<oembed><type>rich</type><version>1.0</version><title>Redish Lab wrote</title><author_name>Redish Lab (npub16j…cknep)</author_name><author_url>https://yabu.me/npub16jr6tn76pth8u36wjh0j09zmed42aue7slg8er9nw3qtl6wuh3us8cknep</author_url><provider_name>njump</provider_name><provider_url>https://yabu.me</provider_url><html>&#34;Multiple journals OK, as long as you list only one line on your CV&#34; would be more work for reviewers, but if the journals are in vastly different fields, then the reviewers might be looking for different things in the paper.&#xA;&#xA;If we follow some of the suggestions of people like nostr:npub1x5aqtd7xa34a68k3nrkqrv9gpm0cxrm8pm9q0nffefht64ecwmxqvdyh0y or nostr:npub14c5eddu9ddulgvgh8zrk9mz954tw32zymd4h88aj27f0g8lddy3sa2rfvf that the future of journals is as &#34;collections&#34; of preprints with commentary (much like #eLife is doing now), then one might have different commentary in different fields.&#xA;&#xA;Think of, for example, a neuroeconomics paper with one set of peer review / commentary in a neuroscience journal and another set in an economics journal.&#xA;&#xA;On the other hand, this would likely open the floodgates of simultaneous submission to multiple journals in the same field which would be a nightmare.  (How far apart would two journals have to be to be OK to publish in both?)&#xA;&#xA;Personally, I&#39;m definitely not going to do multiple journals, but I very well might do multiple preprints, particularly for specific cross-field cases (like neuroeconomics).</html></oembed>