The Journal of Open Source Software (JOSS) conducts all peer review and editorial processes in the open, on the GitHub issue tracker.
JOSS editors manage the review workflow with the help of our bot, @editorialbot . The bot is summoned with commands typed directly on the GitHub review issues. For a list of commands, type: @editorialbot commands .
To learn more about @editorialbot ’s functionalities, take a look at our dedicated guide.
Once a submission comes in, it will be in the queue for a quick check by the Editor-in-chief (EiC). From there, it moves to a PRE-REVIEW issue, where the EiC will assign a handling editor, and the author can suggest reviewers. Initial direction to the authors for improving the paper can already happen here, especially if the paper lacks some requested sections.
If the paper is out-of-scope for JOSS, editors assess this and notify the author in the PRE-REVIEW issue.
The EiC assigns an editor (or a volunteering editor self-assigns) with the command @editorialbot assign @username as editor in a comment.
If a paper is submitted without a recommended editor, it will show up in the weekly digest email under the category ‘Papers currently without an editor.’ Please review this weekly email and volunteer to edit papers that look to be in your domain. If you choose to be an editor in the issue thread type the command @editorialbot assign @yourhandle as editor
By default, unless an editor volunteers, the Associated Editor-in-chief (AEiC) on duty will attempt to assign an incoming paper to the most suitable handling editor. While AEiCs will make every effort to match a submission with the most appropriate editor, there are a number of situations where an AEiC may assign a paper to an editor that doesn’t fit entirely within the editor’s research domains:
In most cases, an AEiC will ask one or more editors to edit a submission (e.g. @editor1, @editor 2 - would one of you be willing to edit this submission for JOSS ). If the editor doesn’t respond within ~3 working days, the AEiC may assign the paper to the editor regardless.
At this point, the handling editor’s job is to identify reviewers who have sufficient expertise in the field of software and in the field of the submission. JOSS papers have to have a minimum of two reviewers per submission, except for papers that have previously been peer-reviewed via rOpenSci. In some cases, the editor also might want to formally add themself as one of the reviewers. If the editor feels particularly unsure of the submission, a third (or fourth) reviewer can be recruited.
To recruit reviewers, the handling editor can mention them in the PRE-REVIEW issue with their GitHub handle, ping them on Twitter, or email them. After expressing initial interest, candidate reviewers may need a longer explanation via email. See sample reviewer invitation email, below.
Once a reviewer accepts, the handling editor runs the command @editorialbot assign @username as reviewer in the PRE-REVIEW issue. Add more reviewers with the command @editorialbot add @username as reviewer .
The assign command clobbers all reviewer assignments. If you want to add an additional reviewer use the add command.
Next, run the command @editorialbot start review . If you haven’t assigned an editor and reviewer, this command will fail and @editorialbot will tell you this. This will open the REVIEW issue, with prepared review checklists for each reviewer, and instructions. The editor should close the PRE-REVIEW issue, at this point, and move the conversation to the separate REVIEW issue.
The REVIEW issue contains some instructions, and reviewer checklists. The reviewer(s) should check off items of the checklist one-by-one, until done. In the meantime, reviewers can engage the authors freely in a conversation aimed at improving the paper.
If a reviewer recants their commitment or is unresponsive, editors can remove them with the command @editorialbot remove @username as reviewer . You can also add new reviewers in the REVIEW issue, but in this case, you need to manually add a review checklist for them by editing the issue body.
Comments in the REVIEW issue should be kept brief, as much as possible, with more lengthy suggestions or requests posted as separate issues, directly in the submission repository. A link-back to those issues in the REVIEW is helpful.
When the reviewers are satisfied with the improvements, we ask that they confirm their recommendation to accept the submission.
When a submission is accepted, we ask that the authors create an archive (on Zenodo, figshare, or other) and post the archive DOI in the REVIEW issue. The editor should run the command @editorialbot set as archive , and ping the EiC for final processing.
At that point, the EiC/AEiC will take over to publish the paper.
It’s also a good idea to ask the authors to check the proof. We’ve had a few papers request a post-publication change of author list, for example—this requires a manual download/compile/deposit cycle and should be a rare event.
If a paper has already been reviewed and accepted by rOpenSci, the streamlined JOSS review process is:
Dear Dr. Jekyll, I found you following links from the page of The Super Project and/or on Twitter. This message is to ask if you can help us out with a submission to JOSS (The Journal of Open Source Software), where I’m an editor. JOSS publishes articles about open source research software. The submission I'd like you to review is titled: "great software name here" and the submission repository is at: https://github.com/ < … >JOSS is a free, open-source, community driven and developer-friendly online journal (no publisher is seeking to raise revenue from the volunteer labor of researchers!). The review process at JOSS is unique: it is open and author-reviewer-editor conversations are encouraged. JOSS reviews involve downloading and installing the software, and inspecting the repository and submitted paper for key elements. See https://joss.readthedocs.io/en/latest/review_criteria.html Editors and reviewers post comments on the Review issue, and authors respond to the comments and improve their submission until acceptance (or withdrawal, if they feel unable to satisfy the review). Would you be able to review this submission for JOSS? If not, can you recommend someone from your team to help out? Kind regards, JOSS Editor.
Step 1: An author submits a paper.
The author can choose to select an preferred editor based on the information available in our biographies. This can be changed later.
Step 2: If you are selected as an editor you get @-mentioned in the pre-review issue.
This doesn’t mean that you’re the editor, just that you’ve been suggested by the author.
Step 3: Once you are the editor, find the link to the code repository in the pre-review issue
Step 4: The editor looks at the software submitted and checks to see if:
Step 5: The editor responds to the author saying that things look in line (or not) and will search for reviewer
Step 6: The editor finds >= 2 reviewers
Step 7: Editor tells Editorialbot to assign the reviewer to the paper
Step 8: Create the actual review issue
Step 9: Close the pre-review issue
Step 10: The actual JOSS review
Step 11: The editor pings the EiC team to get the paper published
Step 12: Celebrate publication! Tweet! Thank reviewers! Say thank you on issue.
Editorial flow
As documented above, usually, papers will be assigned to you by one of the AEiCs. We ask that editors do their best to respond in a timely fashion (~ 3 working days) to invites to edit a new submission.
As an editor, part of your role is to ensure that submissions you’re responsible for are progressing smoothly through the editorial process. This means that once or twice per week we ask that you check your GitHub notifications and/or your editorial dashboard (e.g. http://joss.theoj.org/dashboard/youreditorname ) for updates to the papers you are handling.
If reviews go stale
Sometimes reviews go quiet, either because a reviewer has failed to complete their review or an author has been slow to respond to a reviewer’s feedback. As the editor, we need you to prompt the author/or reviewer(s) to revisit the submission if there has been no response within 7-10 days unless there’s a clear statement in the review thread that says an action is coming at a slightly later time, perhaps because a reviewer committed to a review by a certain date, or an author is making changes and says they will be done by a certain date.
Editorialbot has functionality to remind an author or review to return to a review at a certain point in the future. For example:
@editorialbot remind @reviewer in five days
Sometimes we need time away from our editing duties at JOSS. The joss-reviews repository has the OoO bot installed which means you can mark yourself as out of the office (and unable to respond to reviews) for a period of time e.g.:
Mark yourself as OoO in one of the reviews you’re editing in the joss-reviews repository like this:
/ooo January 18 until February 2
Ooo bot will then respond to any mentions in the joss-reviews repository to let people know you’re away.
Note, if you’re planning on being out of the office for more than two weeks, please let the JOSS editorial team know.
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