Guanya Shi@GuanyaShi
I’m so tired of writing rebuttals to this kind of “lack of novelty” review: “This paper trivially combines A, B, and C, so the algorithmic novelty is limited.”
Technically, most (if not all) robotics papers are convex combinations of existing ideas.
I still deeply appreciate A+B+C papers—especially when they deliver:
- New capabilities: the “trivial combination” unlocks behaviors we simply couldn’t achieve before
- Sensible & organic design: A+B+C is clearly the right composition—not some arbitrary A′+B+C′
- Nontrivial interactions: careful analysis of the dynamics, coupling, or failure modes between A, B, C
- Rehabilitating old ideas: A was dismissed for years, but paired with modern B/C, it suddenly works—and teaches us why
- System-level & "interface" insight: the contribution is not any single piece, but how the pieces talk to each other
- Scaling laws or regimes: identifying when/why A+B+C works (and when it doesn’t)
- Engineering clarity: making something actually work robustly in the real world is not “trivial”
- New problem formulations: sometimes the real novelty is in the reformulation—only under this view does A+B+C make sense.
Maybe worth keeping these in mind when reviewing the next A+B+C paper : )