There Are Published Articles And Registered Authors In Our Article Directory

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Hilma Kolin

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Jul 19, 2024, 11:46:27 PM7/19/24
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Neurology Journal Club submissions are structured evaluations of recent Neurology research articles. The aim is to enhance the training of residents and fellows by providing a critical appraisal of medical literature. Residents or fellows interested in submitting a Neurology Journal Club article should review the e-Publication Ahead of Print articles at for the most recently published material and email Neurology with their selection for prior approval.

There Are Published Articles And Registered Authors In Our Article Directory


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Research articles and systematic reviews require a structured abstract. Many readers will only read the abstract and it is therefore important that it reflects what was done and found in the study. When appropriate, use reporting guidelines for abstracts (CONSORT, PRISMA) when preparing the abstract. The word limit for structured abstracts is 350 words. Do not include information that is not in the manuscript. When necessary, phrases may be used instead of full sentences. Refer to the list of widely accepted abbreviations that may be used without clarification in the abstract. The structured abstract must include the information described below, and authors are asked to reference recent journal issues for examples.

Consequences include retraction of published articles, notification of the misconduct or breach in the journal, notification of institutional authorities or funding agencies and subsequent investigations, and loss of privileges of publishing in the journal.

Wolters Kluwer (WK), publisher of Neurology journals, will submit an electronic version, on behalf of the authors, of the final published article of any study funded by NIH (or in which any of the authors are funded by NIH) to PubMed Central (PMC) for publication 12 months after print or online publication (whichever is first) in Neurology or Neurology: Clinical Practice. The authorization is a non-exclusive license only for the purpose stated in the NIH Public Access Policy. The AAN reserves all rights not specifically granted in this non-exclusive license. Further information on the NIH Public Access Policy is available at:

Embargo is the prohibition of releasing findings in a submitted or accepted paper to the public until after the article has been published (either online or in print) for copyright reasons. Prior to publication, authors may not reveal that the paper is under consideration at any Neurology journal when presenting at scientific meetings, or release information to the press, and must ensure that other organizations or institutions have been instructed of this policy. Exceptions to the embargo policy can be made at the editor's discretion for papers presented at AAN Annual Meetings or in situations in which the article describes major medical advances deemed critical to public health. Please note that the journals cannot guarantee that journal processes will be expedited to meet deadlines for presentation at other meetings. Consequences include notification of the breach in the journal, retraction of published articles, notification of institutional authorities, subsequent institutional investigation, and loss of privileges of publishing in the journal.

Open access articles published with a CC-BY license may be re-used for any purpose (including commercial) without requesting permission from the author or the journal. Content re-use must be attributed to the author and the journal.

Registered Reports are original research articles which undergo peer-review prior to data collection and analyses. This format is designed to minimize publication bias and research bias in hypothesis-driven research, while also allowing the flexibility to conduct exploratory (unregistered) analyses and report serendipitous findings. If you intend to submit a Registered Report to Scientific Reports, please refer to detailed guidelines here.

Errata and addenda can be submitted to JCAP as stand-alone articles following the instructions below.
1) Click on "submit an erratum" or "submit an addendum" in JCAP to see the list of your published articles (as corresponding author).
2) Find the article in question and click on "submit erratum" or "submit addendum".
3) Continue the submission process (see instructions).

When you approve the document for publication, or after your requested corrections have been implemented, the document is sent to the IOP Publishing Office for publication. Please note that if there is no feedback from the authors within 7 days from the first proofreading notification, the document is considered suitable for publication as it stands, and is sent to the IOP Publication Office for publication. It will be stored in the "published" section of your JCAP author pages and will also be available on the IOP website.

The submitting author will be asked to complete a copyright form online, on behalf of themselves and their co-authors, once their article has been accepted. There are two different options, depending on whether the article is to be published on a gold open access basis or on a subscription basis.

For articles to be published on a subscription basis, ownership of copyright is transferred to the Institute of Physics Publishing and SISSA Medialab, from the date on which the article is accepted for publication. The main features of the copyright transfer are that:

For gold open access articles, the author grants a non-exclusive licence to the Institute of Physics Publishing and SISSA Medialab, from the date on which the article is accepted for publication. This means that ownership of copyright is retained by the authors (or if your institution/employer owns the copyright then your institution/employer).

Gold open access articles are published under a Creative Commons attribution license (CC BY 4.0) (more information on this licence can be found here). The Creative Commons attribution license allows anyone to re-use the content in any way they like, provided it is accurately attributed and the terms of the licence are adhered to.

Please note that in the case of papers where the copyright is owned by CERN, authors need to notify us of this on submission. Authors do not need to sign a separate copyright form, as CERN articles are covered by a collective license agreement between CERN, SISSA Medialab and the Institute of Physics Publishing.

Articles can be published on open access terms. Gold open access articles are published under a Creative Commons attribution license (CC BY 4.0). More information on this licence can be found here. The Creative Commons attribution license allows anyone to re-use the content in any way they like, provided it is accurately attributed and the terms of the licence are adhered to. Copyright stays with the agreed copyright owner (usually the authors).

Does it make any difference in the review process or after publication?
Open access articles are treated in the same way as all other articles in the journal; they are peer-reviewed to the same high standard and are processed in the same way. Downloads of Open Access articles are included in Counter usage statistics and Open Access articles are indexed by abstracting and indexing services in the same way that regular articles are. The only difference is that they are published under a Creative Commons attribution license and are available to all on Open Access terms.

During the submission process, users are required to select keywords related to the submitted article.* Using strong keywords supports the discovery of published articles by search engines and research tools.

Corresponding authors must have an ORCID iD registered to their ScholarOne account. ORCID iDs are published on all accepted papers and included in the article metadata to improve content discoverability and citation.

Journal of the American Chemical Society authors may deposit an initial draft of their manuscript in a preprint service such as ChemRxiv, bioRxiv, arXiv, or the applicable repository for their discipline before the manuscript is accepted for publication in JACS. Authors may revise the preprint version of their manuscript up until a final acceptance decision has been issued. Please note any use of a preprint server in the cover letter and include a link to the preprint, and as appropriate, state how the manuscript has been adjusted/updated between deposition and submission. All other prior/redundant publication is forbidden. Upon publication in JACS, authors should add a link from the preprint to the published article via the Digital Object Identifier (DOI). Some preprint servers, including ChemRxiv and bioRxiv, add this link for authors automatically after publication. For further details, contact the Editorial Office. For the ACS Publications policy on theses and dissertations, click here.

All articles published ahead of print receive a unique Digital Object Identifier (DOI) number, which is used to cite the manuscript before and after the paper appears in an issue. Additionally, any supplemental information submitted along with the manuscript will automatically be assigned a DOI and hosted on Figshare to promote open data discoverability and use of your research outputs.

During the submission process, the Corresponding Author must provide a statement on behalf of all authors of the manuscript, describing all potential sources of bias, including affiliations, funding sources, and financial or management relationships, that may constitute conflicts of interest. If the manuscript is accepted, the statement will be published in the final article.

Authors submitting manuscript revisions are required to provide their own personal, validated ORCID iD before completing the submission, if an ORCID iD is not already associated with their ACS Paragon Plus user profiles. This ID may be provided during original manuscript submission or when submitting the manuscript revision. All authors are strongly encouraged to register for an ORCID iD, a unique researcher identifier. The ORCID iD will be displayed in the published article for any author on a manuscript who has a validated ORCID iD associated with ACS when the manuscript is accepted.

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