Welcome to the Editorial Manager® for Discourse Processes. Through this site, authors can submit manuscripts and track their progress up until acceptance for publication. Also on this site, reviewers can download manuscripts and submit their reviews to the editor, who will manage the entire process of submission, review, revision, and acceptance.
Should you encounter any difficulties using the site, please send an e-mail to emsupport@taylorandfrancis.com.
Authors—Please click the Login link at the top of this page and enter your username and password. Click the Author Login button and follow the instructions to submit your manuscript. If needed please refer to the Online Author Tutorial. For information regarding actual manuscript content and format, please click Instructions for Authors. *NOTE: Before a manuscript can be accepted for publication, a Taylor & Francis Copyright Form must must be signed by at least one contributor of a given manuscript and submitted to the editor's office via fax or mail.
Reviewers—Please click the Login link at the top of this page and enter your username and password. Click the Reviewer Login button. You can then accept/decline a review invitation, download manuscripts, and submit your reviews to the editor. Choose New Assignments to accept/decline a review invitation or choose Pending Assignments to access a manuscript you have already agreed to review. If needed please refer to the Online Reviewer Tutorial.
Editors—Please click the Login link at the top of this page and enter your username and password. Click the Editor Login button. Here you can manage for all manuscripts the entire process of submission, review, revision, and acceptance. If needed please refer to the Online Editor Tutorial.
Discourse Processes is a multidisciplinary journal providing a forum for cross-fertilization of ideas from diverse disciplines sharing a common interest in discourse—prose comprehension and recall, dialogue analysis, text grammar construction, computer simulation of natural language, cross-cultural comparisons of communicative competence, or related topics. The problems posed by multisentence contexts and the methods required to investigate them, although not always unique to discourse, are sufficiently distinct so as to require an organized mode of scientific interaction made possible through the journal.
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Please visit Discourse Processes online to view a sample issue, subscribe to the journal, or access additional information regarding the journal.
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