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Writing and Publishing a Scientific Paper: What You Need to Know Pamela Fried, Director Diana Winters, Associate Director Academic Publishing Services.

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Presentation on theme: "Writing and Publishing a Scientific Paper: What You Need to Know Pamela Fried, Director Diana Winters, Associate Director Academic Publishing Services."— Presentation transcript:

1 Writing and Publishing a Scientific Paper: What You Need to Know Pamela Fried, Director Diana Winters, Associate Director Academic Publishing Services aps@drexelmed.edu Academic Publishing Services (APS) does not serve as legal counsel to Drexel University College of Medicine or to individual authors. Information received from APS does not constitute legal advice. Individuals should consult their own attorneys or the Office of the General Counsel, as appropriate, with respect to legal questions or concerns about their publishing activities and copyrights.

2 Publishing Process 1 Idea! 11 Check proofs 6 Format article for journal 2 Design project 4 Write draft 5 Select journal 7 Compile required parts 8 Register w/ journal 9 Submit article 10 Revise 12 Published Or Reformat for another journal Consult research compliance office Request permissions Contact Academic Publishing Services Consult mentor 3 Analyze results Academic Publishing Services, 19 th floor, New College Building, Room 19314, 215-762-1854; aps@drexelmed.edu

3 “A clear question must be posed before the research is planned...” Huth EJ. How to Write and Publish Papers in the Medical Sciences. Philadelphia: ISI Press; 1982, p. 1. 1 Idea!

4 “An effective paper deals with an important question, clearly answered with adequate evidence for the answer.” 2 Design project

5 2 Design project Consult research compliance office Consult mentor regularly

6 Huth EJ. How to Write and Publish Papers in the Medical Sciences. Philadelphia: ISI Press; 1982, p. 1. Meaningful question + meaningful answer = material for a scientific paper 3 Analyze results/ conclusions

7 Taylor RB. The Clinician's Guide to Medical Writing. New York: Springer; 2005. 4 Write draft Select article type Consult mentor Review Case report Original research Letter to the editor

8 “For academic advancement, manuscripts that require development of a specific hypothesis to be evaluated using new original data are more important than review articles or case studies.” Holmes Jr, DR, Hodgson PK, Nishimura RA, Simari RD. Manuscript preparation and publication. Circulation 2009;120:906-913. 4 Write draft

9 Holmes Jr, DR, Hodgson PK, Nishimura RA, Simari RD. Manuscript preparation and publication. Circulation 2009;120:906-913. Reserve time Set deadlines Organize notes Consider journals to submit to Review well-written papers Consult mentor regularly 4 Write draft Develop an outline Authorship

10 Holmes Jr, DR, Hodgson PK, Nishimura RA, Simari RD. Manuscript preparation and publication. Circulation 2009;120:906-913. Organize References (EndNote) Obtain permissions for copyrighted material 4 Write draft Avoid plagiarism View library Web site

11 4 Write draft Working title Eye-catching, concise, informative Important words first Final title

12 Sample titles  Effect of family history on outcomes in patients treated with definitive brachytherapy for clinically localized prostate cancer (18 words)  Definitive brachytherapy for clinically localized prostate cancer: effect of family history on outcomes (14 words)

13 Title page Word count Article title Corresponding author: complete contact information Authors’ names, affiliations Key words 4 Write draft

14 Huth EJ. Writing and Publishing in Medicine, 3rd ed. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins; 1999, p. 258. 4 Write draft Abstract UnstructuredStructured

15 Huth EJ. Writing and Publishing in Medicine, 3 rd ed. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins; 1999, p. 258. Use IMRAD structure: Introduction Materials and methods/ experimental procedures Results And Discussion 4 Write draft

16 What is known? Why ? Question being answered 4 Write draft Introduction

17 Materials and methods Subjects Study design Huth EJ. Writing and Publishing in Medicine, 3rd ed. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins; 1999, pp. 79-81. Measurements Animal, human protections  Supplies:  manufacturer,  city Statistical analysis Interventions Data collection 4 Write draft

18 Results No interpretation Logical presentation Provide information only once Representative data 4 Write draft

19 Discussion State relationships Answer question Generalize results Explain limitations, biases Recommend future studies 4 Write draft

20 References Check citations against text before submitting Add/delete citations Import citations Format for target journal “Cite as you write” 4 Write draft Citation management systems: Endnote

21 Tables Write short, descriptive title Number, cite in order Matthews JR, Bowen JM, Matthews RW. Successful Scientific Writing, 2nd ed. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press; 2000, p. 83. Present in logical sequence Use word-processing program Check journal limitations 4 Write draft

22 Figures Number, cite in order Obtain permission from identifiable subject Make high-resolution files 4 Write draft

23 Halftone Line Drawing Halftone Halftone: 300 dpiLine drawing: 1200 dpi Figures/illustrations

24 Revise, revise, revise Coauthors Colleague in general field Academic Publishing Services Expert in specialty 4 Write draft

25 5 Select journal Consult mentor Identify journals in your specialty (> 10,000 scholarly/technical journals)

26 5 Select journal Consult mentor Amin M, Mabe M. Impact Factors: Use and Abuse. Perspectives in Publishing No. 1. New York: Elsevier Science; 2000. Seglen PO. Why the impact factor of journals should not be used for evaluating research. BMJ 1997;314:497. Consider the journal’s Impact Factor What does your article contribute to the journal?

27 6 Format article for journal Contact APS Consult Information for Authors: Length requirements Forms for signatures

28 7 Compile all required elements Contact APS Authorship Substantial contribution Contribution to intellectual content Final approval

29 Huth EJ. Writing and Publishing in Medicine, 3 rd ed. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins; 1999, p. 258. 7 Compile all required elements Contact APS No duplicate submission

30 7 Compile all required elements Contact APS No prior/redundant publication

31 Contact APS Conflict of interest disclosures 7 Compile all required elements

32 Affirm protection of human subjects and animals involved in research 7 Compile all required elements

33 Contact APS Confidentiality statement signed by patient 7 Compile all required elements

34 Contact APS Letters of permission for copyrighted material 7 Compile all required elements

35 Contact APS Cover letter 7 Compile all required elements

36 Cover Letter “Make sure to address your cover letter to the correct journal, and also make sure the date listed on the letter is correct. We understand where we fall in the hierarchy of journals, but at least give us the delusion that we were your first choice.” Neill US. How to write a scientific masterpiece. J Clin Invest 2007;117:3599- 3602.

37 8 Register with jrl submission system Contact APS Save username and password

38 9 Submit article Contact APS Journals accept only complete submissions

39 10 Revise As requested Contact APS Final decisions: Reject Accept unconditionally Accept with revisions

40 11 Check proofs Contact APS Check page proofs carefully

41 12 Published! Your name and work in print!

42 We can save you hours and hours of time! Academic Publishing Services Drexel University College of Medicine Room 19314, New College Building Tel: 215-762-1854 E-mail: aps@drexelmed.edu Online project submission: http://intranet.drexelmed.edu/aps/ APS


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