报告人:Melissa Patterson, Ph.D.
Director of Editorial Development – AIP Publishing
时间:2018年5月9日(星期三)上午11:00点
地点:物理所M236会议室
联系人:杨槐馨(82649857)
Abstract
Getting your research published is the number one priority for most scientists. Having your results appear in a peer-reviewed journal, validates your work and provides you with what you need to advance in your career. Navigating the publishing landscape can be challenging but it is not impossible. Dr. Melissa Patterson, Director or Editorial Development at AIP Publishing will give an insider’s look into scientific publishing. This seminar will aim to provide guidance on how to pick a journal that is a best fit for your research, how to prepare your manuscript so that it gets noticed, how to respond to reviewer comments, what is open access and more.
About AIP Publishing
AIP Publishing is a wholly owned not-for-profit subsidiary of the American Institute of Physics (AIP). AIP Publishing's mission is to support the charitable, scientific and educational purposes of AIP through scholarly publishing activities in the fields of the physical and related sciences on its own behalf, and on behalf of publishing partners to help them proactively advance their missions. AIP Publishing's portfolio includes 31 publications which is comprised of 23 highly regarded, peer-reviewed journals, including the flagship journals Applied Physics Letters, Journal of Applied Physics, and The Journal of Chemical Physics; as well as AIP Conference Proceedings, two magazines, and five Gold Open Access journals.
Brief CV of Melissa Patterson, Ph.D.:
Dr. Melissa Patterson is currently the Director of Editorial Development at AIP Publishing in New York. As Director, Melissa is responsible for overseeing the strategy and development of a subset of AIP Publishing’s portfolio most notably Applied Physics Letters, Journal of Applied Physics, The Journal of Chemical Physics, APL Materials, APL Photonics, and APL Bioengineering. Before joining AIP Publishing in 2012, Melissa received her PhD in Chemistry from Stony Brook University and was a post-doc at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Her research was focused on the fabrication, characterization and reactivity properties of size-selected gas-phase transition metal compound clusters.