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Citing an accepted manuscript that hasn't yet been published
Is it necessary to include and update the status of a paper on arXiv once it has been accepted for publication in a journal?Can I put my accepted-but-not-yet-on-IEEEXplore paper online?Should I cite my undergraduate thesis in my paper?Am I allowed to submit to a journal, a paper that was accepted to a conference but not presented yet?Can a MS thesis advisor require a conference publication as a thesis acceptance requirement?Does a Conference Issue of a journal count the same as a journal paper in economics?Submit an article to a conference, which contains a section that has been already publishedMy master's thesis is extremely similar to an article that had already been published. Is that okay?How to submit two separate works simultaneously to two conferences when the works are similar in a few parts?Is it ethical/legal to publish Master thesis manuscript as a journal paper?
I'm writing a thesis for the master degree.
I'm going to include one of my conference paper in my thesis and I understand that it is common and acceptable for school regulations to include already published papers of my own work in my thesis.
But there is one problem. The defense of my thesis will be held in mid-April and this thesis will be submitted by the end of April.
But a paper I'm going to include in the thesis has been accepted by a conference and will be published sometime in June.
So, how can I cite my conference paper in the process of publication in my thesis?
publications thesis paper-submission
New contributor
add a comment |
I'm writing a thesis for the master degree.
I'm going to include one of my conference paper in my thesis and I understand that it is common and acceptable for school regulations to include already published papers of my own work in my thesis.
But there is one problem. The defense of my thesis will be held in mid-April and this thesis will be submitted by the end of April.
But a paper I'm going to include in the thesis has been accepted by a conference and will be published sometime in June.
So, how can I cite my conference paper in the process of publication in my thesis?
publications thesis paper-submission
New contributor
Have you asked your advisor/supervisor?
– Thomas
yesterday
@Thomas It's spring break of my school, so I asked here first.
– Gyuhong Lee
yesterday
Ask your supervisor, even though it is a spring break they will normally check email etc and reply - but probably slower than normal...
– Solar Mike
yesterday
add a comment |
I'm writing a thesis for the master degree.
I'm going to include one of my conference paper in my thesis and I understand that it is common and acceptable for school regulations to include already published papers of my own work in my thesis.
But there is one problem. The defense of my thesis will be held in mid-April and this thesis will be submitted by the end of April.
But a paper I'm going to include in the thesis has been accepted by a conference and will be published sometime in June.
So, how can I cite my conference paper in the process of publication in my thesis?
publications thesis paper-submission
New contributor
I'm writing a thesis for the master degree.
I'm going to include one of my conference paper in my thesis and I understand that it is common and acceptable for school regulations to include already published papers of my own work in my thesis.
But there is one problem. The defense of my thesis will be held in mid-April and this thesis will be submitted by the end of April.
But a paper I'm going to include in the thesis has been accepted by a conference and will be published sometime in June.
So, how can I cite my conference paper in the process of publication in my thesis?
publications thesis paper-submission
publications thesis paper-submission
New contributor
New contributor
edited yesterday
user2768
14.9k23859
14.9k23859
New contributor
asked yesterday
Gyuhong LeeGyuhong Lee
163
163
New contributor
New contributor
Have you asked your advisor/supervisor?
– Thomas
yesterday
@Thomas It's spring break of my school, so I asked here first.
– Gyuhong Lee
yesterday
Ask your supervisor, even though it is a spring break they will normally check email etc and reply - but probably slower than normal...
– Solar Mike
yesterday
add a comment |
Have you asked your advisor/supervisor?
– Thomas
yesterday
@Thomas It's spring break of my school, so I asked here first.
– Gyuhong Lee
yesterday
Ask your supervisor, even though it is a spring break they will normally check email etc and reply - but probably slower than normal...
– Solar Mike
yesterday
Have you asked your advisor/supervisor?
– Thomas
yesterday
Have you asked your advisor/supervisor?
– Thomas
yesterday
@Thomas It's spring break of my school, so I asked here first.
– Gyuhong Lee
yesterday
@Thomas It's spring break of my school, so I asked here first.
– Gyuhong Lee
yesterday
Ask your supervisor, even though it is a spring break they will normally check email etc and reply - but probably slower than normal...
– Solar Mike
yesterday
Ask your supervisor, even though it is a spring break they will normally check email etc and reply - but probably slower than normal...
– Solar Mike
yesterday
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
How can I cite a conference paper that has been accepted but not published?
Cite the paper as if it were published (albeit without page numbers, etc.) and add to appear at the end of the citation.
1
As someone who once had issues with a committee on this, I would suggest the more unambiguous "in press".
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
@MartinArgerami I've never seen such usage, but that seems perfectly reasonable. Looking for some numbers: to appear has ~4.01 million hits (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22to+appear%22) whereas in press has ~4.19 million (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22in+press%22)
– user2768
yesterday
@user2768 I don't trust that count; "et al" only shows up 10 million times. ;)
– Yakk
yesterday
add a comment |
1) Check with your supervisor.
2) G. Lee & A. Supervisor (2019) "Awesome Conference Paper", in Very Good Conference Proceedings, accepted.
New contributor
3
I think "to appear" is more common than "accepted"
– Thomas
yesterday
I'll accept that. Published conference proceedings aren't really a thing in my field.
– masher
yesterday
@Thomas: I agree that is more common, but I once had to go throuh an unpleasant situation due to (active research) faculty members not knowing what it meant.
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
add a comment |
The way I know it, you'd do:
G. Lee & A. Supervisor (t.a.) "Awesome Conference Paper", to appear in Very Good Conference Proceedings.
(Shamelessly stealing all the words from masher's answer.)
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
How can I cite a conference paper that has been accepted but not published?
Cite the paper as if it were published (albeit without page numbers, etc.) and add to appear at the end of the citation.
1
As someone who once had issues with a committee on this, I would suggest the more unambiguous "in press".
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
@MartinArgerami I've never seen such usage, but that seems perfectly reasonable. Looking for some numbers: to appear has ~4.01 million hits (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22to+appear%22) whereas in press has ~4.19 million (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22in+press%22)
– user2768
yesterday
@user2768 I don't trust that count; "et al" only shows up 10 million times. ;)
– Yakk
yesterday
add a comment |
How can I cite a conference paper that has been accepted but not published?
Cite the paper as if it were published (albeit without page numbers, etc.) and add to appear at the end of the citation.
1
As someone who once had issues with a committee on this, I would suggest the more unambiguous "in press".
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
@MartinArgerami I've never seen such usage, but that seems perfectly reasonable. Looking for some numbers: to appear has ~4.01 million hits (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22to+appear%22) whereas in press has ~4.19 million (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22in+press%22)
– user2768
yesterday
@user2768 I don't trust that count; "et al" only shows up 10 million times. ;)
– Yakk
yesterday
add a comment |
How can I cite a conference paper that has been accepted but not published?
Cite the paper as if it were published (albeit without page numbers, etc.) and add to appear at the end of the citation.
How can I cite a conference paper that has been accepted but not published?
Cite the paper as if it were published (albeit without page numbers, etc.) and add to appear at the end of the citation.
answered yesterday
user2768user2768
14.9k23859
14.9k23859
1
As someone who once had issues with a committee on this, I would suggest the more unambiguous "in press".
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
@MartinArgerami I've never seen such usage, but that seems perfectly reasonable. Looking for some numbers: to appear has ~4.01 million hits (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22to+appear%22) whereas in press has ~4.19 million (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22in+press%22)
– user2768
yesterday
@user2768 I don't trust that count; "et al" only shows up 10 million times. ;)
– Yakk
yesterday
add a comment |
1
As someone who once had issues with a committee on this, I would suggest the more unambiguous "in press".
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
@MartinArgerami I've never seen such usage, but that seems perfectly reasonable. Looking for some numbers: to appear has ~4.01 million hits (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22to+appear%22) whereas in press has ~4.19 million (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22in+press%22)
– user2768
yesterday
@user2768 I don't trust that count; "et al" only shows up 10 million times. ;)
– Yakk
yesterday
1
1
As someone who once had issues with a committee on this, I would suggest the more unambiguous "in press".
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
As someone who once had issues with a committee on this, I would suggest the more unambiguous "in press".
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
@MartinArgerami I've never seen such usage, but that seems perfectly reasonable. Looking for some numbers: to appear has ~4.01 million hits (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22to+appear%22) whereas in press has ~4.19 million (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22in+press%22)
– user2768
yesterday
@MartinArgerami I've never seen such usage, but that seems perfectly reasonable. Looking for some numbers: to appear has ~4.01 million hits (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22to+appear%22) whereas in press has ~4.19 million (scholar.google.co.uk/scholar?q=%22in+press%22)
– user2768
yesterday
@user2768 I don't trust that count; "et al" only shows up 10 million times. ;)
– Yakk
yesterday
@user2768 I don't trust that count; "et al" only shows up 10 million times. ;)
– Yakk
yesterday
add a comment |
1) Check with your supervisor.
2) G. Lee & A. Supervisor (2019) "Awesome Conference Paper", in Very Good Conference Proceedings, accepted.
New contributor
3
I think "to appear" is more common than "accepted"
– Thomas
yesterday
I'll accept that. Published conference proceedings aren't really a thing in my field.
– masher
yesterday
@Thomas: I agree that is more common, but I once had to go throuh an unpleasant situation due to (active research) faculty members not knowing what it meant.
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
add a comment |
1) Check with your supervisor.
2) G. Lee & A. Supervisor (2019) "Awesome Conference Paper", in Very Good Conference Proceedings, accepted.
New contributor
3
I think "to appear" is more common than "accepted"
– Thomas
yesterday
I'll accept that. Published conference proceedings aren't really a thing in my field.
– masher
yesterday
@Thomas: I agree that is more common, but I once had to go throuh an unpleasant situation due to (active research) faculty members not knowing what it meant.
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
add a comment |
1) Check with your supervisor.
2) G. Lee & A. Supervisor (2019) "Awesome Conference Paper", in Very Good Conference Proceedings, accepted.
New contributor
1) Check with your supervisor.
2) G. Lee & A. Supervisor (2019) "Awesome Conference Paper", in Very Good Conference Proceedings, accepted.
New contributor
New contributor
answered yesterday
mashermasher
1312
1312
New contributor
New contributor
3
I think "to appear" is more common than "accepted"
– Thomas
yesterday
I'll accept that. Published conference proceedings aren't really a thing in my field.
– masher
yesterday
@Thomas: I agree that is more common, but I once had to go throuh an unpleasant situation due to (active research) faculty members not knowing what it meant.
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
add a comment |
3
I think "to appear" is more common than "accepted"
– Thomas
yesterday
I'll accept that. Published conference proceedings aren't really a thing in my field.
– masher
yesterday
@Thomas: I agree that is more common, but I once had to go throuh an unpleasant situation due to (active research) faculty members not knowing what it meant.
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
3
3
I think "to appear" is more common than "accepted"
– Thomas
yesterday
I think "to appear" is more common than "accepted"
– Thomas
yesterday
I'll accept that. Published conference proceedings aren't really a thing in my field.
– masher
yesterday
I'll accept that. Published conference proceedings aren't really a thing in my field.
– masher
yesterday
@Thomas: I agree that is more common, but I once had to go throuh an unpleasant situation due to (active research) faculty members not knowing what it meant.
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
@Thomas: I agree that is more common, but I once had to go throuh an unpleasant situation due to (active research) faculty members not knowing what it meant.
– Martin Argerami
yesterday
add a comment |
The way I know it, you'd do:
G. Lee & A. Supervisor (t.a.) "Awesome Conference Paper", to appear in Very Good Conference Proceedings.
(Shamelessly stealing all the words from masher's answer.)
add a comment |
The way I know it, you'd do:
G. Lee & A. Supervisor (t.a.) "Awesome Conference Paper", to appear in Very Good Conference Proceedings.
(Shamelessly stealing all the words from masher's answer.)
add a comment |
The way I know it, you'd do:
G. Lee & A. Supervisor (t.a.) "Awesome Conference Paper", to appear in Very Good Conference Proceedings.
(Shamelessly stealing all the words from masher's answer.)
The way I know it, you'd do:
G. Lee & A. Supervisor (t.a.) "Awesome Conference Paper", to appear in Very Good Conference Proceedings.
(Shamelessly stealing all the words from masher's answer.)
answered yesterday
sgfsgf
736817
736817
add a comment |
add a comment |
Gyuhong Lee is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Gyuhong Lee is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Gyuhong Lee is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Gyuhong Lee is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Have you asked your advisor/supervisor?
– Thomas
yesterday
@Thomas It's spring break of my school, so I asked here first.
– Gyuhong Lee
yesterday
Ask your supervisor, even though it is a spring break they will normally check email etc and reply - but probably slower than normal...
– Solar Mike
yesterday