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so will i classify this as a "publication" on my activities?
i mean we are a very reputable lab and the paper will ofcourse eventually gets published

"Submitted" doesn't mean anything. Theoretically you could, as first and only author, submit your homework the Lancet, the New England Journal of Medicine or Nature -- if you see what I mean.
If your application is otherwise well rounded, I would leave it out. You could later use this as a reason to send an update. If you already mentioned it before, it's not really news either.
More important is the academic reputation of the journal where you hope to publish. There is a hierarchy (roughly reflected by impact points). Keep that in mind, too. A publication in an average journal isn't as impressive as a well-known and respected journal.
Until it's officially "accepted" or at least "under revision", I would leave it out.
Good luck!![]()
Disagree. You're going to mention your research experience, regardless. As a premed, any publication is significant, because the vast majority of premeds won't have any.
You can list the authors, title, then (submitted to X) as a citation on AMCAS. Also, it's very possible a manuscript will be accepted in a month, just depends on the reviewers.
okay so i should not make it a separate thing on my activities but just include it with my research?
im guessing that only when it is accepted i can put in under "publication" as its own space?

so heres the dealio:
1. one pub from lab#1 has been accepted and is in press. Thus i will put the full citation (authors, title, journal, year) and put "(In Press)" in the end.
2. one pub from lab#2 has been submitted. I will put full citation and "(Submitted)" in the end
3. two pubs from lab#2 are in progress. I will put partial citation (author, title) and put "(Manuscript in Progress)"
Question: Which one(s) of the above would I put as a "Publication" on my app under activities?
so heres the dealio:
1. one pub from lab#1 has been accepted and is in press. Thus i will put the full citation (authors, title, journal, year) and put "(In Press)" in the end.
2. one pub from lab#2 has been submitted. I will put full citation and "(Submitted)" in the end
3. two pubs from lab#2 are in progress. I will put partial citation (author, title) and put "(Manuscript in Progress)"
Question: Which one(s) of the above would I put as a "Publication" on my app under activities?
Ignore everyone else except fMRI, jsh52 and my advice.so heres the dealio:
1. one pub from lab#1 has been accepted and is in press. Thus i will put the full citation (authors, title, journal, year) and put "(In Press)" in the end.
2. one pub from lab#2 has been submitted. I will put full citation and "(Submitted)" in the end
3. two pubs from lab#2 are in progress. I will put partial citation (author, title) and put "(Manuscript in Progress)"
Question: Which one(s) of the above would I put as a "Publication" on my app under activities?
I hope this post is a joke because it is terribad advice. Again, this is not a publication. It is like me saying I have a motorcycle when I only have a bicycle. It will make you look like a desperate joke.Disagree. You're going to mention your research experience, regardless. As a premed, any publication is significant, because the vast majority of premeds won't have any.
You can list the authors, title, then (submitted to X) as a citation on AMCAS. Also, it's very possible a manuscript will be accepted in a month, just depends on the reviewers.
I hope this post is a joke because it is terribad advice. Again, this is not a publication. It is like me saying I have a motorcycle when I only have a bicycle. It will make you look like a desperate joke.
Also I am confused how you people write citations for something not even published...authors then title, then journal you submitted to? Not a citatio dude.
And a month for acceptance....gives me enough lols for the rest of the week! Super rare and unless you have a really breakthrough discovery, its not gonna happen in a month. And these are usually in the form of communications or letters. Don't wait, submit your app early, then update them later.
This guy knows what he is talking about. 👍 I would heed his advice OP, but like vickpick said...👍
We submitted 2 weeks ago to Journal of Neuroscience and it's still "under review" and will remain so for quite some time (we are pretty sure we avoided an editorial rejection, so that's one hurdle cleared!). Meanwhile, we will anticipate changes they want us to make, so we are ready to shoot back a final draft when we hear back.
It is better to be honest and not to try and make something out a non-publication and just send updates. That's what I am doing. I will list what I've got at the time I submit my AMCAS, ignoring that I have two additional manuscripts which I will be submitting in early summer. And trying to pass off abstracts as a publication is completely lame lol. I have about a million of them and MAYBE I will list all of them under ONE activity, but not pass them off as a publication.
vickpick said:lol, I love when people ask questions with their minds already made up.
I hope this post is a joke because it is terribad advice. Again, this is not a publication. It is like me saying I have a motorcycle when I only have a bicycle. It will make you look like a desperate joke.
Also I am confused how you people write citations for something not even published...authors then title, then journal you submitted to? Not a citatio dude.
And a month for acceptance....gives me enough lols for the rest of the week! Super rare and unless you have a really breakthrough discovery, its not gonna happen in a month. And these are usually in the form of communications or letters. Don't wait, submit your app early, then update them later.
What are you even talking about here? It has nothing to do with what you posted initially. Initially you said:You're not listing it as a publication or citing something that's indexed on pubmed, you're simply including information about a manuscript you submitted as a research experience. As an admissions committee menber, I think that's information I'd find useful in evaluating someone's candidacy for the purposes of medical school admission. Clearly it's not enough evidence to cite it as a reference on a manuscript, but probably the equivalent of "unpublished data"
It depends on your field. In technical fields such as medical physics/radiology it's certainly possible to have manuscripts accepted in a month, especially in very specialized journals (i.e. American Journal of Neuroradiology). A lot of it depends on the timing of your submission vis a vis major conferences, etc. and the schedule of the specific reviewers.
Furthermore, you are allowed to list citations (and they'll be indexed on pubmed) as soon as a doi # is assigned, if the journal in question e-publishes their material, which most journals do.
So again, if you're not accepted or published, which is the case of this author how do you have a DOI? Answer is you don't. How can you have a "citation?" Answer is you can't. Just admit you were wrong dude, stop trying to backtrack and write stuff everyone agrees on like "e-pub papers get a DOI." Or that the OP should include this on their app. No really? Everyone agrees on that. They are asking if it should be a publication or not, and anyway you twist it, it is not.drizzt3117 said:You can list the authors, title, then (submitted to X) as a citation on AMCAS. Also, it's very possible a manuscript will be accepted in a month, just depends on the reviewers.
What are you even talking about here? It has nothing to do with what you posted initially. Initially you said:
So again, if you're not accepted or published, which is the case of this author how do you have a DOI? Answer is you don't. How can you have a "citation?" Answer is you can't. Just admit you were wrong dude, stop trying to backtrack and write stuff everyone agrees on like "e-pub papers get a DOI." Or that the OP should include this on their app. No really? Everyone agrees on that. They are asking if it should be a publication or not, and anyway you twist it, it is not.
If it is accepted then you should put the title, authors, etc. and in parentheses or something note that it is accepted. Once it is published, you have a publication. Again you should not wait 3 months to turn in your app for a publication. There is this thing called e-mail where you can update schools. I guess for Stanford it's different since you can't update your app unless you get invited for an interview, but in most cases it's not worth it.okay, what if the manuscript (that was submitted) has been ACCEPTED after revisions which we are currently working on? i could then put it as a publication, right?
(refer to Stanford's secondary prompt where they say to write all our publications--including those that have been accepted)
do you guys think it makes sense to put the citation of a manuscript in preparation in AMCAS after providing the research description, and say that it is in prep and will be submitted in late 2011? (so its part of the same activity, "Research Experience," and not separate)
Would this be "wrong"?
do you guys think it makes sense to put the citation of a manuscript in preparation in AMCAS after providing the research description, and say that it is in prep and will be submitted in late 2011? (so its part of the same activity, "Research Experience," and not separate)
Would this be "wrong"?