in general, high quality publications increase the thesis and researcher rank. but it is not indication about the thesis quality, and it is not a condition in all ,
Not necessarily. I had published 6 papers prior to defending my PhD dissertation. It just depends on the quality of work that determines if it is publication-worthy.
in general, high quality publications increase the thesis and researcher rank. but it is not indication about the thesis quality, and it is not a condition in all ,
No; it's unnecessary. Typically, most peer-reviewed journals employ some forms of blind or double-blind reviews. Usually, most folks who review articles have no clue as to the identity of the author. Normally, they're concerned with the quality and originality of the manuscript.
Not at all, all accepted papers have some quality.......as mentioned by daniel, its true.....well it depends on journal as well....some journals have a lot of fees to pay specifically impact factor one....which is not possible for everyone to pay.......so authors prefer to scoup index or refereed journals......which has very high quality journals....while for PhD, it not necessary to have it....
Not at all! There is no limitation of the PhD requirement. It depends on your supervisor-mode! No paper is okay, One paper is also oaky, and sometimes four five paper in high quality journal never works! They can award you PhD degree without any publication, based on single paper and thesis of the same paper too...!
PhD depends on the project. The publication is not a necessary condition for the Phd, a good quality paper during phd could be the criteria of the institution.
@A. A. Yusuf nothing like indirect proportionality here. The question was asked to know if having PhD has any positive effect on art of writing for publication, and even at that both do not, in anyway, have opposite relationship. Having PhD is a not a joke and definitely it adds tastes to effective writing. I am not saying having PhD is primary for high quality publication, however, undergoing more training to earn the highest degree therefore is something rhetoric in this sense without any confusion. MY CANDID OPINION
Peer-reviewed publications are the bread and butter of the academic world. The quantity and quality of papers a researcher publishes can influence job applications, grant applications, performance reviews, and promotions. Publishing in itself is not a guarantee of conferral of your degree, and quality may be more important than quantity.