All Stories

  1. The cross-subsidy and buy-one-give-one models of compensated peer review: A comparative study for mission-driven journals
  2. What is the sensitivity and specificity of the peer review process?
  3. A formal study of co-opetition in scholarly publishing
  4. Can a paid model for peer review be sustainable when the author can decide whether to pay or not?
  5. Fraud, specialization, and efficiency in peer review
  6. The editor-manuscript game
  7. The interplay between the reviewer’s incentives and the journal’s quality standard
  8. Quality censoring in peer review
  9. The author–reviewer game
  10. Confirmatory bias in peer review
  11. The optimal amount of information to provide in an academic manuscript
  12. The author’s ignorance on the publication fees is a source of power for publishers
  13. An evolutionary explanation of assassins and zealots in peer review
  14. Do the best papers have the highest probability of being cited?
  15. Competition between academic journals for scholars’ attention: the ‘Nature effect’ in scholarly communication
  16. The Game Between a Biased Reviewer and His Editor
  17. STRATEGY: a tool for the formulation of peer-review strategies
  18. Problems with open participation in peer review
  19. Authors and reviewers who suffer from confirmatory bias
  20. Why the referees’ reports I receive as an editor are so much better than the reports I receive as an author?
  21. Evolutionary games between authors and their editors
  22. Bias and effort in peer review
  23. The author–editor game
  24. Adverse selection of reviewers
  25. Social impact of scholarly articles in a citation network
  26. The principal-agent problem in peer review
  27. Evolutionary games between subject categories
  28. A web application for aggregating conflicting reviewers’ preferences
  29. Análisis de redes de las universidades españolas de acuerdo a su perfil de publicación en revistas por áreas científicas
  30. How the same organizational structures can arise across seemingly unrelated domains of human activities: the example of academic publishing and stock market
  31. Image inpainting with nonsubsampled contourlet transform
  32. The selection of high-quality manuscripts
  33. Best-in-class and strategic benchmarking of scientific subject categories of Web of Science in 2010
  34. Mapping citation patterns of book chapters in the Book Citation Index
  35. Mapping academic institutions according to their journal publication profile: Spanish universities as a case study
  36. Benchmarking research performance at the university level with information theoretic measures
  37. Ranking of research output of universities on the basis of the multidimensional prestige of influential fields: Spanish universities as a case of study
  38. A comparison of top economics departments in the US and EU on the basis of the multidimensional prestige of influential articles in 2010
  39. Visual efficiency of image fusion methods
  40. Scientific subject categories of Web of Knowledge ranked according to their multidimensional prestige of influential journals
  41. Sustainable image transmission
  42. Analysis of coding risks in progressive transmission
  43. Comparative visibility analysis of advertisement images
  44. On first quartile journals which are not of highest impact
  45. From computational attention to image fusion
  46. Ranking of the subject areas of Scopus
  47. Overall prestige of journals with ranking score above a given threshold
  48. Relevance of knowledge from bit-saving in progressive transmission
  49. Information visibility using transmission methods
  50. Axiomatic approach to computational attention
  51. A critical examination of the assumptions used in dynamic allocation
  52. Using graphics: motivating students in a C++ programming introductory course
  53. Steady growth of encoding efficiency in progressive transmission
  54. Bit-saving path for progressive transmission
  55. Automatic and optimal hierarchical quantizer decomposition to build knowledge for video transmission
  56. Optimal exploratory effort to build knowledge for video transmission
  57. Dynamics of low-cost transmission on the optimal path
  58. Theory of bit allocation analysis
  59. Emergence of region-based transmission when computation is unconstrained
  60. Very low bit rate video coding of moving targets
  61. Power of a wavelet coefficient in progressive image transmission
  62. Emergence of a region-based approach to image transmission
  63. Justice in quantizer formation for rational progressive transmission
  64. Embedded coder for providing better image quality at very low bit rates
  65. The relationship between information prioritization and visual distinctness in two progressive image transmission schemes
  66. Self-control of quantizer risk attitude in rational embedded wavelet image coding
  67. On the concept of best achievable compression ratio for lossy image coding
  68. Rate control optimization in embedded wavelet coding
  69. Defining a target distinctness measure through a single-channel computational model of vision
  70. CORAL: collective rationality for the allocation of bits
  71. Best Achievable Compression Ratio for Lossy Image Coding
  72. Coder selection for lossy compression of still images
  73. Rational systems exhibit moderate risk aversion with respect to “gambles” on variable-resolution compression
  74. Optimized rate control in embedded wavelet coding
  75. Performance of the Kullback-Leibler information gain for predicting image fidelity
  76. Minimum error gain for predicting visual target distinctness
  77. Information theoretic measure for visual target distinctness
  78. Origins of illusory percepts in digital images
  79. Integral opponent-colors features for computing visual target distinctness
  80. Defining the notion of visual pattern for predicting visual target distinctness in a complex rural background
  81. Computing visual target distinctness through selective filtering, statistical features, and visual patterns
  82. The RGFF representational model: a system for the automatically learned partitioning of "visual patterns" in digital images
  83. THE RGF PANDEMONIUM: A LOW-LEVEL REPRESENTATIONAL MODEL FOR IMAGES
  84. A Normalized Redundancy representation for 2D digital images
  85. A perceptual measure to predict the visual distinction between two color images
  86. A new image distortion measure based on a data-driven multisensor organization
  87. The selection of natural scales in 2D images using adaptive Gabor filtering
  88. Using models of feature perception in distortion measure guidance
  89. A new edge detector integrating scale-spectrum information
  90. Scale selection using three different representations for images
  91. A multi-channel autofocusing scheme for gray-level shape scale detection
  92. The role of integral features for perceiving image discriminability
  93. The novel scale-spectrum space for representing gray-level shape
  94. AN EVALUATION OF THE NOVEL "NORMALIZED-REDUNDANCY" REPRESENTATION FOR PLANAR CURVES
  95. Simplifying cartographic boundaries by using a normalized measure of ambiguity
  96. A multi-channel-based approach for extracting significant scales on gray-level images
  97. A scale-vector approach for edge detection
  98. A dynamic approach for clustering data
  99. A new methodology to solve the problem of characterizing 2-D biomedical shapes
  100. An autoregressive curvature model for describing cartographic boundaries
  101. A method for invariant pattern recognition using the scale-vector representation of planar curves
  102. Representing planar curves by using a scale vector
  103. Boundary simplification in cartography preserving the characteristics of the shape features
  104. Characterizing planar outlines
  105. How to define the notion of microcalcifications in digitized mammograms
  106. Representing 2D digital images through a normalized measure of redundancy
  107. A frequency-domain approach for the extraction of motion patterns