mijopaalmc
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2007
- Messages
- 7,172
In general do journals charge a fee for publication, if an article passes their peer-review and editorial policies?
In general do journals charge a fee for publication, if an article passes their peer-review and editorial policies?
Within physics: some do, some don't. Some charge only for, e.g., pages to be printed in color.
If you want to search for more info, these are called "page charges".
Academic affiliation is also in general not required?
I think the concern with page charges is that it enters money into the question of whether a paper is going to be published or not. Say a journal charges $75 per page, with peer review. Can I get them to forego peer review for $100 per page and keep that a secret?
I think you might have mistaken page charges for publication fees. Page charges (and I had to pay some) refer in general to the amount you pay to have a colour figure in your article. Nothing suspicious about that.
I tend to agree with your sentiment as it applies to publication fees. That and the sheer outrage of the matter: I do the work, write the article, some anonymous reviewers review it for free, I format the whole thing and on top I have to pay for it... not for me, tyvm...
So do most of the prestigious, high-impact journals not have publication fees?
In general do journals charge a fee for publication, if an article passes their peer-review and editorial policies?
But ApJ and the like don't have advertisements, right? I can honestly say I've only ever used the online versions.
I can't remember the last time I saw a paper copy! I don't think they have ads.
The download is available through your University library subscription, right?
John Q Public would have to pay a charge or go through the library.