jmf-rebuttal

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Use when writing the response to a Journal of Marriage and Family (JMF) revise-and-resubmit. JMF reviews are double-blind and most published papers go through at least one R&R, so the response must convert each anonymous reviewer while keeping the editor confident the revision converges. Structures the response letter; it does not fabricate new results.

brycewang-stanford By brycewang-stanford schedule Updated 6/12/2026

name: jmf-rebuttal description: Use when writing the response to a Journal of Marriage and Family (JMF) revise-and-resubmit. JMF reviews are double-blind and most published papers go through at least one R&R, so the response must convert each anonymous reviewer while keeping the editor confident the revision converges. Structures the response letter; it does not fabricate new results.

R&R Rebuttal (jmf-rebuttal)

A JMF R&R is a real opportunity — most papers that publish go through one. But you are answering anonymous reviewers (double-blind) plus an editor who adjudicates, so the response letter must move every reviewer toward yes while keeping the editor confident the revision is convergent and the family- science contribution is intact.

When to trigger

  • An R&R decision arrived and you are planning the revision + response letter
  • Reviewers disagree with each other and you must reconcile their demands
  • A reviewer requests analyses that would change the paper's claims
  • Writing the cover note to the editor summarizing the revision

Strategy

  1. Read the editor's letter as the rubric. The editor signals which points are decisive (often selection, the framework, or the family-science contribution). Solve those first; the editor adjudicates disagreements among reviewers.
  2. One point-by-point response, every comment addressed. Quote each comment, then respond. Never skip one — silence reads as non-compliance.
  3. Concede or rebut explicitly, with evidence. For each: did what was asked (say where, with the new text/table number), or push back respectfully with a reason (theory, design, data limits, or the unit-of-analysis logic). A well-argued disagreement beats a capitulation that weakens the paper.
  4. Reconcile conflicting reviewers openly. When R2 wants the opposite of R3, say so, choose a principled path, and explain the tradeoff to the editor. Don't silently satisfy one and ignore the other.
  5. Answer the recurring family-science objections head-on. Strengthen the selection story, confirm models respect dyadic/family non-independence, and reaffirm the contribution to families — don't dilute it to please a reviewer.
  6. Keep anonymity intact in the revised manuscript (still double-blind), and update the replication/data materials so new tables/figures remain reproducible (see jmf-transparency-and-data-policy).

Response-letter format

For each reviewer comment:

> [Quoted reviewer comment]

Response: [What we did / why we respectfully disagree].
Change: [Section/page/table-figure number where the revision appears].

Open with a short summary of the main changes to the editor; group by reviewer; end each per-comment entry with the location of every change so the editor can verify quickly.

Triage table for a JMF R&R

Comment type Default move Watch-out
Editor's decisive point Solve first, lead the letter with it Often selection, framework, or family-science contribution
Reviewer methodological (selection, dyadic dependence) Concede + add the analysis; report what moved Don't let a new analysis quietly contradict the headline
Reviewer wants a different framework Engage; adopt or argue from family theory Switching frameworks can unravel the hypotheses
Two reviewers conflict Choose a principled path, explain the tradeoff to the editor Silently satisfying one reads as evasive
Request that weakens the contribution Respectful, reasoned pushback A well-argued "no" beats a damaging "yes"
Format/anonymity/data Comply; keep the revision double-blind and reproducible New exhibits must stay in sync with deposited code

Because JMF review is double-blind and most published papers clear at least one R&R, the response letter is a persuasion document aimed at anonymous referees and an adjudicating editor who decides whether the revision converges — written for the flagship venue of the National Council on Family Relations.

Worked micro-example (illustrative)

On a dyadic marital-quality-and-health R&R, R2 demands a causal interpretation while R3 calls causal language unjustified. The fix: state the conflict openly, hold the observational framing, and add within- couple fixed-effects plus a sensitivity bound. Illustrative letter entry:

R3: "The authors cannot claim marital strain causes health decline from observational panel data."

Response: We agree and removed causal phrasing, reframing the contribution as a within-person association net of stable confounders. New couple fixed-effects models (Table 4) attenuate the estimate from −0.15 to −0.11 SD but it persists; an E-value of 1.6 (illustrative) shows how strong an unmeasured confounder would need to be to explain it. Change: Methods p. 14; Table 4. This also answers R2, to whom we explain why we stop short of a causal claim.

Referee-pushback patterns and the convergence fix

  • "Family theory not engaged" (recurring). Show how the framework now constrains the revised hypotheses and point to the exact paragraphs, not just added citations.
  • "Selection still not handled." Add the within-unit or sensitivity analysis implied, report the direction and size of any change honestly, and align the claim to the new evidence.
  • "You ignored my main point." Quote every comment verbatim and answer it; the editor scans for coverage, and a single skipped comment signals non-compliance.
  • "Revision drifted from the deposited data." Regenerate the package so new exhibits reproduce, and say so (see jmf-transparency-and-data-policy).

Calibration anchors (hedged where uncertain)

  • Treating the R&R as a genuine opportunity rather than a soft rejection reflects JMF's norm that most publications iterate; NCFR describes reject, revise-and-resubmit, rare near-immediate acceptance, and written reconsideration for serious reviewer error. Protecting the family-science contribution while answering reviewers is the central balancing act; the editor's letter signals which points are decisive.

Anti-patterns

  • Ignoring or merging away a comment without a visible response
  • Capitulating to a request that breaks the paper's logic just to please a reviewer
  • Defensive or dismissive tone toward reviewers
  • "We thank the reviewer" with no actual change or argued reason
  • Adding analyses that quietly contradict the original claim without acknowledging it
  • Letting the revised manuscript or new exhibits drift out of sync with the deposited materials

Output format

【Editor's decisive points】addressed first? [list]
【Coverage】every reviewer comment answered? [Y/N]
【Concede vs rebut】each tagged with evidence + change location
【Reviewer conflicts】reconciled and explained to editor? [Y/N]
【Contribution protected】family-science significance not diluted? [Y/N]
【Anonymity + data materials updated】[Y/N]
【Next】resubmit via Wiley Research Exchange

Supplementary resources

Install via CLI
npx skills add https://github.com/brycewang-stanford/Awesome-Journal-Skills --skill jmf-rebuttal
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