At 10:31 PM 4/29/2004, you wrote:
worthy of her journal. I called my famous advisor and asked if I could put
his name on it. He said "sure" and the paper has since been published in a
different journal.

So, how do you know it was the inclusion of your "famous advisor's" name and not the simple fact you submitted it to a different journal that led to publication? I believe some of us would see this change in 2 variables as creating a rather big confound. At the same time, I guess some might also wonder about the flip side... if the paper was published despite faulty design, conclusions, etc. because of the famous advisor's name being on it. (I'm not saying this is the case in this situation, but I have seen examples where I believe it has happened.)


- Marc


=============================================
G. Marc Turner, MEd, Network+, MCP
Instructor & Head of Computer Operations
Department of Psychology
Texas State University-San Marcos
San Marcos, TX 78666
phone: (512)245-2526
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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