After the patent application is published, if it is written as an article and submitted to other core journals, will its main contents be adopted and published?
The publication of a patent application is a procedure for examining an application for a patent for invention. Its purpose is to let the public know that someone wants to apply for an open invention. From disclosure to authorization, anyone can submit materials to the Patent Office that can prove that the disclosed patent application is not novel or creative. The purpose of this should be to use the power of the public to examine patent applications. After the patent application is published for a period of time, the Patent Office will conduct a formal review of the patent application, such as whether the patent claim is clear, whether the specification is fully disclosed, whether the invention has three characteristics, and whether there is oneness between multiple inventions in the same application. After the application meets the above requirements, it can be authorized. As for whether or not to accept you to re-edit or modify its core content and submit it to the core publications of the industry, it depends on what the auditing standards of the publications are. If your newly edited paper is necessary for publication, it will certainly not affect its passage. After all, application and scholarship are two different things.