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1 February 2002 2001 in Review
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It has been customary to report on Optical Engineering at the end of each year, and thus this editorial describes the state of this journal at the end of 2001. My first impression looking at the size of the journal over the past three years is that after a large drop in size two years ago, the number of pages and papers bounced back strongly last year and this year the paper count, which I believe is more important than page count, dropped again slightly, as shown in Table 1. It is hard to pinpoint the reason for such a change, but some of the other trends may provide answers.

Part of the explanation may be found in the breakdown between regular papers and those submitted and published in special sections. Table 2 shows a drop of nearly 4 in regular papers published, but publication of special section papers decreased by more than 17. So most of the drop in papers might be attributed to fewer special sections. However, the number of special section papers has decreased in recent years by design. At one time they constituted one-third of all papers. One reason for the drop is that Brian Thompson and I phased out the “local” special sections (“Optics on the French Riviera”) and encouraged both those who are in newly emerging fields and those in traditional optical engineering fields to assemble such sections. But it ain’t easy. Despite their best efforts, editors of these sections find that it takes much the same effort as putting on a conference. One encouraging aspect of the journal statistics is that the number of regular papers submitted increased by nearly 5.

Another reason for the drop in the number of papers is that the percentage of the papers we accepted went down by 2 (see Table 3). This is not a good or bad number. There is no target acceptance quotient. However, the fact that the acceptance quotient remained constant as the number of submissions increased indicates that our reviewers and the Associate Editors take their assignments seriously.

Table 1

Major statistics for 2000-2001 and percentage changes from 2000.
2000 2001 2001 vs 2000
Number of journal pages 3360 2924 −13.0
Number of technical pages 3220 2776 −13.8
Number of papers published 412 385 −6.6

Although OE Letters was instituted in mid-2000 and submissions began to arrive late in the year, the first full year of publication has been, I believe, a good beginning. Certainly our standards as to what constitutes a “rapid publication of short technical communications of significant interest to optical scientists and engineers” have been fairly high since only one-third of the papers submitted are published, as is shown in Table 4. I expect this ratio to rise somewhat. It could be that authors didn’t quite understand our standards and expectations.

In the main, these papers represent research that deserves to be brought to the attention of optical engineers in a timely manner. From that perspective I believe the value of Optical Engineering is enhanced. There is one additional aspect of this new enterprise that has not been examined, and therefore is not presented here—that is, the publication of these papers on SPIE Web as soon as they are accepted. We need to find the number of “hits” at this site. The papers can be accessed at http://spie.org/oe/letters.

In order to show what appears to be a trend, I have included the data for 1999 in Table 5, which gives the distribution of first authors for papers published for the past three years. It would seem there is a definite increase in the number of papers from Asia over the past three years. And for the first time there are more papers from Asia than any other region. The contributions from other regions have changed little.

California continues to be the largest source of papers within the United States, although the output has dropped by one-third. The numbers in parentheses in Table 6 are the number of papers for the previous year.

One reason for the increased submissions from Asia may be the use of electronic submissions. Since Spring 1999, the percentage of e-subs has grown from 20 in that year to 50 last year and to 67 this year. If you are not familiar with the procedure, you can find a description on SPIE Web by typing in http://spie.org/oe and clicking on the Author Information tab.

Table 2

Regular vs special section papers for 2000-2001 and percentage changes from 2000.
2000 2001 2001 ratio 2001 vs 2000
Regular papers published 332 319 82.9 −3.9
Special papers published 80 66 17.1 −17.5
Regular papers received 525 549 +4.6
Special papers received 29 73 +151.7

Table 3

Outcomes of papers acted on in 2000 and 2001 (regular papers only; OE Letters not included).
2000 2001
Accepted 295 62.25 317 60.04
Declined 106 22.36 146 27.65
Closed 67 14.14 57 10.80
Withdrawn 4 0.84 4 0.76
Transferred 2 0.42 4 0.76
Total 474 100 528 100

Table 4

OE Letters statistics for 2000 vs 2001 (began accepting submissions in August 2000).
2000 2001
Letters published 0 20
Letters received 22 61
Accepted 3 25 33.3
Declined 3 50 66.7

Table 5

Number of papers published by region of first author in 1999, 2000, and 2001.
Region 1999 2000 2001
Africa 3 2
Asia 77 119 145
Australia 8 7 2
Eastern Europe 13 19 14
Middle East 10 18 14
North America 108 163 121
South/Central America 6 4 8
Western Europe 51 79 79

Table 6

Number of papers published from the U.S. in 2001 by state of first author. (Numbers in parentheses are the 2000 figures.)
State Number
California (23) 14
Texas (12) 10
Massachusetts (11) 8
Arizona (9); Virginia (5) 6
New York (5); Ohio (5) 5
Alabama; New Jersey 4
Florida; Georgia; Maryland; New Mexico; Tennesee 3
Arkansas; Colorado; Illinois; Michigan; Pennsylvania;
South Carolina
2
Connecticut; Delaware; Idaho; Kentucky; Montan;
Nebraska; New Hampshire: Oklahoma; Oregon;
Washington, DC
1

Table 7

Activity of the editorial office in 2001 (regular papers only, including OE Letters).
Number change vs 2000
Reviewers selected 2023 +8.70
Reviews received 881 +4.14
Revised manuscripts received 335 +6.35
Papers returned to authors
 for revision
399 +2.84
Communication papers received 5 −72.22
OE Letters received 61 +177.27

The review process also benefits from this electronic procedure. Both Associate Editor assignments and reviewer assignments are done by e-mail. Requests to review are done by e-mail with a pdf file containing the abstract attached. With the increased number of papers, the number of reviewers has increased, but the number of reviews has also increased (Table 7). There is a considerable difference between the number of reviewers that were asked to review and the number of reviews received. This doesn’t mean that a lot of reviewers are not responding. It is probably a measure of the willingness of those reviewers we asked to review to do so. Also, many of these reviews were initiated at the end of 2001 and are still in progress.

Although there are always a few papers for which it seems to take forever to arrive at a decision, the response times have been reduced. If the reviewer wishes, we can now send the complete manuscript as a pdf file, also. I thank all of our reviewers who contributed to maintaining the high standards we have come to expect.

I want to thank the members of the Board of Editors for their contributions toward maintaining these standards. I thank Bahram Javidi and Mike Feldman, who have stepped off the Board of Editors, for their effort, and Bill Spillman, who will be leaving us early this year. I appreciate the additional help that new Associate Editors Jiangying Zhou and Touradj Ebrahimi provide to Andy Tescher in information processing, and the expertise that Greg Quarles brings to the assignment and evaluation of papers on lasers.

While the members of the Board of Editors get their timely messages in their e-mail inboxes each week (for me, it’s daily), the continuous work of keeping us on track and making sure the reviewers are reminded, the papers are copy edited, and this collection of pages you hold in your hand gets printed is done by the SPIE journals staff. You will find their names on the masthead of this journal. What they may lack in an understanding of our field, they make up in an attention to the details of publication and a devotion to getting it right and developing our electronic procedures. They have been instrumental in establishing and improving our electronic review process. I am proud to be associated with such a great group of people, the journals staff and the Board of Editors. To be able to assist in providing the optical engineering community with a record of its progress is a wonderful thing. Thank you.

©(2002) Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Donald C. O'Shea "2001 in Review," Optical Engineering 41(2), (1 February 2002). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.1455006
Published: 1 February 2002
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