Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,663
A paper by a "good" author in a mediocre journal is probably not a very good paper.
A paper by a mediocre author in a good journal is probably a good paper.
I think this statement doesn't mean too much if you don't define what you mean by a "good paper".
Articles in Nature generally present work that is of broad interest, and that report significant results. Papers in a journal like Phyical Review B, by contrast, are generally not as significant in this regard, and are more likely either incremental advances or only relevant to a small, select audience. But that really says almost nothing about the relative quality of the data, or the reliability of the author's conclusions. In fact, high-profile journals can sometimes be at higher risk of being wrong, since they often get the first submissions on exciting new topics, and the lesser journals get subsequent publications where theories get refined, interpretations corrected, and more extensive data presented. So it's really significance, not reliability, where the high-profile journals have an advantage.