About ISOM

Research Analysis With Editorial Accountability

ISOM publishes editorial research analysis designed to make technical papers easier to understand, compare, and revisit. The site is operated through an operator-controlled workflow that combines structured source collection, structured drafting, and public disclosure about how each article is prepared.

Operated by: ISOM Editorial Team What we publish: English-first research analysis, editorial notes, and conference tracking Public standard: English editions are the primary public edition Contact: Corrections, rights, and editorial questions by email

What ISOM exists to do

ISOM exists to help readers understand why a paper matters, what the method actually does, where the evidence looks strong, and what limitations remain before a claim is repeated elsewhere.

  • Reader focus: We aim to make difficult research more legible for practitioners, students, and cross-disciplinary readers.
  • Editorial framing: We publish interpretive analysis, not the original paper itself.
  • Source visibility: We link back to publisher, DOI, or conference sources whenever they are available.

How articles are prepared

ISOM uses an structured editorial workflow. Source metadata is gathered first, accessible full text is used when available, and draft analysis is generated from the source packet before publication is controlled through the site operator workflow.

  • Source packet: Official metadata, DOI records, publisher pages, conference links, and accessible text are collected before analysis.
  • Drafting: Automation may help organize source material and produce a first-pass explanation.
  • Publication control: Public publication is still a controlled site action rather than an automatic search-indexing dump.
  • Disclosure: Published pages include article-type and editorial-process disclosure so readers can understand what they are reading.

Publication scope and language policy

ISOM currently treats the English article as the primary public edition. Translation workflows may exist behind the scenes, but translated pages are not published by default.

  • English-first publication: The main public version of a research analysis is the English edition.
  • Translation restraint: Draft translations may be prepared internally and published only when they are ready.
  • Source access limits: If reliable source material is unavailable, ISOM may skip publication or remove a page rather than keep a weak post public.

Corrections and transparency

Readers should be able to tell who prepared the content, what kind of page they are reading, and how to report a problem. ISOM keeps disclosure, policy, and contact pages public so editorial decisions are easier to evaluate.

  • Correction requests: Readers can email factual corrections, source issues, or broken-link reports.
  • Rights concerns: Content or source-rights concerns can be reviewed through the public contact channel.
  • Updates and removals: ISOM may revise summaries, metadata, and article bodies, or remove a page, when better evidence or rights concerns require it.

ISOM is built to be useful first: source-aware, readable, and accountable about how research analysis gets published.