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On how to shorten a paper (or where do I begin cutting?).

Writer's picture: Jason ThatcherJason Thatcher

On how to shorten a paper (or where do I begin cutting?).


A few years ago, my favorite journal unexpectedly imposed page limits on submissions.


Suddenly, authors were expected to tighten their work up & submit more parsimonious work.


The request evoked panic. I wasn't ready to lose any precious words I had written.


So, I submitted an over-the-length paper.


It was promptly returned.


I wanted to publish the paper, so what did I do?


I slashed pages from the manuscript.


First, I eliminated hanging words.


Hanging words refers to the extra word or two in a sentence that extends into the line.


It can be tricky slicing them, esp. if you are already a tight writer.


I have cut as many as two pages from papers by doing so.


Second, I revisited the method.


Authors tend to overexplain their analysis - both how they did it and how to interpret the results.


Usually, I go through and remove extra words. In doing so, I notice where my tone goes from explanatory to didactic.


I delete the didactic.


Third, I shorten the limitations.


I prefer short limitations. Usually, no more than 2 or 3 items.


Every paper has flaws - but no one needs to know that your study has mono-country bias - it's obvious.


I only keep limitations that suggest directions for future research OR that people currently fixate on in the literature (common method bias anyone?)


Fourth, I revisit the literature review.


I always tell my coauthors - do you need a lengthy literature review? When a table of key papers will do?


Seriously, most people go a bit too in-depth in their literature review.


I revisit the narrative to see if I've added too much in some spot or a little unnecessary stuff in another.


Rarely, do I emerge with less than a page snipped.


Finally, I go through the citations.


Academics tend to overcite. I trim citations with two heuristics in mind.


(1) scope - How do I show that I know the classics and recent papers on a topic? I balance what I cut. Then ask the question again.

(2) focus - I go through the motivation, method, and discussion and look for off-focus citations. In those three sections, I invariably find gratuitous or out-of-scope citations.


At this point, having slimmed the paper down, I re-read the paper - and asked have I lost important content?


This is the most critical question; you must remember that you are doomed to rejection if you cut too much of the story.


So really, give the paper a hard look.


If I'm satisfied, I pass it to my coauthors for a second look.


If I'm not, I start over. I'm going to need more space to fix the paper :)


Shortening papers is complicated - I don't envy anyone that has to do it!


Best of luck!




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