Submissions
Submission Preparation Checklist
As part of the submission process, authors are required to check off their submission's compliance with all of the following items, and submissions may be returned to authors that do not adhere to these guidelines.- The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
- Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
- The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.
- I am aware that there is a contribuition of US$7.00, after review process, to generate the DOI (Digital object identifier) number.
- If applicable, I declare that this study was performed in line with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and approval was granted by the local Ethics Committee. The patient gave consent to use his information and images for research proposes and for publication.
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SUBMISSION WILL BE DONE EXCLUSIVELY BE FORMS:
PLEASE COPY AND PASTE THE LINK BELOW:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeC8ebdbsd_Pu6HaKPCbqihaVn_QQ7WnlDOR0a4EfG45olI7g/viewform?usp=sf_link
PLEASE DO NOT SEND ANY FILE IN THE NEXT STEP
Author Guidelines
Last Update: November 06, 2024
- The Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery is a triannual peer-reviewed medical online journal established in 2019 as the official publication of the Brazilian Society for Pediatric Neurosurgery. Before submitting your paper, please read the section “About the Journal” to ensure your contribution is suitable for publication in Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery.
SUBMISSION AND PEER REVIEW PROCEDURE
TYPES OF PUBLICATION ACCEPTED AND FORMATTING GUIDELINES
SUBMISSION AND PEER REVIEW PROCEDURE
****SUBMISSION OF FILES WILL BE DONE EXCLUSIVELY BE GOOGLEFORMS AFTER REGISTRATION ON THE PLATFORM (BOTH ARE NECESSARY)***
Submission Procedure:
Please note: After acceptance of the article, a contribution of US$7.00 is required to generate a permanent Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
- Always review your manuscript before submitting it. You may stop a submission at any phase and save it to submit later. After submission, you will receive a confirmation e-mail. You can also check the status of your manuscript by logging in to the submission system. The Editor-in-Chief will inform you via e-mail once a decision has been made.
Revision Procedure
APN uses a double blind blind peer review system where reviewers do not know the names of the authors, and the authors do not know who reviewed their manuscript.
Please check Peer review process for further information
After submitting the 'Revision Letter' on the platform, MANUSCRIPT REQUIRED REVISIONS MUST BE SUBMITTED THROUGH THE GOOGLE FORMS REVISION FORM!
Author contributions
For transparency, APN demand authors to submit an author statement outlining their individual contributions to the paper using the relevant CRediT roles: Conceptualization; Data curation; Formal analysis; Funding acquisition; Investigation; Methodology; Project administration; Resources; Software; Supervision; Validation; Visualization; Roles/Writing - original draft; Writing - review & editing. Authorship statements should be formatted with the names of authors first and CRediT role(s) following. The author's statement of contribution is submitted during the GOOGLEFORMS filling out.
APN have a restriction in the number of contributions for each type of article, please refer to the table with the information below.
Author names and affiliations
Please clearly indicate the given name(s) and family name(s) of each author and check that all names are accurately spelled. You can add your name between parentheses in your own script behind the English transliteration. Affiliations must be in the native language in the following order (if applicable): section, department, institution, City, State and Country. Please submit in English the name of the institution in parentheses.
ETHICS
Statement of Ethics
Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery adheres to the ethical standards described by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) and the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE). Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery is also listed in the ICMJE list of journals following their recommendations. Editors, Authors, and Reviewers are expected to adhere to these standards.
The editors of APN are committed to using COPE’s flowcharts (https://publicationethics.org/guidance/Flowcharts) in case of suspected ethical violations related to the following cases of suspected misconduct: duplicate publication; plagiarism; data fabrication; undisclosed conflict of interest; as well as any other suspicious ethical problems of submitted papers.
The editors are committed to ensuring fair play and confidentiality principles while handling papers submitted to APN. They are also responsible for advising reviewers on using those same principles for evaluating contributions assigned to them. Reviewers should promptly send their reviews using relevant and well-structured arguments to help the authors improve their paper.
Authors should ensure their paper follows ethical principles, especially regarding:
- Originality and Plagiarism: The authors should ensure that they have written entirely original works, and if the authors have used the words of others, this has been appropriately cited or quoted. Plagiarism is checked during the Desk Review stage. A value less than 20% is considered acceptable. Articles with 20% or more are not accepted for peer review.
- Multiple, Redundant, or Concurrent Publication: An author should not publish manuscripts describing essentially the same research in more than one journal.
- Authorship of the Paper: Authorship should be limited to those who have made a significant contribution to the conception, design, execution, or interpretation of the reported study.
- Errors in published works: When an author discovers a significant error or inaccuracy in his/her own published work, the author must promptly notify Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery and cooperate with the Editor to retract or correct the paper.
- Complaints and appeals: The policy of APN is primarily aimed at protecting the authors, reviewers, editors, and the publisher of the journal. If not described below, the process of handling complaints and appeals follows the guidelines of the COPE (https://publicationethics.org/appeals).
- Who complains or makes an appeal? Submitters, authors, reviewers, and readers may register complaints and appeals in a variety of cases as follows: falsification, fabrication, plagiarism, duplicate publication, authorship dispute, conflict of interest, ethical treatment of animals, informed consent, bias or unfair/ inappropriate competitive acts, copyright, stolen data, defamation, and legal problem. If any individuals or institutions want to inform the cases, they can send a letter to editor through editorialoffice@sbnped.com.br For the complaints or appeals, concrete data with answers to all factual questions (who, when, where, what, how, why) should be provided.
- Editor-in-Chief is responsible to resolve and handle complaints and appeals, unless he is involved, in this case the Co-Editor-In-Chief or the Journal Management Editors are responsible.
- Consequences or remedy of these problems depends on the type or degree of misconduct. The consequence of the resolution will follow the guidelines of the COPE.
Human Subjects
Manuscripts that involve research conducted on human subjects must follow the principles outlined in the Declaration of Helsinki and include a statement in the Methods section stating that the experimental protocol and informed consent were approved by the Institutional Review Board (IRB), and that all subjects gave informed consent. If IRB approval or patient consent was not sought or obtained, authors should include an explanation in the Methods section. Authors should indicate the mechanism used for reviewing the ethics of the research conducted in their cover letter.
Animal Subjects
Manuscripts that report animal experiments must include a statement in the Methods section stating that the study was approved by the Institutional Review Board and that the animal care complied with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (Institute of Laboratory Animal Resources, Commission on Life Sciences, National Research Council. Washington: National Academy Press, 1996). Authors should indicate the mechanism used for reviewing the ethics of the research conducted in their cover letter.
Note: Though not required at the time of submission, authors should be prepared to provide evidence of IRB/Ethics Committee adherence if requested by the Editor.
Patient Consent
It is the policy of the Journal that no identifiable protected health information (PHI) of any person may be included in any manuscript submitted to or published by Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery publications unless the information is essential for the scientific integrity or purpose of the manuscript or published work and the patient has given written informed consent. This policy includes, but is not limited to, any identifiable protected health information subject to applicable laws and regulations concerning the privacy and/or security of personal information.
Authors should pay close attention to images that contain identifiable individual patient characteristics or data such as eyes, date of birth, case number, initials, birthmarks, scars, tattoos, piercings, etc. Care should be taken where an individual’s head or face appears, or where reference is made to an individual’s name or other personal details. Particular care should be taken where children are concerned.
Author(s) shall take all steps necessary to ensure that (1) there is no PHI contained in any text, data, or images in the manuscript unless that PHI is necessary to the scientific integrity of the publication and the patient has provided consent to the publication of their PHI; and (2) all other pre-existing PHI, if any, has been fully anonymized and de-identified (see below for how to properly anonymize and de-identify data).
As a condition of submission to the Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery Publications, all authors warrant that he or she has obtained, prior to submission, written releases from patients whose names or likenesses are submitted as part of the Work. Should the Journal or Publisher request copies of such written releases, authors shall provide them in a timely manner. In addition to the foregoing requirements, each author must ensure that each authorizing individual, or the individual's legal guardian or other person with legal authority to act on the individual's behalf, who may be identified in any video, recording, photograph, image, illustration or case report (or in any other identifiable form) relating to a proposed manuscript is made aware in advance of the fact that such photographs are being taken or such video, recording, photograph, image, illustration or report is being made, and of all the purposes for which they might be used, including disclosure to Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery Publications and use by Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery Publications and any affiliated publication. Such individual, legal guardian, or person with legal authority must give his/her explicit written authorization in writing. If authorization has been obtained, care must be taken to ensure that the portrayals and captioning of any individual are respectful and could not be seen as denigrating that individual. In the case of images of a child, it is important to ensure that images show only children in a suitable dress in order to reduce the risk of images being used inappropriately. If such authorization is made subject to any conditions (for example, adopting measures to prevent personal identification of the person concerned), APN Publications must be made aware in writing of all such conditions. If an author does not obtain the written authorization of the individual or the individual’s legal guardian, the video, etc. cannot be used in the Work.
Patient Consent form - English
TYPES OF PUBLICATION ACCEPTED AND FORMATTING GUIDELINES
Manuscript format
Article Type |
Abstract Limit |
Keywords Limit |
Title Limit |
Tables/Figures Limit |
References Limit |
Peer reviewed |
Maximum number of authors |
Review Article (up to 3,000 words) |
Up to 250 words |
Up to 5 keywords |
Up to 25 words |
Approximately 7 tables/figures |
Up to 90 references |
yes |
6 |
Original Article (up to 3,000 words) |
Up to 250 words |
Up to 5 keywords |
Up to 25 words |
Approximately 5 tables/figures |
Up to 50 references |
yes |
6 |
Clinical Case Reports (up to 2,500 words) |
Up to 250 words |
Up to 5 keywords |
Up to 25 words |
Up to 5 tables/figures |
Up to 15 references |
yes |
6 |
How I do it (up to 1200 words) |
up to 100 wods |
Up to 5 keywords |
Up to 25 words |
Up to 10 tables/figures |
Up to 15 references |
yes |
2 |
Clinical Images (up to 200 words) |
n/a |
Up to 5 keywords |
Up to 25 words |
Legend: up to 200 words |
Up to 5 references |
yes |
4 |
Clinical Videos (up to 200 words) Maximum length 5 minutes |
n/a |
Up to 5 keywords |
Up to 25 words |
Legend: up to 100 words |
Up to 5 references |
yes |
4 |
Editorial |
n/a |
n/a |
Up to 25 words |
n/a |
n/a |
no |
3 |
Letter to the Editor |
n/a |
Up to 5 Keywords |
Up to 25 words |
n/a |
n/a |
no |
2 |
Technical Notes (Up to 1,000 words) |
Up to 250 words |
Up to 5 keywords |
Up to 25 words |
Approximately 5 tables/figures |
Up to 25 references |
yes |
4 |
Historical Vignettes, Obituaries, Etc. (up to 1,200 words) |
n/a |
Up to 5 Keywords |
Up to 25 words |
Approximately 5 tables/figures |
Up to 25 references |
no |
4 |
Commentary (Up to 850 words) |
n/a | Up to 5 Keywords | Up to 25 words | Approximately 2 tables/figures | Up to 15 references | no | 2 |
- The number of authors may exceed the limit if there is a valid formal justification provided to the editor-in-chief
****SUBMISSION OF FILES WILL BE DONE EXCLUSIVELY BE GOOGLEFORMS AFTER REGISTRATION ON THE PLATFORM (BOTH ARE NECESSARY)***
Article Types
The following paragraphs show what types of articles are accepted for publication, and their requirements.
- Original Article may include randomized controlled trials, intervention studies, studies of screening and diagnostic test, outcome studies, cost-effectiveness analyses, case-control series, and surveys with high response rate. For the specific type of articles such as randomized controlled trials, observational studies, systematic reviews, etc., please properly follow the guidelines as described in CONSRORT, STROBE, PRISMA. Find guidelines at: https://www.equator-network.org/
- Clinical Case Report contains single cases or series of cases or more condensed information on clinical or experimental studies. Please follow the CARE guideline (https://www.equator-network.org/). The key elements are:
- The title accurately reflects the case.
- The abstract must be structured in: Introduction/Background; Case presentation; Conclusions.
- The case involves an important area of health / pediatric neurosurgery.
- Where possible, the case illustrates the use of an important clinical guideline or systematic review, and if so, the report is clear about exactly which part of the review or guideline the case relates to.
- The report presents a clear and clinically useful message.
- The report is well written in terms of clarity, style, and use of English.
- The report has a logical construction (provided below).
- The patient’s history, clinical examination plus findings, and investigations plus results are sufficiently detailed to explain the case but without including extraneous information (if it’s not relevant to the main message, don’t include it).
- The relevant details of differential diagnosis, treatment plan, and follow-up are included.
- There is a clear and definite outcome for the case, so readers are not left thinking, “But what happened in the end?”.
- The discussion section explains the case in the context of published information.
- The conclusions accurately and clearly explain the main clinical message.
- The report is a reasonable length (1,000-2,500 words).
- There are no omissions of important content.
- The references are appropriate and current.
- Correct use of the international standard of units (SI units) throughout the report.
- How I do it
- This section of the journal is for showing how surgical procedures are carried out by no more than 4 authors. The abstract should be brief (less than 100 words), unstructured, whereas the residual manuscript should comprise less than 1200 words, 15 key references and at most 10 figures. Headings in the following order: introduction and relevant surgical anatomy, description of the technique, indications, limitations, how to avoid complications, specific information for the patient (optional). Limit to 15 key references. Conflicts of interest should be placed on the title page. A video clearly illustrating the procedure is highly recommended, presented with voice recording. When uploading video files please make sure to keep the running time below 3 minutes.
- Letter to the Editor will usually address articles published in the journal or comment upon recent scientific advances of general interest.
- Clinical Images
- Clinical images are pictures that illustrate a key clinical finding that can be presented in the form of a question. Once again, the images do not have to be unusual, but have to convey an important message.
- The accompanying text should be no longer than 200 words in length and have no more than 5 references. The text should describe a clinical question relating to the image, along with a carefully validated answer. The aim of the questions and answers should be to educate or remind readers about an important clinical situation or event.
- We recommend that you save photographic images in .tiff format and the resolution should be greater than 300 dpi.
- Clinical videos
- Videos are a very good way to describe clinical procedures that are crucial in all aspects of healthcare. Our view again is that these procedures do not have to be novel or unusual, but they need to reflect best practice and must be accompanied by an illustrative video segment.
- Maximum video length is 5 minutes, the accompanying text should be no longer than 200 words in length and have no more than 5 references. The text should describe a clinical question relating to the procedure in the video, along with a carefully validated answer. The aim of the question and answer should be to educate or remind readers about an important clinical situation or event.
- Video segments will be published as supporting information to the clinical question text. We recommend that video files are submitted in Quicktime, MPEG, AVI file formats as these are the most commonly used and accessible by readers. Please try to restrict individual file sizes to 10Mb maximum (zipped or unzipped). Larger files may be hosted, but these can lead to download issues for users.
- Do not include the author's name or institution's name in any part of the video. Insert the author's and institutions' names just in the title page provided within the submission.
- Voice-over audio is required. Please avoid background noise when recording your video.
- The written transcript should match the oral narrative in the video.
- Include time points that are highlighted in your video (e.g., 1:08 - cortical dissection)
- Cite references in parentheses within text in the order used in the video — see Referencessection below for format instructions.
- Technical Notes
- Technical Notes introduce new surgical modalities or variants of existing techniques. Follow-up and outcome need to be clearly stated. Abstracts do not need to be structured and they should not exceed 1,000 words; 5 illustrations or tables and up to 25 references are permitted.
- Historical Vignettes, Obituaries, Etc.
- We consider papers that describe the key contributions of individuals or trace the development of disease concepts. Historical vignettes or obituaries that are likely to be longer than 1200 words exclusive of references should be discussed with the editors prior to submission. Manuscripts in this category should be submitted as opinion papers. An abstract is required but need not be structured.
- Commentary
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Commentaries are invited at the discretion of the Editor-in-Chief and can be a brief communication on a subject pertinent to the field. The goal of a commentary in this case is to enrich the reader's understanding of an issue by highlighting a particular aspect of the given article or to offer an alternative perspective on the contents reported.
Commentaries are short, narrowly focused articles of contemporary interest and usually take one of the following forms:
- Discussion of an article or study that was recently published or that is soon to be published, and that is interesting enough to warrant further comment or explanation. This type of commentary discusses specific issues within a subject area rather than the whole field, explains the implications of the article and puts it in context. Opinions are welcome as long as they are factually based.
- Commentary that is more editorial in nature and covers an aspect of an issue that is relevant to the journal's scope, for example discussion of the impact of new technology on research and treatment.
- Brief Reports: These are not simply descriptions of something but also explore the potential impacts for evolution education and outreach, such as: Online resources, Software, Reports of major conferences/society activity/working groups, Case reports from educational projects that are not ready for a full article.
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General Guidelines
- You must submit EXCLUSIVELY BE GOOGLEFORMS . Hard copy submissions are not accepted.
- Keep the format of your manuscript simple and clear. We will set your manuscript according to our style—do not try to “design” the document.
- Each figure should be saved as its own separate file. Do not embed figures within the manuscript file.
- Keep abbreviations to a minimum and be sure to explain all of them the first time they are used in the text.
- The manuscripts should be written in English.
- The authors should use the International System of Units (SI) measurements. For clarity, nonmetric equivalents may be included in parentheses following the SI measurements.
- Use generic names for drugs. You may cite proprietary names in parentheses along with the name and location of the manufacturer.
- Credit suppliers and manufacturers of equipment, drugs, and other brand-name material mentioned in the manuscript within parentheses, giving the company name and primary location.
Article structure
Manuscript
- Abstract and Keywords - The abstract should briefly outline the article's content and any conclusions it may reach. The keywords should be words a reader would be likely to use to search for the article's content.
- We recommend that authors use DeCS (Health Sciences Descriptors) or MESH (Medical Subject Headings) to select keywords that better represent the manuscript’s content.
- Please clearly distinguish the hierarchy of headings within the manuscript by using capital letters, underline, italic, and bold styles as necessary.
- As needed, use italic, superscripts, subscripts, and boldface, but otherwise, do not use multiple fonts and font sizes.
- Do not insert page or section breaks except where noted in the Author Instructions.
- Use hard returns (the Enter key) only at the end of a paragraph, not at the end of a line. Allow lines of text to break automatically in your word-processing software. Do not justify your text.
- Use only one space, not two, after periods.
- Create tables using the Table function in Microsoft Word.
- Divide your article into clearly defined sections. Each subsection is given a brief heading. Each heading should appear on its own separate line. Subsections should be used as much as possible when cross-referencing text: refer to the subsection by heading as opposed to simply 'the text'.
- Introduction: State the work's objectives and provide an adequate background, avoiding a detailed literature survey or a summary of the results; such a review belongs in the Discussion section.
- Material and Methods: Provide sufficient details to allow the work to be reproduced by an independent researcher. Methods that are already published should be summarized, and indicated by a reference. If quoting directly from a previously published method, use quotation marks and also cite the source. Any modifications to existing methods should also be described.
- Results: Results should be clear, objective and concise.
- Discussion: This should explore the significance of the results of the work, not repeat them. A combined Results and Discussion section is often appropriate. Avoid extensive citations and discussion of published literature.
- Conclusions: In the Conclusions section restate the major findings of the study and address these findings potential clinical implications and/or applications
- Acknowledgments: This section provides a place to acknowledge people who have contributed to the study but do not fulfill all the criteria for authorship. Examples include lab technicians, data collectors, illustrator, and medical editors. It is particularly important to include any employees from sponsoring agencies or industries which have contributed to the work. Specify what type of contribution each person made to the study.
- Disclosures: Include a section in the paper in which you state whether a potential conflict of interest–– financial, personal, or professional––exists or could be construed as existing. If no conflict of interest exists or is specified, a Disclosure section will be added to the manuscript with the following statement: “The authors report no conflict of interest concerning the materials or methods used in this study or the findings specified in this paper.”
- References: Reference information is provided in a session below.
- Figure Legends: Legend information is provided in a session below.
- Case reports: The following sections are common to many published case reports and are useful as general guidance to the article structure:
- Introduction
- Case Report
- Literature review (if applicable)
- Discussion
- Acknowledgments
- Disclosures
- References
- Figure Legends
Acknowledgments
The source of any financial support received and recognition of personal assistance for the work being published should be indicated at the end of the article, just before the Reference section, under the heading
“ Acknowledgments”.
Conflict of Interest
It is required that a list of disclosures from every named author is submitted alongside the manuscript. In it, each author should identify any financial or non-financial conflicts relevant to the article. If no conflicts exist, please state so in this section.
Types of conflicts include: Consulting, Royalties, Research Support, Institutional Support, Ownership, Stock/Options, Speakers Bureau, and Fellowship Support. Any commercial entity whose products are described, reviewed, evaluated, or compared in the manuscript, except for those disclosed in the Acknowledgments section, are potential conflicts.
References
References should be the most recent and pertinent literature available. It is essential that they are complete and thoroughly checked. If the reference information is incomplete, good online sites to search for full details are the National Library of Medicine: www.nlm.nih.gov; Books in Print: www.booksinprint.com; PubMed: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/; or individual publisher Web sites.
Endnote: https://endnote.com/wp-content/uploads/plugins/styles/Vancouver.ens
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- References must be listed in Vancouver style (used by MEDLINE and PubMed);
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- References follow the article text. Insert a page break between the end of text and the start of references.
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- References must be cited sequentially (NOT alphabetically) in n square brackets (i.e. [1]);
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- List all author names, up to and including six names. For more than six authors, list the first three, followed by et al.
References should be styled per the following examples:
- Citing a journal article:
de Oliveira RS, Cinalli G, Roujeau T, Sainte-Rose C, Pierre-Kahn A, Zerah M. Neurenteric cysts in children: 16 consecutive cases and review of the literature. Journal of Neurosurgery: Pediatrics. 2005 Dec 1;103(6):512- 23.
- Citing a chapter in a book:
Toma H. Takayasu’s arteritis. In: Novick A, Scoble J, Hamilton G, eds. Renal Vascular Disease. Philadelphia: WB Saunders; 1995:47–62
- Citing a book:
Stryer L. Biochemistry. 2nd ed. San Francisco: WH Freeman; 1981:559–596
- Citing a thesis:
Stern I. Hemorrhagic Complications of Anticoagulant Therapy [Ph.D. dissertation]. Evanston, IL: Northwestern University; 1994
- Citing a government publication:
Food and Drug Administration. Jin Bu Huan Herbal Tablets. Rockville, MD: National Press Office; April 15, 1994. Talk Paper T94-22
- Citing an online article:
Rosenthal S, Chen R, Hadler S. The safety of acelluler pertussis vaccine vs whole-cell pertussis vaccine [abstract]. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med [serial online]. 1996;150:457–460. Available at: http://www.ama-assn.org/sci-pubs/journals/archive/ajdc/vol_150/no_5/abstract/htm. Accessed November 10, 1996
- Citing a symposium article:
Eisenberg J. Market forces and physician workforce reform: why they may not work. Paper presented at: Annual Meeting of the Association of American Medical Colleges; October 28, 1995; Washington, DC
Figure Captions
- Figures include photographs or radiographs, drawings, graphs, bar charts, flow charts, and pathways, but NOT lists or tables.
- Figures must be cited sequentially in the text. Number all figures (and corresponding figure captions) sequentially in the order they are cited in the text.
- Figure captions should be written after the reference list. Insert a page break between the end of references and the start of figure captions.
- Figure captions should include a description of the figure and/or each lettered part (A, B, etc.) and of any portions of the figure highlighted by arrows, arrowheads, asterisks, etc.
- For a figure borrowed or adapted from another publication (used with permission), add a credit line in parentheses at the end of each figure legend. This credit line should be a complete bibliographic listing of the source publication (as a reference), or other credit line as supplied by the copyright holder. For example (Reprinted with permission from Ballestero MFM, Santos MV. Hydrocephalus. Child’s Nervous System 2015;20:356.)
Tables
- Data given in tables should be commented on but not repeated in the text. Be sure that lists or columns of related data are composed in a word-processing program like the rest of the text.
- Do not intersperse tables in the text. Tables should appear after the figure captions. Insert a page break between the end of the figure captions and the start of the tables.
- Tables must be double-spaced and numbered in the same sequence they are cited in the text. A short descriptive title should be provided for each table.
- If a table contains artwork, supply the artwork separately as a digital file.
- For tables borrowed or adapted from another publication (used with permission), add a credit line as the first footnote beneath each table. This credit line should be a complete bibliographical listing of the source publication (as a reference), or other credit line as supplied by the copyright holder. For example, “Reprinted with permission from Ballestero MFM, Santos MV. Hydrocephalus. Child’s Nervous System 2015;20:356 (“Data from . . .” or “Adapted from . . .” may also be used, as appropriate.)
- Other footnotes for tables should be indicated in the table using superscript letters in alphabetical order.
- Any abbreviations used in the table should be explained at the end of the table in a footnote.
DIGITAL ARTWORK PREPARATION
General Guidelines
- It is best to use Adobe Photoshop to create and save images, and Adobe Illustrator for line art and labels.
- Save each figure in a separate file.
- Do not compress files.
- All black-and-white and color artwork should be at a resolution of 300 dpi (dots per inch) in TIFF format.
- Line art should be 1,200 dpi in EPS or TIFF format. Contact the Production Editor at Thieme if you are unsure of the final size.
- It is preferable for figures to be cropped to their final size or larger, and in the correct orientation. If art is submitted smaller and then has to be enlarged, its resolution (dpi) and clarity will decrease.
Note: Lower resolutions (less than 300 dpi) and JPEG format (.jpg extension) for grayscale and color artwork are strongly discouraged due to the poor quality they yield in printing, which requires 300 dpi resolution for sharp, clear, detailed images. JPEG format, by definition, is a lower resolution (compressed) format designed for quick upload on computer screens.
Black-and-White Art
- Black-and-white artwork can be halftone (or grayscale) photographs, radiographs, drawings, line art, graphs, and flowcharts.
- If possible, do not send color art for conversion to black-and-white. Do the conversion yourself so that you can check the results and confirm in advance that no critical details are lost or obscured by the change to black-and-white.
- For best results, line art should be black on a white background. Lines and type should be clean and evenly dark. Avoid screens or cross-hatching, as they can darken or be uneven in printing and lead to unacceptable printing quality.
Art Labels
- Arrows, asterisks, and arrowheads (or other markers) should be lighter in dark or black areas and darker in light or white areas, and large in size. If not, these highlighting marks may become difficult to see when figures are reduced in size during the typesetting process.
- Use 1-point (or thicker) rules and leader lines.
- Capitalize the first word of each label and all proper nouns. Consider using all capitals if you need a higher level of labels.
- Where there are alternate terms or spellings for a named structure, use the most common one and make sure it is consistent with what is used in the text.
- Avoid using multiple fonts and font sizes for the labels; use only one or two sizes of a serif font.
EDITORIAL CONTACTS
Please contact the Editorial Office Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery with any questions.
Editorial Office Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery Phone: +55 51 33882424 / + 55 51 999637811 Email: editorialoffice@sbnped.com.br
Copyright Notice
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSING
When publishing in Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery journal, authors retain the copyright of their article and agree to license their work using a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC BY 4.0), thereby accepting the terms and conditions of this license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode).
The CC BY 4.0 license terms applies to both readers and the publisher and allows them to: share (copy and redistribute in any medium or format) and adapt (remix, transform, and build upon) the article for any purpose, even commercially, provided that appropriate credit is given to the authors and the journal in which the article was published.
Authors grant Archives of Pediatric Neurosurgery the right to first publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher. Under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license, authors allow the journal to distribute the article in third party databases, as long as its original authors and citation details are identified.
Privacy Statement
The names and email addresses entered in this journal site will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this journal and will not be made available for any other purpose or to any other party.
Advertising and Marketing: APN reserves the right to insert advertisements from sponsors and supporters after evaluation and approval by the Journal Management Editors. Advertisements will not be related in any way to editorial decision-making and will be kept separate from the published content