Citing a rejected paper in related work












4















A paper was uploaded to Arxiv that is very similar to my research. I cited it in the related work section of the paper I am currently working on. I was planning on noting the shortcomings of this Arxiv paper when a few days later I found that it was rejected from the conference via openreview. My questions are:




  • Should I leave this citation in?

  • Should I say that it has been rejected?

  • Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?


This is the first time something like this has happened to me, so not sure how I should approach this.










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    4















    A paper was uploaded to Arxiv that is very similar to my research. I cited it in the related work section of the paper I am currently working on. I was planning on noting the shortcomings of this Arxiv paper when a few days later I found that it was rejected from the conference via openreview. My questions are:




    • Should I leave this citation in?

    • Should I say that it has been rejected?

    • Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?


    This is the first time something like this has happened to me, so not sure how I should approach this.










    share|improve this question



























      4












      4








      4








      A paper was uploaded to Arxiv that is very similar to my research. I cited it in the related work section of the paper I am currently working on. I was planning on noting the shortcomings of this Arxiv paper when a few days later I found that it was rejected from the conference via openreview. My questions are:




      • Should I leave this citation in?

      • Should I say that it has been rejected?

      • Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?


      This is the first time something like this has happened to me, so not sure how I should approach this.










      share|improve this question
















      A paper was uploaded to Arxiv that is very similar to my research. I cited it in the related work section of the paper I am currently working on. I was planning on noting the shortcomings of this Arxiv paper when a few days later I found that it was rejected from the conference via openreview. My questions are:




      • Should I leave this citation in?

      • Should I say that it has been rejected?

      • Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?


      This is the first time something like this has happened to me, so not sure how I should approach this.







      citations arxiv rejection






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      edited 4 hours ago







      McAngus

















      asked 4 hours ago









      McAngusMcAngus

      1605




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          2 Answers
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          6















          Should I leave this citation in?




          Definitely. A paper on arxiv is still related work regardless of its submission/acceptance status.




          Should I say that it has been rejected?




          No. That seems inappropriate. The paper may soon be accepted elsewhere in which case your comment about rejection will be outdated.



          Just cite it like you would any other paper. If you want, your bibliography could link to the openreview page where people could see the reviews and decision.




          Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




          Not really. Perhaps the reviews include some useful information. Otherwise treat it like any other paper.






          share|improve this answer































            3















            Should I leave this citation in?




            Yes. If the work is related to yours and may be relevant to those reading your paper, you should cite it.




            Should I say that it has been rejected?




            No. The rejection is only a transitory part in the paper's life cycle. If you cite it as an arXiv paper, that in and of itself already communicates the paper has not yet been accepted anywhere.




            Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




            No, probably not. The rejection doesn't necessarily mean the paper is bad, it just means the conference had no room to accept it. It could still be a very good paper, it just didn't make the cut at the conference. If you know it was rejected for a very serious reason, then that might be relevant (for instance if the reviewing process found a crucial flaw in the paper).






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              2 Answers
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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

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              active

              oldest

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              6















              Should I leave this citation in?




              Definitely. A paper on arxiv is still related work regardless of its submission/acceptance status.




              Should I say that it has been rejected?




              No. That seems inappropriate. The paper may soon be accepted elsewhere in which case your comment about rejection will be outdated.



              Just cite it like you would any other paper. If you want, your bibliography could link to the openreview page where people could see the reviews and decision.




              Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




              Not really. Perhaps the reviews include some useful information. Otherwise treat it like any other paper.






              share|improve this answer




























                6















                Should I leave this citation in?




                Definitely. A paper on arxiv is still related work regardless of its submission/acceptance status.




                Should I say that it has been rejected?




                No. That seems inappropriate. The paper may soon be accepted elsewhere in which case your comment about rejection will be outdated.



                Just cite it like you would any other paper. If you want, your bibliography could link to the openreview page where people could see the reviews and decision.




                Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




                Not really. Perhaps the reviews include some useful information. Otherwise treat it like any other paper.






                share|improve this answer


























                  6












                  6








                  6








                  Should I leave this citation in?




                  Definitely. A paper on arxiv is still related work regardless of its submission/acceptance status.




                  Should I say that it has been rejected?




                  No. That seems inappropriate. The paper may soon be accepted elsewhere in which case your comment about rejection will be outdated.



                  Just cite it like you would any other paper. If you want, your bibliography could link to the openreview page where people could see the reviews and decision.




                  Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




                  Not really. Perhaps the reviews include some useful information. Otherwise treat it like any other paper.






                  share|improve this answer














                  Should I leave this citation in?




                  Definitely. A paper on arxiv is still related work regardless of its submission/acceptance status.




                  Should I say that it has been rejected?




                  No. That seems inappropriate. The paper may soon be accepted elsewhere in which case your comment about rejection will be outdated.



                  Just cite it like you would any other paper. If you want, your bibliography could link to the openreview page where people could see the reviews and decision.




                  Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




                  Not really. Perhaps the reviews include some useful information. Otherwise treat it like any other paper.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 4 hours ago









                  ThomasThomas

                  11.9k52843




                  11.9k52843























                      3















                      Should I leave this citation in?




                      Yes. If the work is related to yours and may be relevant to those reading your paper, you should cite it.




                      Should I say that it has been rejected?




                      No. The rejection is only a transitory part in the paper's life cycle. If you cite it as an arXiv paper, that in and of itself already communicates the paper has not yet been accepted anywhere.




                      Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




                      No, probably not. The rejection doesn't necessarily mean the paper is bad, it just means the conference had no room to accept it. It could still be a very good paper, it just didn't make the cut at the conference. If you know it was rejected for a very serious reason, then that might be relevant (for instance if the reviewing process found a crucial flaw in the paper).






                      share|improve this answer




























                        3















                        Should I leave this citation in?




                        Yes. If the work is related to yours and may be relevant to those reading your paper, you should cite it.




                        Should I say that it has been rejected?




                        No. The rejection is only a transitory part in the paper's life cycle. If you cite it as an arXiv paper, that in and of itself already communicates the paper has not yet been accepted anywhere.




                        Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




                        No, probably not. The rejection doesn't necessarily mean the paper is bad, it just means the conference had no room to accept it. It could still be a very good paper, it just didn't make the cut at the conference. If you know it was rejected for a very serious reason, then that might be relevant (for instance if the reviewing process found a crucial flaw in the paper).






                        share|improve this answer


























                          3












                          3








                          3








                          Should I leave this citation in?




                          Yes. If the work is related to yours and may be relevant to those reading your paper, you should cite it.




                          Should I say that it has been rejected?




                          No. The rejection is only a transitory part in the paper's life cycle. If you cite it as an arXiv paper, that in and of itself already communicates the paper has not yet been accepted anywhere.




                          Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




                          No, probably not. The rejection doesn't necessarily mean the paper is bad, it just means the conference had no room to accept it. It could still be a very good paper, it just didn't make the cut at the conference. If you know it was rejected for a very serious reason, then that might be relevant (for instance if the reviewing process found a crucial flaw in the paper).






                          share|improve this answer














                          Should I leave this citation in?




                          Yes. If the work is related to yours and may be relevant to those reading your paper, you should cite it.




                          Should I say that it has been rejected?




                          No. The rejection is only a transitory part in the paper's life cycle. If you cite it as an arXiv paper, that in and of itself already communicates the paper has not yet been accepted anywhere.




                          Should the knowledge of the rejection change the way I talk about the paper?




                          No, probably not. The rejection doesn't necessarily mean the paper is bad, it just means the conference had no room to accept it. It could still be a very good paper, it just didn't make the cut at the conference. If you know it was rejected for a very serious reason, then that might be relevant (for instance if the reviewing process found a crucial flaw in the paper).







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 4 hours ago









                          Tom van der ZandenTom van der Zanden

                          1,313512




                          1,313512






























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