万维提示:
1、投稿方式:在线投稿。
2、期刊网址:http://astr.or.kr/
3、投稿网址:
http://www.surg.or.kr/judge_eng/Login.html
4、官网邮箱:journal@surgery.or.kr(编辑部)
5、官网电话:
+82-2-797-1220, +82-2-797-1219(编辑部)
6、期刊刊期:月刊,一年出版12期。
2021年7月5日星期一
投稿须知【官网信息】
Instructions for Authors
Manuscripts to the Annals of Surgical Treatment and Research (Ann Surg Treat Res) should be written in English according to the instructions for authors. If the details are not described below, the style should follow the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Writing and Editing for Biomedical Publications available at International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) website (http://www.icmje.org).
Research and publication ethics
Copyright and Creative Commons License
Publication types
Manuscript submission
Page charge
Review process
Manuscript preparation
General text style
RESEARCH AND PUBLICATION ETHICS
For the policies on research and publication ethics, follow the policies established by the ‘Good Publication Practice Guidelines for Medical Journals’ (https://www.kamje.or.kr/board/view?b_name=bo_publication&bo_id=7&per_page=) or the ‘Ethical Guidelines on Good Publication’ (http://publicationethics.org/resources/guidelines) or Ethical Considerations in ICMJE (http://www.icmje.org/index.html), especially those on the disclosure of conflicts of interest, statement of informed consent, statement of human and animal rights, Institutional Review Board (IRB), authorship, originality, duplicate publication, and clinical trials registry. Any attempt to duplicate publication or any plagiarism will lead to automatic rejection, may prejudice the acceptance of future submissions, and may be highlighted within the pages of the journal.
Author and authorship
An author is considered as an individual who has made substantive intellectual contributions to a published study and whose authorship continues to have important academic, social, and financial implications. The ICMJE has recommended the following criteria for authorship: (1) substantial contributions to conception and design, acquisition, analysis, and interpretation of data; (2) drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content; (3) final approval of the version to be published; and (4) agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved. Authors should meet criteria 1, 2, 3, and 4. These criteria are applicable to those journals that distinguish the authors from other contributors.
Duplicate publication
Manuscripts are only accepted for publication in journals if they have not been published elsewhere. Manuscripts published in this journal should not be submitted for publication elsewhere. If the author(s) wishes to obtain a duplicate or secondary publication for various other reasons, such as for readers of a different language, he/she should obtain approval from the editors-in-chief of both the first and second journal.
Conflict of interest
Conflict of interest exists when an author (or the author’s institution), reviewer, or editor has financial or personal relationships that inappropriately influence his/her actions (such relationships are also known as dual commitments, competing interests, or competing loyalties). All authors should disclose their conflicts of interest, i.e., (1) financial relationships (such as employment, consultancies, stock ownership, honoraria, paid expert testimony), (2) personal relationship, (3) academic competition, and (4) intellectual passion. These conflicts of interest must be included as a footnote on the title page or in the acknowledgement section. Each author should certify the disclosure of any conflict of interest with his/her signature.
Protection of privacy, confidentiality, and written informed consent
The ICMJE has recommended the following statement for the protection of privacy, confidentiality, and written informed consent: The rights of patients should not be infringed without written informed consent. Identifying details should not be published in written descriptions, photographs, and pedigrees unless it is essential for scientific purposes and the patient (or his/her parents or guardian) provides written informed consent for publication. However, complete patient anonymity is difficult to achieve; therefore, informed consent should be obtained in the event that anonymity of the patient is not assured. For example, masking the eye region of patients in photographs is not adequate to ensure anonymity. If identifying characteristics are changed to protect anonymity, authors should provide assurance that alterations do not distort scientific meaning and editors should take note of this. When informed consent has been obtained, it should be indicated in the published article.
Protection of human and animal rights
While reporting experiments that involve human subjects, it should be stated that the study was performed according to the Helsinki Declaration (https://www.wma.net/what-we-do/medical-ethics/declaration-of-helsinki/) and approved by the Research Ethics Committee (REC) or the IRB of the institution where the experiment was performed. A written informed consent should be obtained from all subjects. In the case of an animal study, a statement should be provided indicating that the experiment process, such as the breeding and the use of laboratory animals, was approved by the REC of the institution where the experiment was performed or that it does not violate the rules of the REC of the institution or the NIH Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (Institute of Laboratory Animal Resources, Commission on Life Sciences, National Research Council, http://www.nap.edu/readingroom/books/labrats/index.html). The authors should preserve raw experimental study data for at least 1 year after the publication of the paper and should present this data if required by the editorial board.
Institutional Review Board
All submissions must state whether the study was cleared with the IRB and the associated IRB number within their manuscript. Only studies that were cleared will be due for review. This includes all retrospective studies as well.
Registration of the clinical research
Any research that deals with clinical trial should be registered to the primary national clinical trial registration site such as http://cris.nih.go.kr/cris/index.jsp, or other sites accredited by World Health Organization or ICMJE.
COPYRIGHT AND CREATIVE COMMONS LICENSE
The person using Ann Surg Treat Res online may use, reproduce, disseminate, or display the open access version of content from this journal for non-commercial purposes.
Any use of the open access version of this Journal in whole or in part must include the customary bibliographic citation, including author and publisher attribution, date, article title, Ann Surg Treat Res and the URL, and must include a copy of the copyright notice. If an original work is subsequently reproduced or disseminated not in its entirety but only in part or as a derivative work, this must be clearly indicated For any commercial use of material from the open access version of the journal, permission must be obtained from the Korean Surgical Society (Email: journal@surgery.or.kr). Requests for reprints after the journal is published should be faxed or emailed to the publisher. Copy reprints will be charged after committee approval in US dollars $1 for each copy under 1,000 copies.
The minimum number of copies is 1,000. For mass reprints, a 5% discount will be applied at every 1,000 copies. Color prints will receive an additional charge.
PUBLICATION TYPES
Topics include Original articles, Reviews, Technical advances, Letters to the editor, and "How I do" it in the field of surgery.
Original articles: These include basic or clinical studies that are scientifically sound and original. The content should be helpful for the diagnosis and treatment of surgical diseases.
Reviews: Review articles shall be limited to invitation only selected by the Editorial Board according to a significant theme in areas relevant to the surgical field and whose authors are selected and referred on the basis of articles published in this or other journals.
Technical advance: These articles deal with a new experimental or computational method, test or procedure that are helpful regarding surgical procedures or with any novel surgical technique. The article must describe a demonstrable advance on what is currently available. The method needs to have been well tested and ideally, but not necessarily, used in a way that proves its value.
Letters to the editor: These submissions include comments on published articles or opinions on hot issues in surgery.
How I do it: These are video clips related to surgery and advanced surgical technique, submitted for placement only on the Journal website. The video may be up to 10 minutes in duration. Invited video may be longer at the discretion of the editors. For high resolution and quality, video dimensions must be at least 640×480 or higher. The video must include audio narration explaining the procedure. Audio and text on the video must be in English. The available video formats are Windows Media Player (.WMV), MPEG (.MPG, .MPEG), Audio Video Interleave (.AVI), and Quicktime (.MOV). The video must also be in the NTSC format. If the article is accepted for publication, the video will be digitized and permanently archived on the Ann Surg Treat Res website.
MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION
All manuscripts should be submitted through the online manuscript management system available at http://www.surgery.or.kr/judge_eng/Login.html. Once you have logged into your account, the online system will lead you through the submission process in a step-by-step process. After entering all of the checklist items and information on the authors, manuscript title, abstract, keywords, and other details, you will be prompted to upload your files. Please attach any other related material with the submitted manuscript, so that the reviewers are aware of any potential overlap. Please contact the editorial office if you have difficulty in submitting a manuscript.
Editorial office of Ann Surg Treat Res
101-3304, Brownstone Seoul
464 Cheongpa-ro, Jung-gu, Seoul 04510, Korea
Tel: +82-2-797-1220, +82-2-797-1219
Fax: +82-2-790-4081
E-mail: journal@surgery.or.kr
PAGE CHARGE
Up to six pages, the charge is US$400 (Korean Won 400,000) and US$100 (Korean Won 100,000) per each additional page will be charged. Reprints are free for up to 50 copies. The author should request reprints before the final proof-reading. US$200 (Korean Won 200,000) for the first color page, and US$150 (Korean Won 150,000) per each additional page is charged to the corresponding author. If the authors do not agree with amount of charge per page, the Editorial Office can cancel the acceptance of the manuscript.
REVIEW PROCESS
The decision on the acceptance of unsolicited manuscripts is based on the results of a peer review by at least two anonymous referees. To ensure unbiased review, reviewers receive manuscripts without the authors’ names. When the editorial board requests revisions, authors should complete the revision within 4 weeks or else it will be considered as withdrawn by the author.
MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION
Original articles
The manuscripts for original articles should be organized in the following order: title page, abstract, main text, conflict of interest, acknowledgement, references, tables, figure legends, and figures. Pages are numbered consecutively, beginning with the abstract as page 1.
Preferred file formats
Preferred file formats for the main text and tables are .doc, .docx or .rtf. The file format of figures should be .ppt, .jpg or .tif. The manuscript should be double spaced on 21.0×29.7 cm (A4) paper with 3.0-cm margins at the top, bottom, and left. Standard font size is 12 pt.
Title page
Please state the title of the article, full name of each author, authors’ affiliations, and running title. For authors with different affiliations, the authors should be marked “1,” “2,” “3,” and so forth in Arabic numerals, which should appear in superscript at the top-right-hand corner of the author’s name and before the affiliation. Also include the name, postal address, telephone, FAX, and e-mail of the corresponding author, and the place and date of any scientific meetings where the material may have been presented. The running title must be within 10 words in English.
Open Researcher and Contributor ID (ORCID) ID is a unique and persistent identifier that distinguishes you from every other researcherand connects you to your research activities, so you always get the credit for your work. The ORCID registry is available free of charge to individuals, who may obtain an ORCID identifier, manage their record of activities, and search for others in the ORCID Registry. To register for an ID, please visit the ORCID website (www.orcid.org). ASTR Journal recommends to include all authors' ORCID ID in title page. In the papers published from 2020, all authors must provide the ORCID ID mandatory.
Abstract
The word count should not exceed 250 words in a structured format (see below). Neither the authors’ names nor their affiliations should appear on the Abstract page.
Purpose: State why the study was done, the main aim.
Methods: Describe patients, laboratory materials, and other methods used and the nature of the study (randomized clinical trial, retrospective review, experimental study, etc.).
Results: State the main findings, including important numerical values.
Conclusion: State the main conclusion, highlighting controversial or unexpected observations.
Keywords: These should be listed at the bottom of the abstract to be used as index terms, 5 words or less. Medical Subject Heading (MeSH; http://www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh) terms are highly recommended for selection of keywords.
Main text
The main text of the manuscripts should have pages for the INTRODUCTION, METHODS, RESULTS, DISCUSSION sections. CONFLICTS OF INTEREST and ACKNOWLEDGMENTS paragraphs may be included following DISCUSSION.
INTRODUCTION: Briefly describe the purpose(s) of the investigation, including relevant background information.
METHODS: Describe the research plan, materials or subjects, and methods used. Explain in detail how the disease was confirmed and how subjectivity in observations was controlled. When experimental methodology is the main issue of the paper, describe the process in detail so as to recreate the experiment as precisely as possible. When quoting specific materials, equipment, or proprietary drugs, the name and address of the manufacturer must be given in parentheses. Generic names should be used instead of commercial names. Clearly describe the selection of observational or experimental participants (healthy individuals or patients, including controls), including eligibility and exclusion criteria and a description of the source population. Because the relevance of such variables as age, sex, or ethnicity is not always known at the time of study design, researchers should aim for inclusion of representative populations into all study types and at a minimum provide descriptive data for these and other relevant demographic variables.
Ensure correct use of the terms sex (when reporting biological factors) and gender (identity, psychosocial or cultural factors), and, unless inappropriate, report the sex and/or gender of study participants, the sex of animals or cells, and describe the methods used to determine sex and gender. If the study was done involving an exclusive population, for example in only one sex, authors should justify why, except in obvious cases (e.g., prostate cancer). Authors should define how they determined race or ethnicity and justify their relevance.
RESULTS: RESULTS should be presented in logical sequence in the text, tables, and illustrations and repetitive presentation of the same data in different forms should be avoided. Any data mentioned in the Methods must be presented in the RESULTS section.
DISCUSSION: Results should be interpreted for readers. Emphasize new and important observations. Do not merely repeat the contents of the Results. Explain the meaning of the observations with its limitations. The answer to the purpose of the research should be connected to the results.
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST: Any conflicts of interest should be disclosed.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Include the names of those who contributed substantially to the work described in the manuscript, but who have not fulfilled the requirement for authorship. Also mention sources of funding for research or publication.
References
The journal reference follows the description below. Otherwise, it follows Citing Medicine: The NLM Style Guide for Authors, Editors, and Publishers (http://www.nlm.nih.gov/citingmedicine). The journal title should be abbreviated according to the NLM Catalog: Journals referenced in the NCBI Databases (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/journals). The reference number should be cited in the main text in square brackets, e.g., [1]. All authors’ names are listed when there are six or fewer authors. When there are more than six authors, only the first six authors’ names are given, followed by ‘et al.’ Limit the number of references to 30 for original articles.
- Journal article
1. Jeong DH, Park MG, Melich G, Hur H, Min BS, Baik SH, et al. Laparoscopic repair of parastomal and incisional hernias with a modified Sugarbaker technique. J Korean Surg Soc 2013;84:371-6.
2. Nilsson H, Stranne J, Stattin P, Nordin P. Incidence of groin hernia repair after radical prostatectomy: a population-based nationwide study. Ann Surg 2013 Jun 6 [Epub]. https://doi. org/10.1097/SLA.0b013e3182975c88.
- Book
3. Townsend CM Jr, Beauchamp RD, Evers BM, Mattox KL. Sabiston textbook of surgery: the biological basis of modern surgical practice. 19th ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier Saunders; 2012.
- Chapter in a book
4. Neumayer L, Vargo D. Principles of preoperative and operative surgery. In: Townsend CM Jr., Beauchamp RD, Evers BM, Mattox KL. Sabiston textbook of surgery: the biological basis of modern surgical practice. 19th ed. Philadelphia: Elsevier Saunders; 2012. p.211-39.
- Dissertation
5. Hong GD. The relationship between low serum cholesterol level and cancer mortality [dissertation]. Seoul (KR): Seoul National University; 2009.
- Conference paper
6. Rice AS, Brooks JW. Canabinoids and pain. In: Proceedings of the 10th World Congress on Pain; 2002 Aug 17-22; San Diego, CA. Seattle (WA): IASP Press; 2003. p.437-46.
- Online sources
7. American Cancer Society. Cancer reference information [Internet]. Atlanta (GA): American Cancer Society; c2009 [cited 2011 Mar 10]. Available from: http://www.cancer.org/docroot/ CRI/CRI_0.asp.
Tables
Tables are to be numbered in the order in which they are cited in the text. A table title should concisely describe the content of the table so that the reader can understand the table without referring to the text. Each table must be simple and typed on a separate page with its heading above it. Explanatory matter is placed in footnotes below the tabular matter and not included in the heading. All nonstandard abbreviations are explained in the footnotes. Footnotes should be indicated by a), b), c) as superscripts. Statistical measures, such as the standard deviation (SD) or standard error of the mean (SEM), should be identified. Vertical and horizontal rules between entries should be omitted.
Figures
Figures contain graphs, line drawings, photographs or video files, etc. Each figure should be supplied as a single file. For figures with multiple panels, use a uppercase letter after the numeral to indicate the order of the panels, e.g., Fig. 1A, Fig. 1B. Illustrations in color are encouraged and will be printed at the authors’ cost. Label each illustration with the figure number. Indicate the scale of size for photomicrographs. Include brief, but comprehensive, footnotes. The contrast of figure files should be at least 600 dpi. Refer to the Guidelines for Digital Art (http://art.cadmus.com/da/guidelines.jsp). Written permission should be obtained for the use of all published illustrations and copies of permission letters should be included.
Video clips related to surgery and advanced surgical technique can be submitted for placement on the Journal website. The video may be up to 1 minute in duration. The available video formats are Windows Media Player (.WMV), MPEG (.MPG, .MPEG), Audio Video Interleave (.AVI), and Quicktime (.MOV). The video must also be in the NTSC format.
Review articles
These are organized as follows: title page, unstructured abstract less than 300 words, main text, references, tables, figure legends, and figures. The main text consists of the INTRODUCTION, MAIN BODY, CONCLUSION sections. CONFLICTS OF INTEREST and ACKNOWLEDGMENTS paragraphs may be included following CONCLUSION. The number of references should be limited to 80. Otherwise, it keeps the style and format of original articles.
Technical advance
It should be organized as follows: title page, unstructured abstract, main text, references, tables, figure legends, and figures. The main text consists of the INTRODUCTION, MAIN BODY, CONCLUSION sections. CONFLICTS OF INTEREST and ACKNOWLEDGMENTS paragraphs may be included following CONCLUSION. The number of references should be limited to 10. When dealing with surgical techniques, the procedure should be described as detailed as possible and figures added to ease understanding so that the readers may duplicate the techniques described.
Letters to the editor
It is organized as follows: title page, main text, and references. The word count should not exceed 1,000.
How I do it
These are video clips related to surgery and advanced surgical technique, submitted for placement only on the Journal website. The video may be up to 10 minutes in duration. It has to contain a title page same as original articles. Invited video may be longer at the discretion of the editors. For high resolution and quality, video dimensions must be at least 640×480 or higher. The video must include audio narration explaining the procedure. Audio and text on the video must be in English. The available video formats are Windows Media Player (.WMV), MPEG (.MPG, .MPEG), Audio Video Interleave (.AVI), and Quicktime (.MOV). The video must also be in the NTSC format. If the article is accepted for publication, the video will be digitized and permanently archived on the Ann Surg Treat Res website.
GENERAL TEXT STYLE
Verb tense: Authors should use the past tense to describe past events and data. Use the present tense for authors’ opinion and generally accepted facts.
Description of localities: The names and locations (city, [state], nation) of manufacturers of equipment and non-generic drugs should be given. For Korean localities, refer to the Guidelines for the Romanization of Korean localities available at http://www.korean.go.kr/09_new/dic/rule/rule_roman.jsp.
Units: SI units should be used for measurements. The unit of temperature is degrees Celsius (℃).
Abbreviations: Any abbreviation must be used consistently and must be defined at the first use. Commonly used abbreviations would be described in article without explanation. Refer to ‘Abbreviation. Acnonym and Unit’.