ABOUT PREPRINTS |
Preprints are drafts of a research paper before peer review and post-prints are drafts of a research paper after peer review. Researchers have always given away their preprints and post-prints in order to increase the impact of their work. The online age has, at last, made it possible for researchers to maximize their work's visibility, usage, and impact by self-archiving their preprints and post-prints in institutional or Publisher Archives, making them openly accessible to all would-be users worldwide. |
About the Server
Asian Education Preprint Repository Based form Academic Practices
Publication of manuscripts in a peer-reviewed journal often takes weeks, months, or even years from the time of initial submission, owing to the time required by editors and reviewers to evaluate and critique manuscripts, and the time required by authors to address critiques. The need to quickly circulate current results within a scholarly community has led researchers to distribute documents known as preprints, which are manuscripts that have yet to undergo peer review. The immediate distribution of preprints allows authors to receive early feedback from their peers, which may be helpful in revising and preparing articles for submission (see Wikipedia: Preprint)