Open Access
5 March 2012 2011 in Review
Ronald G. Driggers
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Every February, we provide a report to the Optical Engineering constituency on the health of the journal. The report reviews the performance of the journal as well as provides a description of major changes that have happened over the past year. The report also describes important issues that must be addressed along with proposed efforts to keep the journal healthy and relevant.

OE_51_2_020101_d001.pngEvery February, we provide a report to the Optical Engineering constituency on the health of the journal. The report reviews the performance of the journal as well as provides a description of major changes that have happened over the past year. The report also describes important issues that must be addressed along with proposed efforts to keep the journal healthy and relevant.

From Table 1, the number of papers published in 2011 was 587, up from 405 in 2010 and a 45% increase overall. The increase in the number of pages followed this increase closely.

We have been actively recruiting interesting and relevant topics for special sections, so that the number of special section papers published has increased from 39 in 2010 to 71 in 2011 (Table 2). These numbers correspond to 11% and 14% of the journal content, respectively. I expect special section papers to increase in number and settle out at around 20% of the journal content.

Table 1

Major statistics for 2005–2011 and percentage changes from 2010.

20052006200720082009201020112011 vs. 2010
Number of journal pages3750392039663506284232104678+45.7%
Number of technical pages3630380238643410277130974548+46.9%
Number of papers published515525515442360405587+44.9%

Table 2

Regular versus special section papers, received and published, for 2005 to 2011 (including OE Letters).

2005200620072008200920102011
Regular papers received8758268799379399391335
Regular papers published478525500442360366516
Special section papers received62110095145
Special section papers published37015003971

Table 3 provides a summary of the number of papers accepted and rejected. The acceptance rate of regular papers reduced from 46% to 42%. The acceptance rate for OE Letters was still less at 28%. While the acceptance rate has not varied widely over the past few years, it is a knob that can be adjusted to ensure the papers that we accept are of high quality and are likely to be read and cited.

Table 3

Outcomes of regular papers acted on from 2008 through 2011 (OE Letters not included).

2008200920102011
Accepted28839.2%34340.8%37546.1%50742.0%
Declined/Closed44460.4%49358.7%42952.7%69257.2%
Withdrawn30.4%40.5%101.2%100.8%
Total735100%840100%814100%1209100%

The editorial staff at SPIE never stops surprising me. Their efforts are reflected in the next two tables. As shown in Table 4, there was a 31% increase in the number of reviews solicited and a 43% increase in the number of reviews received. In addition, there was a 64% increase in the number of revised manuscripts received. Table 5 is near and dear to all researchers and is related to the amount of time it takes to publish a paper once a manuscript is received. The average time to complete initial review is a number that I monitor for all associate editors. Between the editorial staff and the associate editors, the average time to complete the initial review was reduced from 2.2 months in 2010 to 1.5 months in 2011. The total time in the system, not including revision, was reduced by an entire month (from 4.2 months to 3.2 months). I can’t express enough appreciation for the editorial staff performance nor thank the associate editors enough for the time reduction.

Table 4

Activity of the editorial office in 2011 (all papers).

Number% change versus 2010
Reviewers solicited6637+31.0%
Reviews received3222+43.0%
Revised manuscripts received1072+64.2%
Papers returned to authors for revision 807+28.9%

Table 5

Journal performance.

200620072008200920102011
Average time to complete initial review (months)
Regular papers2.32.01.91.72.21.5
OE Letters1.21.00.80.81.71.1
Average time from acceptance to publication (months)
Regular papers7.46.13.32.02.01.7
OE Letters2.42.82.11.71.21.4
Total time in system (months), not including revision
Regular papers9.78.15.23.74.23.2
OE Letters3.63.82.92.52.92.5

One last set of data is the percentage of papers published by region as shown in Fig. 1. Historically, the papers published in Asia, North America, and Western Europe have been the largest group of papers within the journal. Africa, Australia, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and South America have been small percentages of the journal publication content and remain so. North American contributions are declining significantly, Asia contributions are increasing significantly, and Western Europe contributions are rising slowly. The volume of papers from Asia continues expand, rapidly boosted by China with a 70% increase in paper submissions. I have had numerous discussions with editors of other optics journals regarding this increase in submissions, which is seen across the board. Most of the editors, including myself, have seen an increase in the quality of papers from Asia over the past few years. However, there is still work to do to continue to increase the quality and I will continue to monitor the citation per paper rate as well as other factors to provide the associate editors with guidance for paper acceptance.

Fig. 1

Percentage of Optical Engineering papers published by region.

OE_51_2_020101_f001.png

Finally, there were a number of changes to the editorial board in 2011. We welcomed Jeonghee Choi in image processing, Jay Dawson in laser technology, Dinqyuan Tang in laser technology, Richard Quimby in laser technology, Siva Narayanswamy in optical measurements, Alessandro Rizzi in image processing, and Lianxiang Yang in physical optics. We say “fair winds and following seas” to Van Hodgkin in optical measurements, Jurgen Jahns in optical computing/memory, Greg Quarles in laser technology, Chao Lu in laser applications, and Bob Plemmons in image processing. We really appreciate their service as associate editors for Optical Engineering. The associate editor position is unpaid hard work, and has no reward other than to know you are serving your colleagues.

© 2012 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE) 0091-3286/2012/$25.00 © 2012 SPIE
Ronald G. Driggers "2011 in Review," Optical Engineering 51(2), 020101 (5 March 2012). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.OE.51.2.020101
Published: 5 March 2012
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KEYWORDS
Optical engineering

Laser applications

Image processing

Optical testing

Chaos

Lutetium

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