I read the linked article and I don’t think it supports your claim. The author referenced a few examples of extremely short abstracts and papers written with the intention of setting records for brevity, then talks about a conversation with his friend that shorter papers have been proliferating. The article does not provide a strong argument that high impact journals reward extreme brevity in general.
I read the linked article and I don’t think it supports your claim. The author referenced a few examples of extremely short abstracts and papers written with the intention of setting records for brevity, then talks about a conversation with his friend that shorter papers have been proliferating. The article does not provide a strong argument that high impact journals reward extreme brevity in general.