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Guidelines for CSUR Associate Editors

As Associate Editor (AE), you are responsible for reading the submission, assigning reviewers, evaluating the reviews, and making a recommendation for the acceptance or rejection of the paper. The details of these processes are described below. AEs are anonymous to the authors, and get to view and make decisions about unpublished manuscripts. Please read the Guidelines for Reviewers, since the same basic ethics and guidelines apply also to AEs.

Quality and efficiency in reviewing is essential to the success of Computing Surveys. To publish papers in a timely fashion we ask you to respond to all requests to assign reviewers and make recommendations as quickly as possible. Our standard invitation letter to reviewers asks them to return their reviews within [no. here] weeks.

Desk (or Bench) Reject Policy

ACM permits both desk (or bench) rejects and "assisted” desk rejects. Assisted desk rejects are rejections based on the judgment of the EiC or an AE that a paper is either out of scope or so far from acceptable as to make external reviews unnecessary.  Assisted desk rejects may involve obtaining one outside review to corroborate an AE's judgment.  

Articles may be desk-rejected for the following reasons:

    • - Topic is clearly out of scope, irrelevant, or outdated.
    • - The work clearly does not meet sufficient standards of novelty or quality of presentation.
    • - There is plagiarism, self-plagiarism, or simultaneous submission.
    • - The manuscript is incomplete, over the page limit, or incorrectly formatted.

All refereed articles accepted for publication need to have three qualified reviews. Soliciting fewer than three reviews is fine for clear reject cases, but not sufficient for articles that are accepted.  In all cases, the final decision is within the discretion of the Editor-in-Chief.

Authors have the right to appeal such decisions.

Finding Reviewers

An AE is responsible for finding at least three (3) appropriate reviewers with the necessary knowledge and experience for a manuscript, and for supervising the review process until a decision is reached. There are three steps to the invitation process: select, assign, invite.

Assigning reviewers

  1. Log in to Manuscript Central.
  2. Via the Associate Editor Dashboard, click on the “Awaiting Reviewer Selection” queue.
  3. Click on “View Submission” to view the paper.
  4. Click on “Take Action.”
  5. Scroll down to see the results returned from Referee Locator* or to search for an existing reviewer in the system or to create a new reviewer account. NOTE: Before creating a new account for a reviewer, use the reviewer search option to see if there is an account already in the system. This will allow you to choose an existing Manuscript Central account. Please also check whether the email address of the reviewer is still valid.
  6. Click on “Add/Grant REF Role” to assign the selected reviewer.
  7. Click on the “Invite” button to view the draft invitation letter, then send it out.

A reviewer should be able to accept or decline the task automatically. However, in some cases, a separate step must be taken to mark the reviewer as agreed or otherwise, in the system.

To make an immediate decision, such in the case of a desk reject, change the value of the "reviews required to make decision" box from the default value of 3 to 2, 1, or even zero (for instance, in case of minor corrections to be verified by you only).

*Referee Locator

When a paper is submitted, the Manuscript Central Referee Locator tool automatically finds a pool of potential reviewers using an algorithm that looks at the article title, abstracts, keywords, and other metadata contained in the submission. It then compares that information with published papers in the Web of Science from the last five years. 

A pool of potential reviewers is then auto-suggested.  A list of up to 30 reviewers is provided in order of relevancy, providing e-mail addresses as well as links into the Web of Science to view information about their published papers. 

This feature is not intended to replace your AE experience, knowledge, or judgment in selecting reviewers. However, it is one additional tool you will have access to in your search for reviewers.

Review supervision
 

The system automatically sends out reminder emails to the referees. However, automated reminders are easy to ignore, so you, as AE, should check your Associate Editor Center every few weeks at least, to maintain a reasonable turn-around time for the reviews.

Review deadline
 

To grant an extension to a reviewer:

  1. Go to the Associate Editor Dashboard.
  2. Search for the paper (via Manuscript ID or via Manuscript Title).
  3. Click on "Take Action."
  4. Click on “Grant an extension” underneath the referee’s name.
  5. Set the new due date.

You may also ask the journal admin to grant such extensions.

Making a preliminary decision


For each review you will receive an e-mail notification; when all the reviews are completed, you may make your preliminary recommendation that will be sent to the Editors-in-Chief for approval (this decision should take into consideration your own opinion of the paper as well as the general consensus of the referees).

  1. Find a paper in the AE Dashboard, “Awaiting AE Preliminary Decision” queue.
  2. Select the paper, then click on “Take Action.”
  3. Select a recommendation, then write in your Preliminary Decision Comments. These comments are transmitted to the EiC only.
  4. Click on “Create Draft E-Mail,” create, save, then hit “Send for Approval.” The letter is forwarded to the EiC.

For most journals, there are four decision options:

  • Accept a paper when a submission is excellent, and there are no suggestions for improvement.
  • Choose Minor Revision when you feel the paper should be accepted after slight revisions. Minor revisions should be verified by the AE and not sent back to the reviewers. If you intend for the reviewers to verify the revisions, you should NOT choose Minor Revision.
  • Choose Major Revision if a paper has real potential, but a large component should be redone and re-reviewed. In this case, the revised manuscript must be sent to the reviewers for reassessment.
  • Reject a paper when the submission does not meet publication standards.

Handling a revised paper
 

When a revision is submitted, it should be automatically reassigned to you as AE.

  • For a resubmission of a paper with minor revisions, check that the authors have completed the necessary corrections and make your decision as described above.
  • For a resubmission with major revisions, the original reviewers will be automatically selected. However, you must take action to invite some or all of them to review the revised paper.

Accessing previous versions of a revision
 

You have access to all versions of a manuscript. Revisions are indicated by a revision number appended to the manuscript ID (e.g., R1 or R2). To view decision-related correspondence regarding a previous version, scroll down to “Version History” and click on the “Switch Details” button.

Revised and resubmitted files will also include a link to the Author’s response on the header.

When you are on a task-related tab, such as “Invite Reviewers,” the version history will appear on the right side of the screen. Clicking on the “View Review Details” for the previous version will give you the Author’s Response, Decision Letter, and Reviews.

For further instructions


Refer to the ScholarOne tutorial for editors or contact the journal admin.