chief of the <i>Journal of the American Water Resources Association</i> (JAWRA), I would like to outline some of the issues, challenges and opportunities that are in my opinion going to be relevant to this journal in the foreseeable future. I would also like to comment on possible ways of meeting some of these challenges, ensuring that the journal continues its long and successful tradition of communicating the highest quality research.</p><p>JAWRA, one of the earliest journals on water resources and hydrology, began in 1965 as the Water Resources Bulletin, which was changed to its present name in 1997. Its long history and several decades of experience in publishing state-of-the-art research and applications made this journal highly regarded and recognized among water resources researchers and practitioners worldwide. To maintain its status and prominence in the future and to leverage its past excellence in producing highly impactful research, the journal needs to continue sustaining its visibility, attracting top-quality manuscripts and ensuring the highest professional standards of manuscript review and processing.</p><p>We are all witnessing the exponential rate of the accelerating change of history, driven primarily by technological innovations. For most of today's scientists, it is hard to comprehend that only several decades ago, the internet did not exist. Without search engines and databases, it is hard to imagine scientists who would wait for weeks or even months to receive a copy of a desired journal paper, only to read it and realize that another paper should have been ordered. The internet enabled scientists to transition from traditional extensive procedures to the modern-day efficient processes to search, communicate and collaborate more effectively, producing publications at a much faster rate than before. Moreover, by transitioning to open access and using social media, journals are reaching wider audiences beyond those limited to academic and government agencies, eventually leading to a broader readership and a higher impact. All these changes arguably redefined the publication arena, pressing journals to adopt new practices and standards in the transition to cope with the changes. It remains to be seen if, and to what degree, the emerging artificial intelligence-based tools are going to affect the publication processes. Despite all these changes, the key norms such as research novelty, integrity, and ethics continue to be paramount for JAWRA.</p><p>Along with the technological advances, an increasing globalization has been progressing for decades, clearly and strongly affecting the research and publishing, facilitating communication and collaborations and resulting in research products well beyond what was possible only a few decades earlier. While it is hard to predict the societal, technological, research and other future trends with confidence, some of those changes, nonetheless, appear likely to perpetuate in the future. The increasing impact of the emerging societies such as India, probably already the most populous country in the world, China, which is rapidly moving from emerging to a fully emerged society, Brazil, Ethiopia, and Iran is already evident. These still largely untapped sources of human and institutional potential will make a significant contribution to science in future decades. Being cognizant of the incoming intellectual powerhouses and “markets,” this journal should be well positioned to serve the readership by communicating the worldwide scientific achievements by presenting water issues in such regions and describing approaches to resolve them. The opportunities are immense.</p><p>The review process of incoming manuscripts is another area that has been evolving through time in various ways and is likely to continue doing so. The process relies on the team of associate editors (AEs), recognized scientists who contribute their time and expertise to keep this journal going. AEs, along with a large base of reviewers, are the most valuable asset of this journal. Without them it would not be possible to achieve JAWRA aims and mission. It is our obligation to acknowledge their work and maintain the depth and diversity of the multi-disciplinary expertise of the Editorial Board. With a goal to increase the quality and number of submittals, special attention should be given to making the manuscript review process more efficient. Reduced turnaround times and other measures to streamline the process will further improve and optimize the journal review and publication procedures.</p><p>In the scientific community, journals are typically compared and ranked using the journal impact factor (JIF) (Garfield, <span>2006</span>), which is often used as a proxy to a journal's importance in its field. For each journal, the JIF is calculated for every year as the number of citations received for articles published in the two previous years divided by the total number of articles published in the same 2 years (in 2022, the JIF for JAWRA was equal to 2.4). While it provides a simple way to evaluate journals, many scientists highlight its weaknesses (DePellegrin & Johnston, <span>2015</span>; Werner, <span>2015</span>). Seglen (<span>1997</span>) states that JIFs are determined by technicalities unrelated to scientific quality of the articles. Even the JIF inventor E. Garfield recognized its limitations. “Informed and careful use of these impact data is essential. Users may be tempted to jump to ill-informed conclusions based on impact factor statistics unless several caveats are considered” (Garfield, <span>1994</span>). It is understood that ignoring the weaknesses of JIF data and using measures such as JIF or a more recent CiteScore (Teixeira da Silva, <span>2020</span>) helps publishers promote their journals. On the other hand, it is necessary to avoid overemphasizing these metrics (Cobb et al., <span>2018</span>) and maintain the focus on professionalism, knowledge, integrity, and continuous improvement in manuscript review and processing procedures and practices.</p><p>According to its scope, “JAWRA papers present ideas derived from multiple disciplines woven together to give insight into a critical water issue, or are based primarily upon a single discipline with important applications to other disciplines.” JAWRA's orientation on theoretical and applied water resources-related research has drawn a majority of papers from academic institutions in the United States and worldwide. In addition, JAWRA also attracted a significant number of manuscripts submitted by federal, state and local agencies, and even from industry. Approximately one-fourth of the Editorial Board members represent governmental research groups, which is comparable with a relatively large portion of manuscripts submitted by authors from government agencies. These ties ensure journal uniqueness and are an important contributor to the journal brand and prestige. A good balance between publishing a more theoretical work and applied research with a strong international presence seems to be a winning formula that has provided a niche for this journal in the past and may as well be its blueprint for the future.</p>","PeriodicalId":17234,"journal":{"name":"Journal of The American Water Resources Association","volume":"59 5","pages":"875-876"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1752-1688.13154","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"JAWRA—Looking ahead\",\"authors\":\"Momcilo Markus\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/1752-1688.13154\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>In the capacity of the recently appointed Editor-in-Chief of the <i>Journal of the American Water Resources Association</i> (JAWRA), I would like to outline some of the issues, challenges and opportunities that are in my opinion going to be relevant to this journal in the foreseeable future. I would also like to comment on possible ways of meeting some of these challenges, ensuring that the journal continues its long and successful tradition of communicating the highest quality research.</p><p>JAWRA, one of the earliest journals on water resources and hydrology, began in 1965 as the Water Resources Bulletin, which was changed to its present name in 1997. Its long history and several decades of experience in publishing state-of-the-art research and applications made this journal highly regarded and recognized among water resources researchers and practitioners worldwide. To maintain its status and prominence in the future and to leverage its past excellence in producing highly impactful research, the journal needs to continue sustaining its visibility, attracting top-quality manuscripts and ensuring the highest professional standards of manuscript review and processing.</p><p>We are all witnessing the exponential rate of the accelerating change of history, driven primarily by technological innovations. For most of today's scientists, it is hard to comprehend that only several decades ago, the internet did not exist. Without search engines and databases, it is hard to imagine scientists who would wait for weeks or even months to receive a copy of a desired journal paper, only to read it and realize that another paper should have been ordered. The internet enabled scientists to transition from traditional extensive procedures to the modern-day efficient processes to search, communicate and collaborate more effectively, producing publications at a much faster rate than before. Moreover, by transitioning to open access and using social media, journals are reaching wider audiences beyond those limited to academic and government agencies, eventually leading to a broader readership and a higher impact. All these changes arguably redefined the publication arena, pressing journals to adopt new practices and standards in the transition to cope with the changes. It remains to be seen if, and to what degree, the emerging artificial intelligence-based tools are going to affect the publication processes. Despite all these changes, the key norms such as research novelty, integrity, and ethics continue to be paramount for JAWRA.</p><p>Along with the technological advances, an increasing globalization has been progressing for decades, clearly and strongly affecting the research and publishing, facilitating communication and collaborations and resulting in research products well beyond what was possible only a few decades earlier. While it is hard to predict the societal, technological, research and other future trends with confidence, some of those changes, nonetheless, appear likely to perpetuate in the future. The increasing impact of the emerging societies such as India, probably already the most populous country in the world, China, which is rapidly moving from emerging to a fully emerged society, Brazil, Ethiopia, and Iran is already evident. These still largely untapped sources of human and institutional potential will make a significant contribution to science in future decades. Being cognizant of the incoming intellectual powerhouses and “markets,” this journal should be well positioned to serve the readership by communicating the worldwide scientific achievements by presenting water issues in such regions and describing approaches to resolve them. The opportunities are immense.</p><p>The review process of incoming manuscripts is another area that has been evolving through time in various ways and is likely to continue doing so. The process relies on the team of associate editors (AEs), recognized scientists who contribute their time and expertise to keep this journal going. AEs, along with a large base of reviewers, are the most valuable asset of this journal. Without them it would not be possible to achieve JAWRA aims and mission. It is our obligation to acknowledge their work and maintain the depth and diversity of the multi-disciplinary expertise of the Editorial Board. With a goal to increase the quality and number of submittals, special attention should be given to making the manuscript review process more efficient. Reduced turnaround times and other measures to streamline the process will further improve and optimize the journal review and publication procedures.</p><p>In the scientific community, journals are typically compared and ranked using the journal impact factor (JIF) (Garfield, <span>2006</span>), which is often used as a proxy to a journal's importance in its field. For each journal, the JIF is calculated for every year as the number of citations received for articles published in the two previous years divided by the total number of articles published in the same 2 years (in 2022, the JIF for JAWRA was equal to 2.4). While it provides a simple way to evaluate journals, many scientists highlight its weaknesses (DePellegrin & Johnston, <span>2015</span>; Werner, <span>2015</span>). Seglen (<span>1997</span>) states that JIFs are determined by technicalities unrelated to scientific quality of the articles. Even the JIF inventor E. Garfield recognized its limitations. “Informed and careful use of these impact data is essential. Users may be tempted to jump to ill-informed conclusions based on impact factor statistics unless several caveats are considered” (Garfield, <span>1994</span>). It is understood that ignoring the weaknesses of JIF data and using measures such as JIF or a more recent CiteScore (Teixeira da Silva, <span>2020</span>) helps publishers promote their journals. On the other hand, it is necessary to avoid overemphasizing these metrics (Cobb et al., <span>2018</span>) and maintain the focus on professionalism, knowledge, integrity, and continuous improvement in manuscript review and processing procedures and practices.</p><p>According to its scope, “JAWRA papers present ideas derived from multiple disciplines woven together to give insight into a critical water issue, or are based primarily upon a single discipline with important applications to other disciplines.” JAWRA's orientation on theoretical and applied water resources-related research has drawn a majority of papers from academic institutions in the United States and worldwide. In addition, JAWRA also attracted a significant number of manuscripts submitted by federal, state and local agencies, and even from industry. Approximately one-fourth of the Editorial Board members represent governmental research groups, which is comparable with a relatively large portion of manuscripts submitted by authors from government agencies. These ties ensure journal uniqueness and are an important contributor to the journal brand and prestige. A good balance between publishing a more theoretical work and applied research with a strong international presence seems to be a winning formula that has provided a niche for this journal in the past and may as well be its blueprint for the future.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":17234,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of The American Water Resources Association\",\"volume\":\"59 5\",\"pages\":\"875-876\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":2.6000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-08-07\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1752-1688.13154\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of The American Water Resources Association\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"93\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1752-1688.13154\",\"RegionNum\":4,\"RegionCategory\":\"环境科学与生态学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q3\",\"JCRName\":\"ENGINEERING, ENVIRONMENTAL\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of The American Water Resources Association","FirstCategoryId":"93","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1752-1688.13154","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"环境科学与生态学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, ENVIRONMENTAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
作为最近任命的《美国水资源协会杂志》(JAWRA)主编,我想概述一下我认为在可预见的未来与该杂志相关的一些问题、挑战和机遇。我还想评论一下应对其中一些挑战的可能方法,以确保该杂志继续其传播最高质量研究的悠久而成功的传统。JAWRA是最早的水资源和水文杂志之一,始于1965年的《水资源公报》,1997年改为现名。其悠久的历史和几十年来出版最先进研究和应用的经验使该杂志在世界各地的水资源研究人员和从业者中受到高度重视和认可。为了在未来保持其地位和突出地位,并利用其过去的卓越成果进行极具影响力的研究,该杂志需要继续保持其知名度,吸引高质量的稿件,并确保稿件审查和处理达到最高的专业标准。我们都见证了主要由技术创新驱动的历史加速变化的指数级速度。对于今天的大多数科学家来说,很难理解仅仅在几十年前,互联网还不存在。如果没有搜索引擎和数据库,很难想象科学家们会等上几周甚至几个月才收到一篇想要的期刊论文,结果却读了一遍,意识到应该订购另一篇论文。互联网使科学家能够从传统的广泛程序过渡到现代的高效过程,更有效地进行搜索、沟通和合作,以比以前更快的速度出版出版物。此外,通过向开放获取和使用社交媒体过渡,期刊正在接触到更广泛的受众,而不仅仅局限于学术和政府机构,最终带来更广泛的读者群和更高的影响力。所有这些变化可以说重新定义了出版领域,迫使期刊在转型中采用新的实践和标准来应对这些变化。新兴的基于人工智能的工具是否以及在多大程度上会影响出版过程,还有待观察。尽管发生了所有这些变化,但研究新颖性、完整性和伦理等关键规范仍然是JAWRA的首要原则。随着技术的进步,几十年来,日益全球化的趋势一直在发展,对研究和出版产生了明显而强烈的影响,促进了沟通和合作,并产生了远远超出几十年前可能的研究产品。虽然很难满怀信心地预测社会、技术、研究和其他未来趋势,但其中一些变化似乎可能在未来持续下去。新兴社会的影响越来越大,比如印度,可能已经是世界上人口最多的国家,中国,正在从新兴社会迅速转变为完全崛起的社会,巴西,埃塞俄比亚和伊朗,这些影响已经很明显了。这些在很大程度上尚未开发的人力和机构潜力来源将在未来几十年对科学做出重大贡献。认识到即将到来的知识强国和“市场”,这本杂志应该能够很好地为读者服务,通过介绍这些地区的水问题并描述解决这些问题的方法来传播世界范围内的科学成就。机会是巨大的。对来稿的审查过程是另一个随着时间的推移以各种方式不断发展的领域,而且很可能会继续这样做。这一过程依赖于副编辑(AE)团队,他们是公认的科学家,他们贡献自己的时间和专业知识来维持这本杂志的发展。AE和大量的评审人员是本杂志最有价值的资产。没有他们,就不可能实现JAWRA的目标和使命。我们有义务承认他们的工作,并保持编委会多学科专业知识的深度和多样性。为了提高提交文件的质量和数量,应特别注意提高稿件审查过程的效率。减少周转时间和其他简化流程的措施将进一步改进和优化期刊审查和出版程序。在科学界,期刊通常使用期刊影响因子(JIF)进行比较和排名(Garfield,2006),该因子通常被用作衡量期刊在其领域重要性的指标。 对于每种期刊,每年的JIF是根据前两年发表的文章被引用的次数除以同一年发表的文章总数计算的 年(2022年,JAWRA的JIF等于2.4)。虽然它提供了一种简单的评估期刊的方法,但许多科学家强调了它的弱点(DePellegrin&;Johnston,2015;Werner,2015)。Seglen(1997)指出,JIF是由与文章的科学质量无关的技术细节决定的。就连JIF的发明者E.加菲尔德也认识到了它的局限性。“知情和谨慎地使用这些影响数据是至关重要的。除非考虑到几个警告,否则用户可能会根据影响因素统计得出不知情的结论”(Garfield,1994)。据了解,忽略JIF数据的弱点,使用JIF或更新的CiteScore(Teixeira da Silva,2020)等措施有助于出版商推广其期刊。另一方面,有必要避免过度强调这些指标(Cobb et al.,2018),并保持对专业性、知识、诚信的关注,以及对稿件审查和处理程序和实践的持续改进。根据其范围,“JAWRA论文提出了来自多个学科的想法,这些学科交织在一起,以深入了解关键的水问题,或者主要基于对其他学科有重要应用的单个学科。“JAWRA对理论和应用水资源相关研究的定位吸引了来自美国和世界各地学术机构的大多数论文。此外,JAWRA还吸引了大量由联邦、州和地方机构提交的手稿,甚至来自行业。大约四分之一的编委会成员代表政府研究小组,这与政府机构作者提交的手稿中相对较大的一部分相当。这些联系确保了期刊的独特性,是期刊品牌和声誉的重要贡献者。在出版更具理论性的作品和具有强大国际影响力的应用研究之间取得良好的平衡,似乎是一个成功的公式,它在过去为该杂志提供了一个利基市场,也可能是其未来的蓝图。
In the capacity of the recently appointed Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of the American Water Resources Association (JAWRA), I would like to outline some of the issues, challenges and opportunities that are in my opinion going to be relevant to this journal in the foreseeable future. I would also like to comment on possible ways of meeting some of these challenges, ensuring that the journal continues its long and successful tradition of communicating the highest quality research.
JAWRA, one of the earliest journals on water resources and hydrology, began in 1965 as the Water Resources Bulletin, which was changed to its present name in 1997. Its long history and several decades of experience in publishing state-of-the-art research and applications made this journal highly regarded and recognized among water resources researchers and practitioners worldwide. To maintain its status and prominence in the future and to leverage its past excellence in producing highly impactful research, the journal needs to continue sustaining its visibility, attracting top-quality manuscripts and ensuring the highest professional standards of manuscript review and processing.
We are all witnessing the exponential rate of the accelerating change of history, driven primarily by technological innovations. For most of today's scientists, it is hard to comprehend that only several decades ago, the internet did not exist. Without search engines and databases, it is hard to imagine scientists who would wait for weeks or even months to receive a copy of a desired journal paper, only to read it and realize that another paper should have been ordered. The internet enabled scientists to transition from traditional extensive procedures to the modern-day efficient processes to search, communicate and collaborate more effectively, producing publications at a much faster rate than before. Moreover, by transitioning to open access and using social media, journals are reaching wider audiences beyond those limited to academic and government agencies, eventually leading to a broader readership and a higher impact. All these changes arguably redefined the publication arena, pressing journals to adopt new practices and standards in the transition to cope with the changes. It remains to be seen if, and to what degree, the emerging artificial intelligence-based tools are going to affect the publication processes. Despite all these changes, the key norms such as research novelty, integrity, and ethics continue to be paramount for JAWRA.
Along with the technological advances, an increasing globalization has been progressing for decades, clearly and strongly affecting the research and publishing, facilitating communication and collaborations and resulting in research products well beyond what was possible only a few decades earlier. While it is hard to predict the societal, technological, research and other future trends with confidence, some of those changes, nonetheless, appear likely to perpetuate in the future. The increasing impact of the emerging societies such as India, probably already the most populous country in the world, China, which is rapidly moving from emerging to a fully emerged society, Brazil, Ethiopia, and Iran is already evident. These still largely untapped sources of human and institutional potential will make a significant contribution to science in future decades. Being cognizant of the incoming intellectual powerhouses and “markets,” this journal should be well positioned to serve the readership by communicating the worldwide scientific achievements by presenting water issues in such regions and describing approaches to resolve them. The opportunities are immense.
The review process of incoming manuscripts is another area that has been evolving through time in various ways and is likely to continue doing so. The process relies on the team of associate editors (AEs), recognized scientists who contribute their time and expertise to keep this journal going. AEs, along with a large base of reviewers, are the most valuable asset of this journal. Without them it would not be possible to achieve JAWRA aims and mission. It is our obligation to acknowledge their work and maintain the depth and diversity of the multi-disciplinary expertise of the Editorial Board. With a goal to increase the quality and number of submittals, special attention should be given to making the manuscript review process more efficient. Reduced turnaround times and other measures to streamline the process will further improve and optimize the journal review and publication procedures.
In the scientific community, journals are typically compared and ranked using the journal impact factor (JIF) (Garfield, 2006), which is often used as a proxy to a journal's importance in its field. For each journal, the JIF is calculated for every year as the number of citations received for articles published in the two previous years divided by the total number of articles published in the same 2 years (in 2022, the JIF for JAWRA was equal to 2.4). While it provides a simple way to evaluate journals, many scientists highlight its weaknesses (DePellegrin & Johnston, 2015; Werner, 2015). Seglen (1997) states that JIFs are determined by technicalities unrelated to scientific quality of the articles. Even the JIF inventor E. Garfield recognized its limitations. “Informed and careful use of these impact data is essential. Users may be tempted to jump to ill-informed conclusions based on impact factor statistics unless several caveats are considered” (Garfield, 1994). It is understood that ignoring the weaknesses of JIF data and using measures such as JIF or a more recent CiteScore (Teixeira da Silva, 2020) helps publishers promote their journals. On the other hand, it is necessary to avoid overemphasizing these metrics (Cobb et al., 2018) and maintain the focus on professionalism, knowledge, integrity, and continuous improvement in manuscript review and processing procedures and practices.
According to its scope, “JAWRA papers present ideas derived from multiple disciplines woven together to give insight into a critical water issue, or are based primarily upon a single discipline with important applications to other disciplines.” JAWRA's orientation on theoretical and applied water resources-related research has drawn a majority of papers from academic institutions in the United States and worldwide. In addition, JAWRA also attracted a significant number of manuscripts submitted by federal, state and local agencies, and even from industry. Approximately one-fourth of the Editorial Board members represent governmental research groups, which is comparable with a relatively large portion of manuscripts submitted by authors from government agencies. These ties ensure journal uniqueness and are an important contributor to the journal brand and prestige. A good balance between publishing a more theoretical work and applied research with a strong international presence seems to be a winning formula that has provided a niche for this journal in the past and may as well be its blueprint for the future.
期刊介绍:
JAWRA seeks to be the preeminent scholarly publication on multidisciplinary water resources issues. JAWRA papers present ideas derived from multiple disciplines woven together to give insight into a critical water issue, or are based primarily upon a single discipline with important applications to other disciplines. Papers often cover the topics of recent AWRA conferences such as riparian ecology, geographic information systems, adaptive management, and water policy.
JAWRA authors present work within their disciplinary fields to a broader audience. Our Associate Editors and reviewers reflect this diversity to ensure a knowledgeable and fair review of a broad range of topics. We particularly encourage submissions of papers which impart a ''take home message'' our readers can use.