newms-review-process
GitHub解析《New Media & Society》期刊的匿名同行评审流程,涵盖跨学科评审标准、决策分类及投稿前模拟策略。旨在帮助作者预判审稿意见、评估录用概率并优化稿件,不直接代写论文。
Trigger Scenarios
Install
npx skills add brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill newms-review-process -g -y
SKILL.md
Frontmatter
{
"name": "newms-review-process",
"description": "Use when anticipating how a New Media & Society (NM&S) manuscript will be judged — anonymous (double-anonymized) peer review, what interdisciplinary referees weigh, and the decision categories. Sets expectations; it does not write the paper or the response letter."
}
Review Process (newms-review-process)
NM&S runs a strictly anonymous peer review: the reviewer's name is withheld from the author and the author's name from the reviewer (a double-anonymized model). Understanding what an interdisciplinary panel weighs — and how high the bar is, given the journal's very large submission volume — helps you preempt the objections before they become a decision.
When to trigger
- Before submission, to stress-test the paper against likely referee objections
- After a decision, to read the letter and decide whether to revise (then go to
newms-rebuttal) - Estimating odds and effort given NM&S's selectivity
How NM&S review works
- Anonymous (double-anonymized). Reviewer and author identities are mutually withheld — so the manuscript must be masked (no identifying names, affiliations, or self-revealing phrasing); you may cite your own work, just not in a way that names you. Confirm the current masking rules at submission.
- High volume, high selectivity. NM&S receives a very large number of submissions (on the order of
hundreds per month, per the journal's editor call). Desk rejection for fit/scope is common; clearing
the fit gate (
newms-topic-selection) matters before craft. - Editorial transition. The journal is moving to new editor(s) in 2026; editor-specific preferences may shift — anchor on the durable standards below, and verify volatile specifics on the live page.
What interdisciplinary referees weigh
| Dimension | The question a referee asks | Where to fix it |
|---|---|---|
| Fit & significance | "Does this matter for new media and society broadly?" | newms-topic-selection |
| Positioning | "Did they engage the right (multiple) literatures?" | newms-literature-positioning |
| Conceptual payoff | "Is there a portable idea, or just a platform report?" | newms-theory-building |
| Method rigor | "Is the design sound for its kind?" | newms-research-design |
| Inference | "Are claims warranted; is analysis transparent?" | newms-data-analysis |
| Ethics | "Was online/platform data handled ethically?" | newms-transparency-and-data |
| Clarity | "Will a cross-field reader follow it in ~8,000 words?" | newms-writing-style |
Decision categories (typical SAGE journal pattern; confirm wording)
- Reject (often desk, for fit/scope or fundamental flaws)
- Major revision — substantial concerns; the modal "good news" outcome
- Minor revision — close, address specific points
- Accept — rare on first pass
Treat a major revision as a genuine invitation: a careful, point-by-point response (newms-rebuttal)
materially improves the odds.
The pre-submission referee simulation
Before submitting, role-play three referees from different fields (e.g., a critical media scholar, a computational social scientist, an ethics-minded qualitative researcher). For each, write the single objection they would raise. If you cannot answer each in one paragraph plus one exhibit, that is a hole to fix now, not in the response letter.
Worked micro-example (illustrative)
Paper: digital ethnography of courier "datafied control."
Referee A (critical media): "Where's the political economy of the platform?" → add a paragraph on the
business model; cite platform-capitalism literature (positioning).
Referee B (computational): "N=30, how general?" → restate the claim as a mechanism with scope conditions,
not a population estimate (theory-building + research-design).
Referee C (ethics): "Did you consent the forum users?" → state IRB position + anonymization
(transparency-and-data). All three answerable in a paragraph + exhibit → ready.
Calibration anchors
- Fit is the first gate. With desk rejection common, an out-of-scope paper never reaches craft review.
- Three fields, three objections. An interdisciplinary panel means the weakest cross-field link sinks you.
- Verify volatile specifics. Masking rules, decision labels, and editor preferences can change — especially across the 2026 editorial transition; confirm on the live page.
Anti-patterns
- Submitting an unmasked manuscript to an anonymous-review journal
- Optimizing for one field's referee and ignoring the other two
- Treating a major revision as a rejection instead of an invitation
- Assuming a niche platform study will clear a high-volume desk screen
- Relying on a specific editor's known taste during an editorial transition
Output format
【Stage】pre-submission stress-test / post-decision read
【Three referees】the cross-field objection from each, and whether answerable now
【Biggest risk】the dimension most likely to sink it, and the skill that fixes it
【Decision read】(if applicable) reject / major / minor / accept → next move
【Next】newms-submission (pre) or newms-rebuttal (post-decision)
Supplementary resources
../../resources/exemplars/library.md— papers that cleared the bar, by method../../resources/official-source-map.md— review model, volume, editorial transition
Version History
- 1839142 Current 2026-07-05 14:07


