Peer-Reviewer Process

Manuscripts submitted by researchers to publishers will first be reviewed by the journal editor to assess the suitability of the manuscript with the focus and scope of the journal, editorial principles, and layout arrangements (suitability with the template). If it meets the requirements, the manuscript will be forwarded by the editor to the reviewer.

Before being published, the manuscript will first be reviewed using the peer review process technique. The Peer Review process is a technique (review/review/assessment) of peers on the quality of scientific papers by other experts from relevant fields of science or who have historical experience in reviewing manuscripts. The Peer Review Process aims to ensure that published manuscripts meet scientific discipline standards and general scientific standards such as errors in terms or procedures, methods used, data validity, references that are not included or are inaccurate and so on.

The decisions of the Peer Review Process include:

  • Accepted
  • Accepted with minor revisions (the author makes revisions until the time specified by the publisher)
  • Accepted with major revisions (the author makes revisions until the time specified by the publisher)
  • Rejected (generally because the manuscript is outside the focus and scope of the journal, the layout does not comply with journal provisions and other substantive errors).