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The 2005 editorial team is launching new features and procedures
as outlined below.
GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY publishes
original
papers reporting investigations and observations relating to
endoscopic procedures used in the study and treatment of
digestive
diseases. All submissions undergo peer review.
Submissions may be accompanied by supplemental materials
posted to the electronic version
of the journal; such materials
also will be subject to peer review. Careful adherence to
submission guidelines will avoid unnecessary
delays, as
incomplete submissions may be returned to the authors
before initiation of the peer review process.
ETHICAL CONCERNS
- Prospective authors should refer to the Uniform
Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical
Journals1
(
http://www.icmje.org ) to familiarize themselves
with ethical conventions of publication; specifically,
the issues of redundant
or duplicate publication, authorship
criteria, and potential conflicts of interest.
- The Editor reserves the right to investigate
alleged improprieties
related to these conventions.
- When questions of scientific misconduct or dishonesty in
research occur,
the Editor reserves the right to proceed
according to the guidelines of the Office of Research
Integrity.2 Authors may be
asked to provide the appropriate
documentation of compliance, as well as the data on
which the manuscript is based.
- Investigations
involving human subjects or animals must
have prior approval of the appropriate institutional review
board or an equivalent body.3,4
- In countries where institutional review is not established
practice, a statement must be included in the methods
section that
the research was carried out in accordance
with the Helsinki Declaration.3
REGISTRATION OF HUMAN CLINICAL
TRIALS
Gastrointestinal Endoscopy follows the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE)'s Uniform Requirements
for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals. All prospective human clinical trials eventually submitted in GIE must have been registered
through one of the registries approved by the ICMJE, and proof of that registration must be submitted to GIE along with the article.
For further details and explanation of which trials need to be registered as well as a list of ICMJE-acceptable registries, please go
to http://www.icmje.org .
SPECIAL SUBJECT REPOSITORIES
Certain repositories such as PubMed Central ("PMC")
are authorized under special arrangement with Elsevier to process and post certain articles such as those funded by the National Institutes
of Health under its Public Access policy (see elsevier.com for more
detail on our policy).
Articles accepted for publication in an Elsevier journal from authors who have indicated that the underlying
research reported in their articles was supported by an NIH grant will be sent by Elsevier to PMC for public access posting 12 months
after final publication. The version of the article provided by Elsevier will include peer-review comments incorporated by the author
into the article. Because the NIH 'Public Access' policy is voluntary, authors may elect not to deposit such articles in PMC. If you
wish to 'opt out' and not deposit to PMC, you may indicate this by sending an e-mail to NIHauthorrequest@elsevier.com.
There will be no need for you to post your manuscript directly to PubMed Central, and any such posting is prohibited. Individual modifications
to this general policy may apply to some Elsevier journals and to its society publishing partners.
MANUSCRIPT TYPES
GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY will consider the following
types of submissions. Authors should consider these
categories and review
recent issues of the journal when
preparing submissions.
-
Original Article:
work of approximately 2500 words
reporting basic science or clinical investigations in areas
relevant to gastrointestinal endoscopy.
-
Review Article:
extensive review of the published literature,
limited to 3500 words, on a particular, well-defined
topic. Do not combine with reports
of individual cases. These are by invitation only. If interested, please contact Dr. Jason Dominitz at Jason.Dominitz@med.va.gov.
-
New Methods and Materials:
report of experience
with new developments in the endoscopic arena, given in
no
more than 1200 words.
-
At the Focal Point:
unusual or classic findings illustrated
by no more than four high-quality
images, accompanied
by a brief description of no more than 200 words.
-
Technical Review:
systematic, scholarly
overview of
technologic advances in endoscopy, authored by a single
individual and limited to 3500 words. These are by invitation only.
If interested, please contact Dr. John Vargo at vargoj@ccf.org.
-
Perspectives:
topical review
of nonclinical areas pertaining to gastrointestinal endoscopy, limited to 3000 words. These are by invitation only. If interested, please
contact Dr. Klaus Mergener at klausmergener@aol.com.
-
Thinking Outside the Box:
an opinion piece
of no
more than 1000 words on a provocative matter or novel
unexplored concept related to the practice of endoscopy,
possibly accompanied
by editorial comment; no abstract
necessary.
-
Case Series:
report and analysis of a series of four or more
related
cases, described in no more than 2000 words.
-
Brief (Case) Report:
a single case described in no more
than 600
words.
-
Letter to the Editor:
reader comments, limited to 300
words.
SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS
- Original submissions will be considered for publication
with the understanding that they are contributed solely toGastrointestinal
Endoscopy. If any material related to the
submission (other than a brief abstract) has been published
in any medium or has been
submitted for publication
elsewhere, the authors should provide copies of all
related manuscripts, and outline the relationship of all
materials for the Editor, to avoid allegations of duplicate
publication.
- All manuscripts must be submitted online at
http://ees.elsevier.com/gie/
. This web site provides step-bystep
instructions for manuscript submission as well as a
tutorial for authors.
- All peer review,
tracking, and follow-up will be done
through this system.
- Articles must be written in standard English. All accepted
manuscripts
are subject to copy editing for conciseness,
clarity, grammar, spelling, and journal style.
JOURNAL PUBLISHING AGREEMENT
- At the time an article is accepted and sent to Elsevier for production, a Journal Publishing Agreement will be e-mailed to the
corresponding author. This original document, containing the author(s) ink signatures, should be returned to Elsevier at the following
address. This must be on file before publication can occur.
Farida Sakoor
Elsevier, Inc.
360 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10010
E-mail: f.sakoor@elsevier.com
Fax: 212-462-1955
- The Journal Publishing Agreement
must be completed in its entirety.
- The deletion or addition of authors at any point between submission and publication must
be explained to the satisfaction of the Editor. The Editor reserves the right to clarify each author's role in the work outlined.
SUBMISSION FORMAT
Key Words
When prompted by the online submission process, authors
should provide no fewer
than three but no more that five key
words that reflect the content of the manuscript. For guidance,
consult the Medical Subject
Headings (MeSH terms),
available on-line at
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/meshhome.html .
Title/Cover Page
The online instructions will guide you in creating this item.
This page also should specify each author's contribution to
the following
criteria for authorship: conception and design;
analysis and interpretation of the data; drafting of the article;
critical revision of
the article for important intellectual content;
final approval of the article.
Conflict of Interest Disclosure
Each submission
must include a full conflict of interest disclosure. A potential conflict of interest exists when an author or the author's institution
has financial or personal relationships that could influence or could be perceived to influence the work. Examples of financial conflicts
include employment, consultancies, stock ownership, honoraria, paid expert testimony, patent applications, and research and travel grants
within 3 years of beginning the work submitted. If there are no conflicts of interest, authors must state that there are none. These
disclosures will appear with the article in print and online.
Associate Editors and Reviewers will recuse themselves from involvement
in processing manuscripts when they identify a conflict of interest.
For a complete explanation of what does and does not constitute
a conflict of interest, please see Gastrointest Endosc 2006;63(7):33A-35A or view the document online at www.giejournal.org
or www.asge.org.
Express-track Submissions
For Original Articles
only, if authors believe their submission warrants express-track treatment, they may request this during the submission process. If the
article is chosen for this special handling, an initial decision will be made within 2 weeks. If the article is accepted, publication
will occur within 3 months.
Abstract
For Original Articles, New Methods and Materials, and Case
Series submissions, a structured
abstract of no more than 250
words should use all of the following headings:
- Background
- Objective
- Design
- Setting
- Patients
- Interventions
- Main outcome measurements
- Results
- Limitations
- Conclusions
Submissions to Reviews, Brief Reports, and At the Focal
Point do not require an abstract.
Text
Structure
Manuscripts should be structured according to the following:
- Title: What is the main conclusion of the study?
- Introduction: Why carry out the study?
- Background: What is already known on the issue?
- Methods: How was
the study done?
- Results: What were the main findings?
- Discussion: What do these results add to the current body
of
knowledge?
Randomized controlled trials should be presented according
to the CONSORT guidelines
( http://www.consort-statement.org
).5 Observational studies should be presented, where possible, according to the STROBE guidelines ( http://www.strobe-statement.org
).
The paper's emphasis should be on tables, figures, and/or
images. Authors should stress why the results are important
and what
the study adds to current knowledge.
Take-home Message
If you are submitting an Original Article or New Methods article,
write 1 to 3 sentences interpreting (not summarizing) your work and placing it into context. What is the significance and what is the
most important concept from your study for readers? What are the implications?
Author Contributions
Each submission must
include an uploaded file outlining the contribution(s) that each author made toward the production of the article.
Product and
Drug Names
Generic drug names should be used; trade names may be
inserted in parentheses after the initial mention of the drug.
Product names should be treated similarly, listing the manufacturer's
name, city, and state in parentheses.
Laboratory Values
Laboratory values should be presented in SI units. For
conversion from non-SI units see
http://www.techexpo.com/techdata/techcntr.html
. Following laboratory values, normal
values should be presented in parentheses in the text.
Abbreviations
Spell out abbreviations
the first time the terms appear in
the text. You may follow the list of standard abbreviations
found in the AMA Manual of Style,
10th edition.6
Statistics
- All studies reporting levels of significance must include
the sample size calculation
and power used in that calculation.
Justification for deviating from calculated sample
sizes must be addressed.
- Statistical
techniques that do not appear in the published
literature should be presented as an appendix. All but the
most standard tests should
be referenced.
- For reporting means, standard deviations, and standard
error, the following format should be used: "mean (SD)"
and "mean ± SE." For reporting medians, the values of
the interquartile range (IQR) and those of the range
should be given.
-
Report levels of significance for all comparisons made,
whether significant or not, with P-values or confidence
intervals.
-
Papers that overstate the level of significance of findings
due to multiple comparisons must be adjusted statistically
and the results
and discussion presented only with
respect to the corrected findings. The problem may be
avoided through the use of multivariate methods;
however,
significance levels may be corrected with post-hoc
tests, such as Bonferroni's method. Multiple comparisons
of data from a single
data set typically can occur in either
of the two following situations: repeated measurements
of a single variable are tested over time,
or several correlated
variables are used in different tests of hypotheses.
- Interpretation of results of regression analyses
requires
that units of continuous variables as well as categories of
discrete or ordinal variables be specified. Additionally, for
logistic
regression and Cox regression analyses, the baseline
or reference category of discrete or ordinal variables
must also be given.
Figures and Tables
Figures (including color photographs) are published without
charge to authors.
- Instructions
for creating figures can be found below and
at
http://ees.elsevier.com/gie/ .
- It is crucial that you create your
figures at the correct resolution
before uploading them to the Editorial Manager
website. For step-by-step instructions (with screenshots
of common graphics applications for PC or Mac users) on
how to create your figures at the proper resolution, see
"Application guidelines"
at
http://authors.elsevier.com .
For best results, please follow these guidelines carefully.
- Figure images should
be provided in EPS or TIF format. If it
is an endoscopic figure, please leave it in its native image
form. Graphics software such as
Photoshop and Illustrator
(not presentation software such as PowerPoint, CorelDraw,
or Harvard Graphics) should be used to create
the figures.
- Illustrations should be saved at the highest resolution setting
and sized as close to a column width (3 to 4 inches)
as possible.
- Tables should be Word documents and should be placed at the end of the text Word document. All tables and figures
must be cited in the text in consecutive order.
- Legends should be typed in a separate document and
include enough information
so that figures can be interpreted
without reference to the text. Give staining and
magnification for photomicrographs of histologic
slides.
- At the discretion of the Editor, images may appear in the
print version of the Journal, the electronic version, or
both.
Video/Computer Graphics
- Videos and computer graphics (ie, slide presentations with or without
animation) can be submitted through Editorial Manager. If the file is too large to upload into Editorial Manager, it can be sent on original,
edited CD-ROMs or DVD-Rs in Windows-compatible format to the GIE Editorial Office. Three copies of the disk containing the video/computer
graphics should be submitted by mail or courier when the manuscript is submitted. Be sure to include the manuscript title and date of
submission so that the disks can be cross-referenced to the manuscript submission. Please indicate the video component on the submission
cover page.
- All videos or graphics submitted must be of the highest
quality possible.
- Submissions of videos
that were originally recorded
through the S-video or RGB outputs of the endoscope
processor are desired.
- Gastrointestinal
Endoscopy may edit any video or computer
graphics. Reviewers, following the usual policy with
illustrations, may suggest changes
in the video or computer
graphic.
- A sound track is highly recommended, but not required.
- Maximum cumulative length
of videos or computer
graphics is 8 minutes, and materials may be divided into
several smaller clips not to exceed 8 minutes in total.
If
the video or animation is divided into several clips, each
clip should be identified at the beginning of the section
(eg, Video Clip
1, Graphic 1) and on the disk. Several
videos/graphics may be on the same disk, but if they are
separate clips, they must be saved as
separate files. When
needed, use of simple transitions, eg, fade in/out dissolve,
dip to color dissolve, are suggested.
- Concise
legends (typed on a separate page) must accompany
each video clip or computer graphic presentation.
- The following formats for
video will be accepted: MPEG-1
or MPEG-2 (.mpg), Quicktime (.mov), or Compuserve
GIF (.gif). Please contact the publisher about the use
of
other formats.
- A graphic will be used in the text to indicate the location
of a video clip or computer graphic component.
Videos/computer graphics for accepted manuscripts will
not be returned, nor will they be accepted separately
from a rejected manuscript.
- If the article is accepted for publication, the video will be
digitized and permanently archived on the Gastrointestinal
Endoscopy website (
http://www.giejournal.org ).
References
- References must be cited in
the text in consecutive order
and identified by superscript numbers.
- It is the author's responsibility to check the accuracy
of all
references by verifying them against the original documents.
Citations can be verified by using PubMed's
Citation Matcher (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query/static/citmatch.html ).
- Examples of correct forms of reference, in accordance
with Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted
to Biomedical
Journals,1 are given in the online submission
instructions.
- Follow Index Medicus for journal title abbreviations
(
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/entrez/jrbrowser.cgi ).
PERMISSIONS
- If excerpts from other
copyrighted works are included,
the author(s) must obtain written permission from the
copyright owners and credit the source(s) in the
article.
These permissions must be submitted to the Editorial
Office before publication can occur.
- Preprinted forms for use
by authors in these cases can be
obtained from Elsevier's Rights Department, Philadelphia,
PA, USA: phone (+1) 215-239-3804, fax (+1)
215-239-3805
, e-mail: healthpermissions@elsevier.com
- Requests may also be completed online via the Elsevier
homepage (
http://www.elsevier.com/locate/permissions ).
ARTICLES IN PRESS
The Editorial Office and
Elsevier may choose to publish an article online before we publish it in the journal. Please contact our production department immediately
if you do not want us to make any such prior publication for any reason, including disclosure of a patentable invention.
PROOFS
Galley proofs are e-mailed to the corresponding author
and must be returned to the publisher by fax or e-mail within
48 hours to avoid
delay in publication:
John Porter
Issue Management
Elsevier Inc.
360 Park Avenue South
New York, NY 10010-1710
(212)
462-1955
E-mail: j.s.porter@elsevier.com
For any further information please contact the issue manager
or the
Author Support Department at authorsupport@
elsevier.com
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. International Committee of Medical
Journal Editors. Uniform requirements
for manuscripts submitted to biomedical journals. Available at:
http://www.icmje.org
. Accessed June 11, 2004.
2. Office of Research Integrity. Managing allegations of scientific
misconduct: a guidance document for
editors. Available at: http://ori.dhhs.gov/ . Accessed June 12, 2004.
3. World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki.
Recommendations
guiding physicians in biomedical research involving human subjects.
JAMA 1997;277:925-6.
4. Institute of Laboratory
Animal Resources, National Research Council.
Guide for the care and use of laboratory animals. Washington, DC:
National Academy Press,
1996. Available at: http://www.nap.edu/readingroom/books/labrats/ . Accessed June 12, 2004.
5. Moher D, Schulz KF, Altman
D; CONSORT Group (Consolidated
Standards of Reporting Trials). The CONSORT statement: revised recommendations
for improving the quality
of reports of parallel-group randomized
trials. JAMA 2001;285:1987-1991.
6. Iverson CL, Flanagin A, Fontanarosa PB, Glass RM, Giltman
P, Lantz JC,
et al. American Medical Association manual of style: a guide for
authors and editors. 9th ed. Baltimore, MD: Williams Wilkins;
1998.
p. 319-28.
Updated January 2010
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