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Hi All,
what would you all consider to be a competitive number of journal publications prior to internship?
Well, Science & Nature certainly don't exclusively publish neuroscience, but either way it was a gross exaggeration (which was kind of the point). Very few psychologists, neuroscientists, or anyone for that matter is likely to publish there at any point in their career, let alone as a grad student. They are just my "Go to" prestigious journals as they publish stuff in my area so they are first ones that come to mind, are widely known, and carry weight across pretty much all fields. Feel free to insert any other journal of your choosing with an IF > 20🙂 Not that IF is the end all, be all...
More realistically for most of us, a publication in Psych Science, JPSP, Abnormal or JCCP will almost certainly open doors. Not that they are really in the same league as Science/Nature in terms of prestige, but within psychology specifically they are top of the line, though I'm still not certain I'd expect one first-author pub in one to guarantee one would be competitive at research-heavy internships.
Thanks for all the responses! I'm more interested in more clinically based internships. Considering that, how many publications are competitive (and does it matter order of authorship)
Honestly, I'd imagined that what erg mentioned above (i.e., 1) is likely true at many/most sites that aren't highly research-focused. This is, of course, assuming it's an actual peer-reviewed publication, and not an encyclopedia entry or book chapter (not that those aren't necessarily helpful, but they don't carry the same weight, and having too many of them could be a bad thing).
By bad thing, do you mean being seen as not spending your time efficiently/effectively?
Ollie: I agree that not all journals are created equal. My point was that we just don't see the same types of IFs as they do in medicine and basic science. Psychology's ceiling is substantially lower (although psychologists can publish in medical journals, of course).
Thanks for all the responses! I'm more interested in more clinically based internships. Considering that, how many publications are competitive (and does it matter order of authorship)
Essentially, yes. Relatedly, I've heard that having a slew of encyclopedia entry-type pubs can be seen as an effort to build up a CV with a lot of "fluff" over substance.
I think this probably depends on the discipline (i.e. more true in psych than in other social science disciplines) and the context (internship vs. going for faculty job at teaching institution that has low publication expectations anyway). That said, what happens if you simply enjoy writing and your non-peer-reviewed pubs overshadow your J articles? Or if you publish a lot of this type of thing early on, before you figure out the above (bias against lower prestige pubs, need to skew towards peer-reviewed J articles)? Do you just take some of them off your CV? No one is likely to track down your encyclopedia entries anyway.
I wouldn't get rid of it necessarily, but I'd hope that you have something peer-reviewed as well. Also, one of my own pet peeves is when people don't separate peer-reviewed items from non peer-reviewed items. I hate that and I have a negative emotional reaction. I'm not selecting students for internship, but I am sure others feel similarly.
Yeah, it's just that my ratio of peer-reviewed to non-peer reviewed is off. Too many of the latter, too few of the former.
I see that (bold above) a lot, especially for folks who haven't published very much. I'm never sure how to organize the damn thing (i.e. separate sections for J articles and book chapters, both of which include peer-reviewed and non-peer reviewed, or separate section for peer reviewed only, which includes both J articles and book chapters, etc.). I've nosed around and read CVs in my discipline and others and have seen it done both ways. Of course my encyclopedia and other stuff (book reviews, etc.) is separate, but I'm never sure how many OCD subcategories to make.
Well having publications is impressive no matter what, and it is still currency. You've mentioned that you are in a different area as well, so I'd imagine that those non peer-reviewed things may get more weight. But some may view lumping them together as an attempt to misrepresent yourself. I have seen even faculty do this (e.g., put a published abstract with their peer-reviewed articles to make it look like a full publication - ick!).
FWIW, I organize my CV into 4 sections for this kind of stuff: "Peer-reviewed publications", "Manuscripts under review", "Other publications", and "Presentations"
I haven't gotten to the point where specifying further seems practical. But perhaps after a few more invited works, it would make sense to do something like "Book Chapters" and such.
Me too (bold #1)--I usually only bother to look at faculty CVs--I figure most other grad students probably don't know any more than I do about this kind of thing, at least if they haven't been on the job market. I'd say that more often than not, I see "books," "J articles," and "book chapters" separated out by category, regardless of status (p-r vs non-p-r). But I see it the other way too.
Interesting (bold #2). No "works in progress," eh?
This was frowned upon where I was taught. I view it as fluff. Wait until you've submitted it somewhere at least. You could mention "research interests" or something else on the CV to get the point across. But "works in progress" could mean I talked about it with some other student at a bar, but haven't collected any data or started writing as far as I'm concerned.
When I see it on a CV, I have a negative reaction as well.
Had a hunch you'd feel that way.
The one psychologist I know who got an academic job in the last year had a slew of "works in progress" on the most recent copy of her/his CV, but even more published J articles, so I suspect it didn't count against.
There's nothing more annoying than a CV that is pages longer than it should be because someone is trying to inflate their credentials.
Yeah, I agree.
Well having publications is impressive no matter what, and it is still currency. You've mentioned that you are in a different area as well, so I'd imagine that those non peer-reviewed things may get more weight. But some may view lumping them together as an attempt to misrepresent yourself. I have seen even faculty do this (e.g., put a published abstract with their peer-reviewed articles to make it look like a full publication - ick!).
FWIW, I organize my CV into 4 sections for this kind of stuff: "Peer-reviewed publications", "Manuscripts under review", "Other publications", and "Presentations"
I haven't gotten to the point where specifying further seems practical. But perhaps after a few more invited works, it would make sense to do something like "Book Chapters" and such.
I have one or two non-peer-reviewed pubs (e.g., book chapters and the like) along with a couple published abstracts, so I might actually steal those categories from you so that I can group them together rather than needing to have separate sections.
As for encyclopedia entries, I personally don't think there's anything at all wrong with them. I've just heard that if it's ALL you have, for example, it might not look terribly strong.
And re: CV padding, I do sometimes feel mine could currently come across that way with respect to clinical experiences. At the moment, I've got them separated into internship and grad school categories, which I figured would be useful for the postdoc application process, and then within each of those two categories it's further divided into individual practica/rotations. However, given how many such rotations I've had at this point, those two sections alone are somewhere between two and three pages. Definitely need to see if I can somehow cut that down a bit, depending on the type of jobs I'm applying for after fellowship.
I format my CV similarly:
-Peer-reviewed publications (subsection for under review and in revision)
-Book chapters
-Non-peer-reviewed scholarly publications (encyclopedia entries, test reviews, invited commentary, etc)
-Presentations (divide into national and state and local plus non-referred professional)
I've almost always seen book chapters grouped as their own category on faculty CVs, hence why I did the same.
In the past, I've put a couple of manuscripts in preparation just to sure what I was currently working on, but now that I have a decent body of journal articles to my name, I'll likely leave it off.
I format my CV similarly:
-Peer-reviewed publications (subsection for under review and in revision)
-Book chapters
-Non-peer-reviewed scholarly publications (encyclopedia entries, test reviews, invited commentary, etc)
-Presentations (divide into national and state and local plus non-referred professional)
I've almost always seen book chapters grouped as their own category on faculty CVs, hence why I did the same.
In the past, I've put a couple of manuscripts in preparation just to sure what I was currently working on, but now that I have a decent body of journal articles to my name, I'll likely leave it off.
Thanks, future.
So if you have a peer-reviewed book chapter, do you put it in "peer-reviewed," or in "book chapters"?
My own personal preference is that I don't like having entire categories with only 1-2 things under them.
I have never heard of that. How does the review process compare to the review process in a PR journal?
I think that's why sometimes you see folks combining J articles, book chapters, pedagogical publications, book reviews, encyclopedia entries and the like under one heading. Maybe they have 3-5 things and it seems odd to separate by peer-review status, etc.
Yeah, that's the case for me. I have a section for "publications," under which I have two entries... a (non-PR) book chapter and a peer-reviewed article in a journal. It seems silly to separate them into two categories. I also have a section for posters/presentations.
Actually, I just checked my advisor's CV and it turns out there's only two categories: books, and articles and chapters. It's all mashed in there together. Doesn't seem to have hurt her/him any, as s/he's a leader in the subfield.
I think that's why sometimes you see folks combining J articles, book chapters, pedagogical publications, book reviews, encyclopedia entries and the like under one heading. Maybe they have 3-5 things and it seems odd to separate by peer-review status, etc.
Actually, I just checked my advisor's CV and it turns out there's only two categories: books, and articles and chapters. It's all mashed in there together. Doesn't seem to have hurt her/him any, as s/he's a leader in the subfield.