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Updated Dec 3, 2020 0 subscribers

The Science Reach

The journal of group 3 in the course Effective Science Communication at DTU

Editor Katrin Birna, Johannesdottir

COMPARISON BETWEEN TWO MODELING ASPECTS TO INVESTIGATE SEISMIC SOIL STRUCTURE INTERACTION IN A JOINTLESS BRIDGE (2019)

Sreya Dhar, Ali Guney Ozcebe, Kaustubh Dasgupta

DOI: 10.31224/osf.io/am7xs 

The study is interesting and useful for the civil engineering community. The difference in modeling assumptions and results of two approaches has been well presented with a case study.

However, the authors should make note of the following points:

  1. The authors should mention what is the state of the art with respect to SSI investigation and direct the reader to the knowledge gap.
  2. The paper lacks a critical analysis of the comparison between the two modelling approaches. The authors should include a more detailed discussion on what the differences in the results from the two approaches mean in terms of seismic design and analysis, and what their recommendations are for different application scenarios.
  3. The authors should also mention the comparison in terms of computation times and resources for the two methods to enable a more thorough comparison.
  4. A discussion on the influence of not including the nonlinear shear keys in the structural modeling on the results should be added.
  5. Why is the magnitude of Rayleigh damping introduced in SB_FB no/with BA models chosen to be 10% ?

Further, I have the following minor remarks on the paper layout:

  1. The paper will benefit from a concise and informative graphic summarizing major differences in the two modelling approaches (as well as results)
  2. The authors should thoroughly proof read the paper and resolve inconsistencies e.g. is it FB_SD or SB_SD or FB_SB?
  3. Figures must be improved for legibility

Editor notes: Accepted after revision

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A peeriodical is a lightweight virtual journal with you as the Editor-in-chief, giving you complete freedom in setting editorial policy to select the most interesting and useful manuscripts for your readers. The manuscripts you will evaluate and select are existing publications—preprints and papers. Thus, a peeriodical replicates all the functions of a traditional journal, including discovery, selection and certification, except publication itself.

Why set up a peeriodical? The traditional journal has changed remarkably little in centuries and many people feel that scientific publishing is stuck in a rut, subject to a corporatist drift, and is not serving science optimally. The advent of preprints in many fields beyond those served by the ArXiv is liberating the dissemination of research, but most other journal functions have not been replaced effectively. Now you—all researchers—have the opportunity to select and certify research according to your own criteria. We expect peeriodical subject matters and editorial policies to be extremely varied. Some peeriodicals may wish to target narrow domains, while others will adopt a generalist approach. Some peeriodicals will be inclusive, focusing on discovery, whereas others may aim to enforce stringent quality criteria, prioritising certification. The point is that all approaches are permitted and supported—we hope you will innovate! You can create multiple peeriodicals. It will be users and readers who decide which peeriodicals they find useful and interesting. Users can sign up to receive alerts from any peeriodical they wish.

A peeriodical has one or more editors. Anybody can set-up a peeriodical and either operate it alone or invite colleagues to form an editorial board or community. The editors can select "manuscripts"—existing papers or preprints—to consider, either spontaneously or through suggestions from other researchers, including of course the authors. Note that there is no obligation that the manuscript be recent; for instance, we expect that some peeriodicals could focus on underappreciated classics. After all, predictions about scientific impact are generally more accurate for the past than the future. If the editors wish, they can solicit reviews for the manuscript via the Peeriodicals interface. Reviews will be published and the referees will have the option of posting anonymously or signing their review. Editors may decide at any time to accept, reject or comment on the manuscript, taking into account the comments received. They may of course suggest improvements to the manuscript or underlying study. If they justify their decision, their editorial decision will also be published.

How will Peeriodicals fit into the publishing landscape? We see them as a space without entry barriers in which researchers can innovate and explore new approaches to scientific dissemination, in parallel to the traditional publishing industry. There are related and complementary initiatives, notably the overlay journals promoted by Tim Gowers, exemplified by Discrete Analysis, but also Science Open Collections, PLoS Channels, the APPRAISE initiative and Peer Community in... Each of these projects has their own specificities and goals. Nobody yet knows exactly what the future will look like, but we strongly believe that we are about to experience a period of rapid evolution in the dissemination of science and we hope that Peeriodicals will inspire and help you to share your imagination and expertise with the whole research community.

For those starting a peeriodical, you will discover that the hardest part is building up an audience. Unfortunately, we can't yet guarantee you the exposure you would get from a paper in a glamour journal. Reviews with scientific content will be mirrored on PubPeer, offering an audience through the PubPeer browser and Zotero extensions. However, it will be largely up to you to run your publicity, most likely through social media. We are on Twitter (@PEERIODICALS) and will of course help out as we can.

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