An research article with with good fabrication details and conclusions can easily pears through any high impact journals, probably those findings should be unique. Although some things has to be kept in mind inorder to have your article for an wider reach.
1. publish your article to your field relevant publisher.
you could very well get to know the requirements for every publisher when you go through their periodic abstract in their web page.👉🏻 “The most easiest way to get the exact publisher for your publication is by just browsing your relavant topic in google and get the idea, where the other authors have dropped their papers”.👈🏻
2. do thorough research and try to understand what you don't understand.
In every area or speciality there are always some popular journals. The criteria which usually our lab follow is to first see if the journal is
1. Published by some scientific body
2. Indexed in some internationally reputed database such as PubMed or Scopus
3. Peer reviewed
4. Has impact factor (least concerned)
5. Has a good track record of publication
These are few things that our lab look for when we try to publish our papers. I guess these are very fair rules and can be generalised to any area or specialisation.
According to my personal opinion, I prefer to select a scientific journal that is indexed in the Scopus or Thomson Reuters database and has an impact factor
I usually choose to publish my paper in a journal that in the area of my research theme, and is a subscription journal that is indexed in a bibliographic database such as Clarivate Analytics, and its citation style is the one that I prefer.
An research article with with good fabrication details and conclusions can easily pears through any high impact journals, probably those findings should be unique. Although some things has to be kept in mind inorder to have your article for an wider reach.
1. publish your article to your field relevant publisher.
you could very well get to know the requirements for every publisher when you go through their periodic abstract in their web page.👉🏻 “The most easiest way to get the exact publisher for your publication is by just browsing your relavant topic in google and get the idea, where the other authors have dropped their papers”.👈🏻
2. do thorough research and try to understand what you don't understand.
Typically, I attempt to align the contents and theme of my paper with the intended journal's scope and covered topics. Also, depending on the scope and magnitude of my study, I also determine whether the manuscript would be better suited for a regional, national, or international journal. Additionally, some employers require that articles be published in journals that are listed in the Cabell's directory.
An author can select a journal based on impact factor (or CiteScore), periodicity, promptness, punctuality, cost involved, the area of circulation (international, national, or regional), prospective audience, and the language of the journal.
Researchers can select any of the three categories of journals – general scientific journals (e.g., ‘Nature’, ‘Science’, ‘Current science’, and American Journal of Science), general discipline journals (in agriculture, the journals such as Experimental Agriculture, Tropical Agriculture (Trinidad), and Indian Journal of Agricultural Sciences can be categorized as general agricultural journals), and specialist journals, which cover major specialties and subspecialties. Please note that for specialist journals, although acceptance rate would be higher, readership and citations would be low.
Open-access journals are research journals that are freely available on the Internet. However, only peer reviewed open access journals qualify as valid publications. Many journals, which come under the three categories mentioned above, are now available as “open access”. Open access increases readership and citations.
Whatever be the periodicity or type, ensue the selected journal has an Impact Factor or CiteScore.