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Knowledge and Information Systems |
If a reviewer feels that his/her decision will be affected, he/she should return the paper to the handling editor, stating the conflict of interest. Examples of cases which could cause conflict of interest include:
Also, if a reviewer feels that his/her confidence in the review is not high (e.g. the technical content of the paper is not in his/her main research area), he/she should return the paper to the handling editor and suggest a more suitable person.
KAIS publishes regular and short papers. A regular paper is either a critical review, discussing the state of the art in an emerging topic area related to KAIS, or a state-of-the-art research report, presenting the results of original research. The title, abstract, introduction, and conclusion of a regular paper should all be informative and coherent. A short paper usually reports on-going research that is original and significant.
Regular papers are normally limited to 8000 words and short papers should have a maximum of 3000 words. Short papers have the same acceptance standard but present results that can be stated more concisely. If a long submission is accepted as a short paper, the results must be presentable in a concise form.
| 3: | Strong Accept (As good as any top paper in reputable journals) |
| 2: | Accept (Comparable to good papers in reputable journals) |
| 1: | Weak Accept (I vote acceptance, but won't argue for it) |
| 0: | Neutral (I don't like it, but I won't object if others like it) |
| -1: | Weak Reject (I would rather not see this paper accepted) |
| -2: | Reject (I would argue to reject this paper) |
| -3: | Strong Reject (Definitely detrimental to the journal quality if accepted) |
The overall recommendation might be: