ways to increase your academic visibility

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1 Ways to Increase Your Academic Visibility by Adrian Andreescu , Associate Circulation Editor IJTS The Enigma The aim of scholarly research is to make a contribution to the existing human knowledge. Still, many scholars are aware of valuable articles that are rarely cited in the academic literature. The innovative advances delayed by the cumulative research impact lost cannot be accurately calculated at this moment. Probably eighty years from now, future studies will present detailed  insights  into the causes and consequences of early 21th century’s increased scholarship fragmentation . One Motive (Among Others) A large number of your peers (most of them outside your specific area of research) have a million and one reasons to do something other than spend long hours searching for articles from different fields and trying to find out which of them might offer (against the odds) some novel perspective or unexpected  justification for their own research. A Five-Step Solution to Increase Your Acad emic Visibility 1. Craft your articles for a larger audience. There is no secret that papers grounded in and speaking to multiple fields often have the broadest impact and appeal. If most of your articles do not fall in this category, spend some time trying to identify a different academic audience that currently debates issues to which you could provide an unexpected perspective (concentrate on publishing in international journals across disciplines). Remember that “We are not students of some subject matter but students of problems. And problems may cut right across the  borders of any subject or discipline”. (Karl Popper) As dissemination of scientific publications via the web is becoming more common nowadays, serendipity  is intricately woven within the fabric of a casual Google search. Make sure you write “search-engine friendly” papers (read here and here some useful tips). Present your finding in ways that are credible and persuasive to the readers. Without engaging your expected audience into the text, a flawless logic of complex arguments might have in some cases alienating effects as many potential readers  do not attempt to decipher those academic articles looking

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8/7/2019 Ways to Increase Your Academic Visibility

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Ways to Increase Your Academic Visibility

by Adrian Andreescu , Associate Circulation Editor IJTS

The Enigma

The aim of scholarly research is to make a contribution to the existing human knowledge. Still, many

scholars are aware of valuable articles that are rarely cited in the academic literature. The innovative

advances delayed by the cumulative research impact lost cannot be accurately calculated at this moment.

Probably eighty years from now, future studies will present detailed insights into the causes and

consequences of early 21th century’s increased scholarship fragmentation .

One Motive (Among Others )

A large number of your peers (most of them outside your specific area of research) have a million and

one reasons to do something other than spend long hours searching for articles from different fields and

trying to find out which of them might offer (against the odds) some novel perspective or unexpected

justification for their own research.

A Five-Step Solution to Increase Your Academic Visibility

1. Craft your articles for a larger audience.

There is no secret that papers grounded in and speaking to multiple fields often have the broadest impactand appeal. If most of your articles do not fall in this category, spend some time trying to identify a

different academic audience that currently debates issues to which you could provide an unexpected

perspective (concentrate on publishing in international journals across disciplines). Remember that “We

are not students of some subject matter but students of problems. And problems may cut right across the

borders of any subject or discipline” . (Karl Popper)

As dissemination of scientific publications via the web is becoming more common nowadays,

serendipity is intricately woven within the fabric of a casual Google search. Make sure you write

“search -engine friendly” papers (read here and here some useful tips).

Present your finding in ways that are credible and persuasive to the readers. Without engaging your

expected audience into the text, a flawless logic of complex arguments might have in some cases

alienating effects as many potential readers do not attempt to decipher those academic articles looking

8/7/2019 Ways to Increase Your Academic Visibility

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like an impenetrable thicket of words. In case you have been socialized into the norms of writing

through a process of implicit learning, you might appreciate some articulated suggestions on academic

discourse from peers like Sternberg (here ), Boellstorff (here and here ), Ellis (here ), Bem (here and

here ), Caulley (here ), Weick (here ), Frank (here ), Fer nández -Ríos & Buela -Casal (here ) or Knox

(here ).

2. Submit your articles to suitable journals.

Don’t aim only at those journals that are rejecting over 80% of the manuscripts submitted for

consideration as this narrow approach might imply in the end a lot of frustration for you, a delay in

publication and an inefficient use of reviewers’ time and energy.

3. Self-archive your papers.Why it is very important to self archive your academic articles in a repository ? Because the goal of your

dissemination activity should be to maximise research usage and impact . Try to avoid uploading your

papers exclusively in institutional repositories that are not open to public access. Better solutions are

currently available (e.g., Social Science Research Network , The Social Science Open Access

Repository , HAL , CogPrints , Hprints , OpenDepot , ResearchGate ). Self-archiving is easy ! As many

articles can be self-archived in compliance with publisher policy , put them on the paths that most

scholars use when they explore the information jungle. Open repositories are especially useful when

your are not publishing in journals that have sufficient mass to make your work rapidly visible to a

wider international audience.

A brief synthesis relevant to the OA/non-OA debate, can be found in an article published not long ago in

Journal of Clinical Psychology:

“Harnad and Brody (2004) compared the c itation counts of individual OA and non-OA physics articles

appearing in the same (non-OA) journals (The OA articles in non-OA journals were made OA by their

authors through self-archived eprints ).They found citation advantages for OA articles of 200 to 300% ,depending on the publication year. Similar studies have compared OA and non-OA articles in

astronomy, computer science, electrical engineering, mathematics, philosophy, and political science,

finding OA impact advantage rates of 25 to 250% (Antelman, 2004; Eysenbach, 2006; Hajjem, Harnad,

& Gingras, 2005b; Kurtz et al., 2005a; Lawrence, 2001), with an average OA advantage of 93.2% in

psychology (Hajjem et al., 2005a).[…] Scholars wishing to maximize the diffusion of their research

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among the professional community should deposit eprints of their work in OA archives. There are no

copyright or other legal barriers to this OA strategy, with 91% of research journals (including all APA

and Wiley journals) already giving their explicit green light to authors self-archiving of pre- or

postprints (Eprints, 2008). One hundred percent OA is a reachable goal.”

4. Be committed to disseminate the findings of your work.

A “CERN for social scientists” is unlikely to be created in the next decades. In this context, you should

become more involved in the dissemination of your papers . As stated by Shelley E. Taylor in her article ,

“marketing papers, a concept alien to some scientists, is increasingly important if we are to reach the

multiple fields to which our work may contribute. […] We can send our papers out to a target audience

that might otherwise not read the journal. Authors might be well advised to create a list of people in

other fields unlikely to otherwise encounter the paper and e- mail it to them.”

5. Network curiously and habitually with other scholars.

You might consider creating an account on a site like Academia.edu . Your profile should not be limited

to your name and the email address. Upload a photo, your papers, select at least some relevant research

interests, “follow” the profiles of your peers, etc. Give others a chance to find out more about your

work! Uncuriosity can be dangerously comfortable especially within the sophisticated, intellectual world

of Academe. In the effort to raise your long-term visibility and impact, you must become aware of novel

research opportunities. Also, remain curious about big, intractable problems and invest at least one

hour/week for online interaction with scholars from outside your niche research area. Keep in mind that

theoretical innovation and new findings come often through cross-fertilization and interdisciplinary

research.

Note: You can help scholarly research circulate and interact more freely by forwarding the above

educational hypertext to your peers or by posting it on any academic blog or listserv, under the Creative

Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 . The author does not assume and hereby

disclaims any liability to any party for any loss or damage resulting from the unappropriate use of

information mentioned in Ways to Increase Your Academic Visibility (the webpages and their contents

are provided on an "as is" basis, without warranty of any kind, either express or implied from the

author). Sept. 2010