时间:4月20日(周五)10:30
地点:科技创新大楼5楼学术报告厅
报告人:CHEN Long
Publishing
in Nature Communications
Abstract: The
past five years have witnessed the rapid growth of Nature Communications, the
flagship open access journal in Springer Nature. In 2016, about 34,500 manuscripts
were submitted to Nature Communications, with 13% of them from the mainland of
China. However, the acceptance rate for the submissions from China is
conspicuously lower than that from Europe, North America, and even other
regions in East Asia. In order to help improve the acceptance rate, in this
talk, I will first present what the editors of Nature and Nature Research
Journals look for in the manuscripts they want to publish. Next, I will clarify
the key editorial difference between Nature, the Nature Research journals and
Nature Communications, and specify how to publish a paper in Nature
Communications. At last, some of the benefits of open access will be briefly
discussed.
Biography: Dr. Long Chen Joined Springer Nature
and worked as an associate editor for Nature Communications in the office of
New York since June 2017. He earned his PhD in physical chemistry under the
supervision of Prof. Xiaolai Wang from Lanzhou Institute of Chemical Physics,
Chinese Academy of Sciences, in 2009. Then he was trained as a postdoctoral
researcher by Prof. Edward Sacher and Prof. Arthur Yelon in Ecole Polytechnique
of Montreal, Prof. D. Wayne Goodman in Texas A&M University, and Dr. Zdenek
Dohnalek and Dr. Bruce Kay in Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. His
research is mainly focused on surface science and heterogeneous catalysis. He
has authored and co-authored more than 30 papers in J. Am. Chem. Soc., ACS
Catal., ACS Nano, J. Phys. Chem. B/C etc. in his research fields.