I found some topographical errors in one of my published papers











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i found some topographical errors mainly missing spellings in one of my published papers. However the errors does not alter the meaning or concept of the paper. I contacted the joirnal editor but told me that it remains topographical error. Am just worried about it when readers find these mistakes. what do i do










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  • 3




    Proofreading everything you write carefully before you publish it is generally a good habit and also the reason why the journal sends you the galley proofs. I suggest you develop this habit and start with this question. Spellcheckers are available as browser plugins and can help. For instance, the first person singular pronoun is always capitalized in English.
    – Roland
    Nov 27 at 7:15






  • 12




    I'm sure you mean typographical errors rather than topographical?
    – henning
    Nov 27 at 7:32






  • 2




    @henning: That's the first thing I noticed! Possibly one could call this a meta error, where "meta" is roughly used in this sense.
    – Dave L Renfro
    Nov 27 at 9:23








  • 2




    @henning I'm sure they do, but it's too beautiful for me to correct :)
    – Flyto
    Nov 27 at 10:36






  • 1




    "I", "typographical", "," "mistaken", ",", "do", "journal", "who"... etc. Get yourself a proof-reader!
    – Strawberry
    Nov 27 at 11:45















up vote
1
down vote

favorite












i found some topographical errors mainly missing spellings in one of my published papers. However the errors does not alter the meaning or concept of the paper. I contacted the joirnal editor but told me that it remains topographical error. Am just worried about it when readers find these mistakes. what do i do










share|improve this question







New contributor




Aliyu Mashud is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 3




    Proofreading everything you write carefully before you publish it is generally a good habit and also the reason why the journal sends you the galley proofs. I suggest you develop this habit and start with this question. Spellcheckers are available as browser plugins and can help. For instance, the first person singular pronoun is always capitalized in English.
    – Roland
    Nov 27 at 7:15






  • 12




    I'm sure you mean typographical errors rather than topographical?
    – henning
    Nov 27 at 7:32






  • 2




    @henning: That's the first thing I noticed! Possibly one could call this a meta error, where "meta" is roughly used in this sense.
    – Dave L Renfro
    Nov 27 at 9:23








  • 2




    @henning I'm sure they do, but it's too beautiful for me to correct :)
    – Flyto
    Nov 27 at 10:36






  • 1




    "I", "typographical", "," "mistaken", ",", "do", "journal", "who"... etc. Get yourself a proof-reader!
    – Strawberry
    Nov 27 at 11:45













up vote
1
down vote

favorite









up vote
1
down vote

favorite











i found some topographical errors mainly missing spellings in one of my published papers. However the errors does not alter the meaning or concept of the paper. I contacted the joirnal editor but told me that it remains topographical error. Am just worried about it when readers find these mistakes. what do i do










share|improve this question







New contributor




Aliyu Mashud is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











i found some topographical errors mainly missing spellings in one of my published papers. However the errors does not alter the meaning or concept of the paper. I contacted the joirnal editor but told me that it remains topographical error. Am just worried about it when readers find these mistakes. what do i do







publications errors-erratum






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share|improve this question







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Aliyu Mashud is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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asked Nov 27 at 6:26









Aliyu Mashud

61




61




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Aliyu Mashud is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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New contributor





Aliyu Mashud is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Aliyu Mashud is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 3




    Proofreading everything you write carefully before you publish it is generally a good habit and also the reason why the journal sends you the galley proofs. I suggest you develop this habit and start with this question. Spellcheckers are available as browser plugins and can help. For instance, the first person singular pronoun is always capitalized in English.
    – Roland
    Nov 27 at 7:15






  • 12




    I'm sure you mean typographical errors rather than topographical?
    – henning
    Nov 27 at 7:32






  • 2




    @henning: That's the first thing I noticed! Possibly one could call this a meta error, where "meta" is roughly used in this sense.
    – Dave L Renfro
    Nov 27 at 9:23








  • 2




    @henning I'm sure they do, but it's too beautiful for me to correct :)
    – Flyto
    Nov 27 at 10:36






  • 1




    "I", "typographical", "," "mistaken", ",", "do", "journal", "who"... etc. Get yourself a proof-reader!
    – Strawberry
    Nov 27 at 11:45














  • 3




    Proofreading everything you write carefully before you publish it is generally a good habit and also the reason why the journal sends you the galley proofs. I suggest you develop this habit and start with this question. Spellcheckers are available as browser plugins and can help. For instance, the first person singular pronoun is always capitalized in English.
    – Roland
    Nov 27 at 7:15






  • 12




    I'm sure you mean typographical errors rather than topographical?
    – henning
    Nov 27 at 7:32






  • 2




    @henning: That's the first thing I noticed! Possibly one could call this a meta error, where "meta" is roughly used in this sense.
    – Dave L Renfro
    Nov 27 at 9:23








  • 2




    @henning I'm sure they do, but it's too beautiful for me to correct :)
    – Flyto
    Nov 27 at 10:36






  • 1




    "I", "typographical", "," "mistaken", ",", "do", "journal", "who"... etc. Get yourself a proof-reader!
    – Strawberry
    Nov 27 at 11:45








3




3




Proofreading everything you write carefully before you publish it is generally a good habit and also the reason why the journal sends you the galley proofs. I suggest you develop this habit and start with this question. Spellcheckers are available as browser plugins and can help. For instance, the first person singular pronoun is always capitalized in English.
– Roland
Nov 27 at 7:15




Proofreading everything you write carefully before you publish it is generally a good habit and also the reason why the journal sends you the galley proofs. I suggest you develop this habit and start with this question. Spellcheckers are available as browser plugins and can help. For instance, the first person singular pronoun is always capitalized in English.
– Roland
Nov 27 at 7:15




12




12




I'm sure you mean typographical errors rather than topographical?
– henning
Nov 27 at 7:32




I'm sure you mean typographical errors rather than topographical?
– henning
Nov 27 at 7:32




2




2




@henning: That's the first thing I noticed! Possibly one could call this a meta error, where "meta" is roughly used in this sense.
– Dave L Renfro
Nov 27 at 9:23






@henning: That's the first thing I noticed! Possibly one could call this a meta error, where "meta" is roughly used in this sense.
– Dave L Renfro
Nov 27 at 9:23






2




2




@henning I'm sure they do, but it's too beautiful for me to correct :)
– Flyto
Nov 27 at 10:36




@henning I'm sure they do, but it's too beautiful for me to correct :)
– Flyto
Nov 27 at 10:36




1




1




"I", "typographical", "," "mistaken", ",", "do", "journal", "who"... etc. Get yourself a proof-reader!
– Strawberry
Nov 27 at 11:45




"I", "typographical", "," "mistaken", ",", "do", "journal", "who"... etc. Get yourself a proof-reader!
– Strawberry
Nov 27 at 11:45










2 Answers
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5
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As you discovered, journals usually don't correct typographical errors if the paper's meaning is unaffected. Publishing a correction is a lot of trouble, and they don't want to do it unless there is a compelling reason.



So there is nothing you can do. You will just have to live with those errors being there.



Perhaps it will motivate you to proofread your next paper more carefully before submitting.






share|improve this answer




























    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Make all papers available on a website and update them if necessary.



    I wouldn't update the website for typos, but I might update the offline paper to correct typos and later update the website should more significant changes be made.*



    *Corrections, revisions, updates, etc., are time consuming, yet offer little reward; prioritise your time.






    share|improve this answer





















    • I really wouldn't do this. Hosting a copy of your published paper on your personal website: Great. Making changes to it, where those changes happen after the published version is fixed: Dubious, and potentially a way that a bad actor might try to sneak around peer review. Sure, if they're just typos it doesn't matter, but then again they don't matter, so why bother.
      – Flyto
      Nov 27 at 10:37






    • 1




      @Flyto How is advancing research dubious? How might such advances allow a bad actor to sneak around peer review? Sure, researchers can correct technical mistakes, but that is surely only ever a good thing? (I'd recommend noting that a revision contains such corrections.) Peer review isn't avoided, the formally published version is authoritative, other versions aren't.
      – user2768
      Nov 27 at 10:47












    • when changes have been made from the published version, it is no longer a self-hosted copy of a peer-reviewed paper - it's a new work, not peer-reviewed, which shares a lot of content with a peer-reviewed paper (which incidentally may be a breach of copyright). I would expect to see such a document very clearly labelled, within the document as well as on the website.
      – Flyto
      Nov 27 at 13:44













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    2 Answers
    2






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    2 Answers
    2






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    active

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    up vote
    5
    down vote













    As you discovered, journals usually don't correct typographical errors if the paper's meaning is unaffected. Publishing a correction is a lot of trouble, and they don't want to do it unless there is a compelling reason.



    So there is nothing you can do. You will just have to live with those errors being there.



    Perhaps it will motivate you to proofread your next paper more carefully before submitting.






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      5
      down vote













      As you discovered, journals usually don't correct typographical errors if the paper's meaning is unaffected. Publishing a correction is a lot of trouble, and they don't want to do it unless there is a compelling reason.



      So there is nothing you can do. You will just have to live with those errors being there.



      Perhaps it will motivate you to proofread your next paper more carefully before submitting.






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        5
        down vote










        up vote
        5
        down vote









        As you discovered, journals usually don't correct typographical errors if the paper's meaning is unaffected. Publishing a correction is a lot of trouble, and they don't want to do it unless there is a compelling reason.



        So there is nothing you can do. You will just have to live with those errors being there.



        Perhaps it will motivate you to proofread your next paper more carefully before submitting.






        share|improve this answer












        As you discovered, journals usually don't correct typographical errors if the paper's meaning is unaffected. Publishing a correction is a lot of trouble, and they don't want to do it unless there is a compelling reason.



        So there is nothing you can do. You will just have to live with those errors being there.



        Perhaps it will motivate you to proofread your next paper more carefully before submitting.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 27 at 6:42









        Nate Eldredge

        103k32294394




        103k32294394






















            up vote
            0
            down vote













            Make all papers available on a website and update them if necessary.



            I wouldn't update the website for typos, but I might update the offline paper to correct typos and later update the website should more significant changes be made.*



            *Corrections, revisions, updates, etc., are time consuming, yet offer little reward; prioritise your time.






            share|improve this answer





















            • I really wouldn't do this. Hosting a copy of your published paper on your personal website: Great. Making changes to it, where those changes happen after the published version is fixed: Dubious, and potentially a way that a bad actor might try to sneak around peer review. Sure, if they're just typos it doesn't matter, but then again they don't matter, so why bother.
              – Flyto
              Nov 27 at 10:37






            • 1




              @Flyto How is advancing research dubious? How might such advances allow a bad actor to sneak around peer review? Sure, researchers can correct technical mistakes, but that is surely only ever a good thing? (I'd recommend noting that a revision contains such corrections.) Peer review isn't avoided, the formally published version is authoritative, other versions aren't.
              – user2768
              Nov 27 at 10:47












            • when changes have been made from the published version, it is no longer a self-hosted copy of a peer-reviewed paper - it's a new work, not peer-reviewed, which shares a lot of content with a peer-reviewed paper (which incidentally may be a breach of copyright). I would expect to see such a document very clearly labelled, within the document as well as on the website.
              – Flyto
              Nov 27 at 13:44

















            up vote
            0
            down vote













            Make all papers available on a website and update them if necessary.



            I wouldn't update the website for typos, but I might update the offline paper to correct typos and later update the website should more significant changes be made.*



            *Corrections, revisions, updates, etc., are time consuming, yet offer little reward; prioritise your time.






            share|improve this answer





















            • I really wouldn't do this. Hosting a copy of your published paper on your personal website: Great. Making changes to it, where those changes happen after the published version is fixed: Dubious, and potentially a way that a bad actor might try to sneak around peer review. Sure, if they're just typos it doesn't matter, but then again they don't matter, so why bother.
              – Flyto
              Nov 27 at 10:37






            • 1




              @Flyto How is advancing research dubious? How might such advances allow a bad actor to sneak around peer review? Sure, researchers can correct technical mistakes, but that is surely only ever a good thing? (I'd recommend noting that a revision contains such corrections.) Peer review isn't avoided, the formally published version is authoritative, other versions aren't.
              – user2768
              Nov 27 at 10:47












            • when changes have been made from the published version, it is no longer a self-hosted copy of a peer-reviewed paper - it's a new work, not peer-reviewed, which shares a lot of content with a peer-reviewed paper (which incidentally may be a breach of copyright). I would expect to see such a document very clearly labelled, within the document as well as on the website.
              – Flyto
              Nov 27 at 13:44















            up vote
            0
            down vote










            up vote
            0
            down vote









            Make all papers available on a website and update them if necessary.



            I wouldn't update the website for typos, but I might update the offline paper to correct typos and later update the website should more significant changes be made.*



            *Corrections, revisions, updates, etc., are time consuming, yet offer little reward; prioritise your time.






            share|improve this answer












            Make all papers available on a website and update them if necessary.



            I wouldn't update the website for typos, but I might update the offline paper to correct typos and later update the website should more significant changes be made.*



            *Corrections, revisions, updates, etc., are time consuming, yet offer little reward; prioritise your time.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Nov 27 at 7:59









            user2768

            10k22544




            10k22544












            • I really wouldn't do this. Hosting a copy of your published paper on your personal website: Great. Making changes to it, where those changes happen after the published version is fixed: Dubious, and potentially a way that a bad actor might try to sneak around peer review. Sure, if they're just typos it doesn't matter, but then again they don't matter, so why bother.
              – Flyto
              Nov 27 at 10:37






            • 1




              @Flyto How is advancing research dubious? How might such advances allow a bad actor to sneak around peer review? Sure, researchers can correct technical mistakes, but that is surely only ever a good thing? (I'd recommend noting that a revision contains such corrections.) Peer review isn't avoided, the formally published version is authoritative, other versions aren't.
              – user2768
              Nov 27 at 10:47












            • when changes have been made from the published version, it is no longer a self-hosted copy of a peer-reviewed paper - it's a new work, not peer-reviewed, which shares a lot of content with a peer-reviewed paper (which incidentally may be a breach of copyright). I would expect to see such a document very clearly labelled, within the document as well as on the website.
              – Flyto
              Nov 27 at 13:44




















            • I really wouldn't do this. Hosting a copy of your published paper on your personal website: Great. Making changes to it, where those changes happen after the published version is fixed: Dubious, and potentially a way that a bad actor might try to sneak around peer review. Sure, if they're just typos it doesn't matter, but then again they don't matter, so why bother.
              – Flyto
              Nov 27 at 10:37






            • 1




              @Flyto How is advancing research dubious? How might such advances allow a bad actor to sneak around peer review? Sure, researchers can correct technical mistakes, but that is surely only ever a good thing? (I'd recommend noting that a revision contains such corrections.) Peer review isn't avoided, the formally published version is authoritative, other versions aren't.
              – user2768
              Nov 27 at 10:47












            • when changes have been made from the published version, it is no longer a self-hosted copy of a peer-reviewed paper - it's a new work, not peer-reviewed, which shares a lot of content with a peer-reviewed paper (which incidentally may be a breach of copyright). I would expect to see such a document very clearly labelled, within the document as well as on the website.
              – Flyto
              Nov 27 at 13:44


















            I really wouldn't do this. Hosting a copy of your published paper on your personal website: Great. Making changes to it, where those changes happen after the published version is fixed: Dubious, and potentially a way that a bad actor might try to sneak around peer review. Sure, if they're just typos it doesn't matter, but then again they don't matter, so why bother.
            – Flyto
            Nov 27 at 10:37




            I really wouldn't do this. Hosting a copy of your published paper on your personal website: Great. Making changes to it, where those changes happen after the published version is fixed: Dubious, and potentially a way that a bad actor might try to sneak around peer review. Sure, if they're just typos it doesn't matter, but then again they don't matter, so why bother.
            – Flyto
            Nov 27 at 10:37




            1




            1




            @Flyto How is advancing research dubious? How might such advances allow a bad actor to sneak around peer review? Sure, researchers can correct technical mistakes, but that is surely only ever a good thing? (I'd recommend noting that a revision contains such corrections.) Peer review isn't avoided, the formally published version is authoritative, other versions aren't.
            – user2768
            Nov 27 at 10:47






            @Flyto How is advancing research dubious? How might such advances allow a bad actor to sneak around peer review? Sure, researchers can correct technical mistakes, but that is surely only ever a good thing? (I'd recommend noting that a revision contains such corrections.) Peer review isn't avoided, the formally published version is authoritative, other versions aren't.
            – user2768
            Nov 27 at 10:47














            when changes have been made from the published version, it is no longer a self-hosted copy of a peer-reviewed paper - it's a new work, not peer-reviewed, which shares a lot of content with a peer-reviewed paper (which incidentally may be a breach of copyright). I would expect to see such a document very clearly labelled, within the document as well as on the website.
            – Flyto
            Nov 27 at 13:44






            when changes have been made from the published version, it is no longer a self-hosted copy of a peer-reviewed paper - it's a new work, not peer-reviewed, which shares a lot of content with a peer-reviewed paper (which incidentally may be a breach of copyright). I would expect to see such a document very clearly labelled, within the document as well as on the website.
            – Flyto
            Nov 27 at 13:44












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