Editorial

The ‘Editorial’ article from the 2017-2 issue.

Roger Bivand (.na.character)
2017-12-01

In my editorial for the 2017–1 issue, I concentrated on tabulating the status of this journal with respect to its authors and reviewers (updated tables below). This time, I was prompted by an interesting blog posting by Jan Wijffels of BNOSAC, describing the use of the udpipe package to apply natural language processing (NLP) to the CRAN package database available from tools::CRAN_package_db() since the release of R 3.4. The interactive NLP searcher is a dashboard permitting exploration of annotated CRAN package title and description NLP data.

It struck me that an analysis of abstracts of contributed research articles published in the R Journal would now be possible since the introduction of article landing pages earlier this year, because the website configuration file containing the abstracts can be read using the yaml package. Jan Wijffels kindly and rapidly responded, providing an R Journal NLP search tool analogous to the CRAN NLP search tool.

graphic without alt text
Figure 1: Wordcloud for abstracts of contributed research articles: left panel 53 articles 2012–2013, centre panel: 69 articles 2014–2015, right panel: 115 articles 2016–2017.

Figure 1 shows total cumulative wordclouds for the last six years in two-year slices, and indicates that we are, broadly, maintaining topical consistency with a sustained focus on data. The search tool permits much more detailed exploration as well, such as term search to supplement web searches on site:journal.r-project.org.

While we do not have on-site indexing or searching, a tab has been added for news and notes contributions by issue. In this issue, two new columns are initiated, one for news and notes from Forwards, starting with a report on the useR! 2016 survey (see also forwards). The second new column covers teaching R and teaching with R, and kicks off with a note on linking teaching and reproducible research (see also the revisit package). Progress in answering Heather Turner’s appeal to help useRs navigate their way through the R world (editorial, 2011–1) is at best incremental, but progress none the less. A year later, Martyn Plummer pointed out (editorial, 2012–1) that “it is worth spending some time browsing these sections in order to catch up on changes you may have missed.”

From the publication of this issue, fuller benefits from the introduction of landing pages may be realised through the addition of citation page metadata tags, permitting search engines to index contributed research articles more efficiently, thanks to a suggestion by Carl Boettiger. We expect to begin providing DOI for published contributed research articles during 2018 as a further step towards increasing the visibility of the valuable work published here.

We have already added links for supplementary matter (typically reproduction code) on article landing pages, for articles published in this issue. Since the beginning of 2017, submissions were expected to provide scripts permitting reviewers to run code without copying from the manuscript, but previously this was only exceptionally the case, so it may not be practical to provide supplementary matter for articles published in earlier issues.

The wisdom of the editors in choosing to consolidate, and become a listed journal (see Peter Dalgaard’s editorial in 2010–1) is manifest in our current standing in Journal Citation Reports, with a 2016 impact factor of \(1.075\), and a five-year score of \(2.114\). The steps being taken by the editors and the R Foundation should enhance the discoverability and impact of work published here. It is fair to repeat from the 2010–1 editorial that “we need to show that we have a solid scientific standing with good editorial standards, giving submissions fair treatment and being able to publish on time.”

Table 1: Submission outcomes 2009–2017, by year of submission.
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Published 26 26 26 22 31 36 51 74 24
Rejected 11 14 11 24 29 32 53 68 55
Under review 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 65
Total 37 40 37 46 60 68 104 144 144
Table 2: Published contributed articles 2009–2017, by year of publication.
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Page count 109 123 123 136 362 358 479 895 1023
Article count 18 18 20 18 35 33 36 62 68
Average length 6.1 6.8 6.2 7.6 10.3 10.8 13.3 14.4 15.0
Table 3: Median day count from acknowledgement to acceptance and online publication 2013–2017, by year of publication.
2013 2014 2015 2016 2017
Median 347.0 225.5 212.5 212.0 244.0

CRAN packages used

udpipe, yaml, forwards

CRAN Task Views implied by cited packages

NaturalLanguageProcessing, WebTechnologies

Note

This article is converted from a Legacy LaTeX article using the texor package. The pdf version is the official version. To report a problem with the html, refer to CONTRIBUTE on the R Journal homepage.

Reuse

Text and figures are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0. The figures that have been reused from other sources don't fall under this license and can be recognized by a note in their caption: "Figure from ...".

Citation

For attribution, please cite this work as

Bivand, "Editorial", The R Journal, 2017

BibTeX citation

@article{RJ-2017-2-editorial,
  author = {Bivand, Roger},
  title = {Editorial},
  journal = {The R Journal},
  year = {2017},
  note = {https://rjournal.github.io/},
  volume = {9},
  issue = {2},
  issn = {2073-4859},
  pages = {4-5}
}