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期刊名称:YONSEI MEDICAL JOURNAL

ISSN:0513-5796
出版频率:Bimonthly
出版社:YONSEI UNIV COLLEGE MEDICINE, C/O KYUN0-IL IM, M.D., PH.D,SHINCHON DONG 134,SEODAEMOON KUSEOUL, SOUTH KOREA, 120-752
期刊网址:http://www.eymj.org/abstracts/list.asp
影响因子:0.784(2008)
主题范畴:MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

Yonsei Medical Journal is being published from 1960 six times annually, one volume per year beginning in February by the Yonsei University College of Medicine which was founded by Dr. Horace N. Allen in 1885.

The goal of Yonsei Medical Journal ( ISSN 0513-5796, indexed in Index Medicus, SciSearch®, Current Contents®/Clinical Medicine,  Research Alert®, included in JCR®) is to inform its readers of significant development in all areas related to medicine.

Yonsei Medical Journal is copyrighted by the Yonsei University College of Medicine.


Instructions to Authors

SUBMISSION OF MANUSCRIPTS:

  Contributions must be submitted triplicate (with at least two sets of original illustrations) to Kwan Chul Tark, M.D., Ph.D., FACS, Editor in Chief, Yonsei Medical Journal, Yonsei University College of Medicine, Shinchon dong 134, Seodaemoon ku, Seoul 120-752, Korea (Tel: 82-2-361-5061). Papers should be submitted only by an author, preferably by corresponding senior author, who should indicate in a covering letter the exact address to which all related correspondences should be sent and a telephone number at which the author can be reached. Contributor may indicate in the covering letter if they wish their papers to appear in the Clinical Investigations section; however, the final decision as to placement within the journal will be made by the Editor.
  There is no manuscript processing fee, regardless of the number of resubmissions required.
  Revised manuscripts should be submitted in duplicate, with two sets of original illustrations. A covering letter in duplicate must accompany all revised manuscripts and indicate clearly what alterations have been made in response to the reviewer's comments. Satisfactory reasons should be given for noncompliance with any of the recommendations of the Editors. Revised manuscripts may undergo another review by an Associate Editor and/or referees, particularly if the original submission required extensive changes.
  If a new author has been added or an author has been deleted since the original submission, it is the responsibility of the corresponding author to ensure that the authors involved are aware of and agree to the changes in authorship. Yonsei Medical Journal accepts no responsibility for such changes.

STYLE:

  Papers should conform strictly to Journal style. A recent issue of Yonsei Medical Journal will provide authors with assistance in the proper arrangement of papers. Manuscripts are to be written in clear, grammatical English. Papers that are not in idiomatic English, so that it cannot be understood by the Editors, will be returned to the author without review. Yonsei Medical Journal, however, is fortunate to have the necessary professional personnel who are knowledgeable in medical English and will help the authors in revising the accepted manuscripts at no cost to authors. Laboratory slang as well as terminology and abbreviations not consistent with internationally accepted guidelines should be avoided.
  For general and technical assistance in writing scientific papers, authors should refer to the following publications: Stedman's Medical Dictionary (Twenty- sixth Edition, 1995, The Williams & Wilkins Co., Baltimore, MD.); Scientific Style and Format: The CBE manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers (6th ed. New York: Cambridge University Press; 1994); Medical Writing, The Technic and the Art (Fourth Edition, 1972, Morris Fishbein, Charles C. Thomas, Publisher, Springfield, III).
  Data must be presented concisely. Large masses of data of peripheral significance to the main thesis of the investigation will not be published in Yonsei Medical Journal. However, if such data are considered necessary by the author to gain acceptance of the paper by the Journal, copies may be submitted for review along with the manuscript.
  The manuscript should be typed on 21.6×28 cm (8.5×11 inch) paper with double spacing throughout, allowing for ample margins. Consecutive numbering of all pages is requested, with the title page as page 1. The typescript should be arranged in the following order: (a) title, (b) author(s) and complete name(s) and location(s) of institution(s) or laboratory(ies) where the work was done, (c) running title, (d) footnotes, (e) key words, (f) text, (g) tables, (h) legends for all figures and photographs, (i) figures and photographs, and (i) other materials, if any. However, numbering and lettering of sections in the text should be avoided. The appropriate locations for each table and illustrations should be indicated by marginal notes. Simple chemical formulas or mathematical equations should be presented in a form that allows their reproduction in single horizontal lines of type; more complicated mathematical formulas or chemical structures difficult to set in type should be provided in the form of India ink drawings or glossy photographs for camera-ready reproduction.

FORMAT:

TITLE. Titles should be brief but informative, and if possible, should be less than 100 characters. It is important for literature retrieval to include the key words in the title which are necessary to identify the nature of the subject matter, including the species of animal on which the work is done. Use of expressions such as "Studies onˇ" "Observations ofˇ" or "Effects ofˇ" should be avoided, since they are not sufficiently informative. Chemical formulas or abbreviations should not be used. Titles in the form of declarative or interrogative sentences are not encouraged. Also, do not use Roman or Arabic numerals to designate that the paper is one in a series.
AUTHORS and AFFILIATIONS. Authors are urged to include their full names, complete with first and middle names or initials. Particularly for Korean authors, a hyphen between the two parts of their first name are encouraged. Confusion often arises in the literature when authors are identified by surname and initials only. Authors' academic degrees should not be included. The full names of institutions and subsidiary laboratories should be given, together with a useful address (including the postal number). If several authors and institutions are listed on a paper, it should be clearly indicated with which department and institution each author is affiliated.
RUNNING TITLE. A brief running title should be provided, not to exceed 50 characters. Running titles in the form of declarative or interrogative sentences are not acceptable.
FOOTNOTES. Lengthy footnotes are discouraged since the same information can, in most instances, be presented more effectively in the text. Footnotes to the title page and text are to be designated consecutively with superscript Arabic numbers. A footnote to the title should contain information on financial support, including the source(s) and number(s) of the grant(s). Authors should also include a footnote designating to whom reprint requests should be addressed. An all-inclusive abbreviation footnote should contain a definition for every non-standard abbreviation used in the paper.
ABSTRACT. The abstract, to appear at the beginning of the paper, should be concise, yet indicative of the content of the paper. As abstracts are often copied directly by the secondary information services, they should repeat in a shortened form, the purpose of the study and the experimental technique, results, and interpretations of the data. Data such as the number of test subjects and controls, strains of animals or viruses, drug dosages and routes of administration, length of the observation period, and magnitude of activity should be included. Vague, general statements such as "significances of the results are discussed", or "some physical properties were studied", are un-informative and not acceptable. All of the important terms relevant to the content of the paper should be used in the abstract to assist indexers in their search for key words. Abbreviations, if they are needed, should be kept to absolute minimum with proper identifications. Authors may wish to remember that "Medline", a computerized monthly bibliography prepared by the National Library of Medicine, includes only those abstracts that contain less than 250 words. Longer abstracts are not accessible through the Medline service.
KEY WORDS. List important terms relevant to the content of the paper. For the selection of key words, please refer Medical Subject Heading (MeSH) of Index Medicus.
INTRODUCTION. It is not necessary to include all of the background literature in this section. Brief reference to the most pertinent papers generally is enough to inform the reader with the findings of others in the field and with the question to which the author's particular investigation is being studied.
MATERIALS and METHODS. Explanation of the experimental methods should be concise but sufficient for repetition by qualified investigators. Procedures that have been published previously should not be described in detail, but merely cited with appropriate references. Only new and significant modifications of previously published procedures need complete explanation. The sources of special chemicals or preparations used should be given along with their locations (names of the company, city and state and country, if foreign).
  This Journal endorses the principles embodied in the Declaration of Helsinki and expects that all investigators involving humans will have been performed in accordance with these principles. For animal experimentation reported in this Journal, it is expected that the "Guiding Principles in the Care and Use of Animals" approved by the American Phy-siological Society will have been observed.
RESULTS. This section should include a concise textual description of the data presented in tables and figures. Excessive elaboration of data already given in tables and figures should be avoided. The Results and Discussion sections may be combined if, by doing so, space is saved or the logical sequence of the material is improved.
DISCUSSION. In this section, the data should be interpreted concisely without repeating material already presented in the Results section. Speculation is permitted, but it must be supported by the presented data of authors' and be well founded.
REFERENCES. References should be numbered serially in the text, with numbers as unparenthesized superscripts:
1 or 1,2-5 and appear after any closing punctuation. They should be listed on a separate sheet, double-spaced, at the end of the paper in that order. Reference format should conform to that set forth in "Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals" (JAMA 1997;277:927-34), also known as the "Vancouver" style for biomedical journals. Journal abbreviations should conform to the style used in the Cumulated Index Medicus. Each reference should include:
  Journals articles - authors' names and initials, title of article, journal name, year, volume number, and inclusive pages (list all authors when six or less; when seven or more, list six and add et al.):
 Vega KJ, Pina I, Krevsky B. Heart transplantation is associated with an increased risk for pancreatobiliary disease. Ann Intern Med 1996;124:980-3.
  Books - Ringsven MK, Bond D. Gerontology and leadership skills for nurses. 2nd ed. Albany(NY): Delmar Publishers; 1996.
  Book chapter - authors' names and initials, chapter title, editor's name, book title, edition, city, publisher, year, and inclusive   pages:
 Phillips SJ, Whisnant JP. Hypertension and stroke. In: Laragh JH, Brenner BM, editors. Hypertension: pathophysiology, diagnosis, and management. 2nd ed. New York: Raven Press; 1995. p.465-78.
Unpublished data and personal communications may be cited in the text but should not be listed as references. Authors are responsible for the accuracy of references.
ADDENDA. Data acquired after acceptance of the paper, by the authors themselves or by others, cannot be added to the text. An addendum may be added in proof upon approval by the Editor. Addenda should be kept extremely brief.
TABLES. Tables should be constructed so that when typeset, they will fit within a single page. Tabular material should not duplicate data already presented in the figures. Unnecessary columns of data that can easily be obtained from the rest of the results in the table should not be included. Large groups of individual values should be avoid; instead, these should be averaged and proper designation of the dispersion such as standard deviation or standard error included.
  Authors are obligated to indicate the significance of their observations by appropriate statistical analysis.
  Every table must have descriptive title and an explanatory paragraph that clearly gives the experimental details for understanding by the reader without reference to the text. Each column must carry an appropriate heading and, if numerical measurements are given, these units should be added to the column heading. Tables should be numbered with arabic numerals. Explain in footnotes all nonstandard abbreviations that are used in each table. For footnotes use the following symbols, in this sequence: *,⒂,⒃,§,~,¶,**,⒂⒂,⒃⒃, etc.
  All units of measurement and concentration should be clearly designated. Exponential terminology is discouraged (the term mM is preferable to
10-3 M). If exponentials are absolutely needed in column headings, the quantity expressed should be preceded, not followed, by the power of 10 by which its value has been multiplied, i.e., 10-3×concentration (M). This will prevent confusion as to whether the quantity should be multiplied or divided to obtain the correct value.
FIGURES. Graphs, drawings and photographs are to be designated as figures. Flow diagrams and comple. biochemical structures should be prepared professionally(not simply type written). Graphs should be used only when a relevant point needs illustration. Straight-line functions such as relationships between concentration and absorbance, of Lineweaver-Burk plots when these are linear, should instead be described in a few lines in the text. To conserve space, those curves that could appropriately appear together should be included in a single figure.
  The use of exponentials for labeling coordinates in figures is considered ambiguous and should, if at all possible, be avoided. If exponentials must be used, the quantity expressed should be preceded by the power of 10 by which its value has been multiplied, i.e., 103×concentration(M). The form "Concentration (M×10
-3)" is not acceptable. If powers of 10 are used, the legend should designate how the quantity is to be calculated (whether multiplied or divided) to give the correct value.
  Preparation of figures. Figures must be drawn with professional instruments and may be on Bristol board, tracing paper or cloth, or coordinate (graph) paper printed in light blue. Figures should not be mounted on heavy cardboard. Clear, glossy prints are acceptable instead of orignial drawings, provided that all parts of the figure are in focus, X-ray films or Polaroid photographs are not acceptable. If original drawings are submitted, they should not be larger than one page width.
  Except for especially complicated drawings showing large amounts of data, all figures are published at one-page width or less. It is recommended that figures be submitted in less than one-page size. If larger figures are submitted, it is the responsibility of the author to see that the abscissas, ordinates, lines, and especially the symbols are sufficiently large to permit reduction. When the figures are reduced to the size of a single column or of a single-page width, the letters and numbers must be at least 1.5 mm high and the smallest part of the figure must be readable or the figures will be returned to the author for correction. In original figures, this can be accomplished by having the minimum height for lower-case letters 5 mm. The thickness of ruled lines on charts is also important for clear presentation of the data. Size recommendations for lines are as follows: #1 Leroy for graph grids, bonds, and arrows; #2 Leroy for graph borders or reference lines; and #5 Leroy for graph curves or emphasis lines.
  Points of observations should be noted with different symbols rather than with different types of lines; their significance can be explained directly in the body of the figure or in the legend. Only those common symbols for which the printer has type (×, ≯, ·, [ ], ♂, ♀, °) should be used.
  Figures should be ruled off close (not far away) to the area occupied by the curve, and abscissas and ordinates should be clearly marked with proper units. Explanations of the coordinates should not extend beyond the respective lines. Do not bo.-in figures with top and right-hand frame lines, unless these are essential for reference. If a figure contains a left- and a right-hand ordinate, explanations of the left ordinate should read in the upward direction and that of the right ordinate should read downward. Titles printed outside the limits of the figures waste space; all of this information can easily be included in the legend.
  Each figure should be labeled in pencil on an adhesive label on the back side with Arabic numbers and the first author's name.
FIGURE LEGENDS. Legends are required for all figures. They should briefly describe the data shown; details in the text need not be repeated. Each legend should properly identify all units, abbreviations, mathematical expressions, abscissas, ordinates, and symbols.
PHOTOGRAPHS. Because halftone illustrations (photomicrographs and photographs) are expensive to reproduce, only those photographs that are absolutely essential to aid the presentation can be accepted. It is often difficult for the printer to judge accurately the amount of reduction possible for electrophoretic patterns. Therefore this material should be submitted in reduced form ready for photoreproduc-tion. Color photographs are discouraged and will be published only if the Editors decide them absolutely necessary. The complete expense of reproducing such photographs will be charged to the author. The author is also responsible for submitting prints that are of sufficient quality to permit accurate reproduction, and for approving the final color galley proof. If mounted, color photographs must be on a flexible backing. Yonsei Medical Journal assumes no responsibility for the quality of the photograph as it appears in the journal. Current estimates for color reproduction can be obtained from the Editorial Office.
  Preparation of plates. Photographs should be mounted on "plates" of white cardboard; the overall dimensions of photographs on a given plate should not exceed one-page width. All photographs should be correctly exposed, sharply focused, and submitted on glossy white paper.
  Karyotypes should be presented in the form of cardboard plates onto which chromosome sections from an original photomicrograph are pasted. This "original" is needed for clear Journal reproduction. The back of the plate should indicate how much it can be reduced in size if published. For review purposes, two additional glossy photographs are requested.
  The figure numbers, in Arabic numerals, should appear in India ink directly on the photographs and, if possible, should be in the lower right-hand corner of each photograph. These numbers should be no larger than 0.8 cm. Wax-based lettering such as PRES-TYPE or LETRASET is discouraged because of its tendency to crumble and adhere to the vinyl overlays used at printing. Photomicrographs should have internal scale markers. Symbols, arrows, or letters used in photomicrographs should contrast with the background.
  Tissue or thin paper overlays on plates are a necessary protection for figures. Indicate on overlays the important areas of the photographs that must be reproduced with greatest accuracy. The top of the figure and the first author's name should be given in pencil on an adhesive label on the back side of each plate.
PHOTOGRAPH LEGENDS. An appropriate legend for each figure, including stains and magnifications, where applicable, is required. Any abbreviations or reference points on a photograph should be explained in the legend. All attempts will be made to place legends under the plates to which they refer. To facilitate proper layout, authors should keep their plates to about one-page size of the journal.

ABBREVIATIONS:

  Abbreviations are in general a hindrance to readers in fields other than that of the author(s), to abstractors, and to scientists in foreign countries. Authors should limit their use to an absolute minimum. Single words should not be abbreviated, e.g., daunomycin, vincristine. Abbreviations are not to be used in titles. Abstracts may contain abbreviations for terms mentioned many times in the abstract section, but their identification is necessary and mandatory.
  Authors should follow the recommendations of the IUPAC-IUM Commission on Biochemical Nomenclature for standard abbreviation. All non-standard abbreviations should be identified in an inclusive abbreviation footnote to the first such abbreviation after the Abstract section. Abbreviations that form recognizable words, such as EAT and MOPS, are discouraged.


Editorial Board

Editor in Chief       Kwan Chul Tark, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.C.S.
Associate Editor     Kyung Soon Song, M.D., Ph.D.
Executive Editor    In-Hong Choi, M.D., Ph.D.
Editorial Board    
  Ji Hoe Heo, M.D., Ph.D.            Yu Seun Kim, M.D., Ph.D.        Dong Chun Shin, M.D., Ph.D.
  Deok Won Kim, Ph.D.               Hwan Mo Lee, M.D., Ph.D.       Chang-Ok Suh, M.D., Ph.D.
  Dong Kee Kim, Ph.D.                Min-Geol Lee, M.D., Ph.D.        Il Suh, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.H.A.
  June-Myung Kim, M.D., Ph.D.    Min Goo Lee, M.D., Ph.D.        Jin-Suck Suh, M.D., Ph.D.
  Soon Il Kim, M.D., Ph.D.           Wyun Kon Park, M.D., Ph.D.    Woo Ick Yang, M.D., Ph.D.
  Young-Ho Kim, M.D., Ph.D.
Editorial Advisory Board
Sharon Adler, M.D., Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, USA	     
Perry F. Bartlett, BDSc, Ph.D., Univ Queensland, Australia	
John P. Bilezikian, M.D., Columbia Univ, USA	
Malcolm N. Blumenthal, M.D., Univ Minnesota, USA	
R. Maynard Case, M.D., Univ Manchester, UK	
Jong-Yil Chai, M.D., Ph.D., Seoul Nat'l Univ, Korea	
Kyunghee C. Cho, M.D., FACR, New Jersey Medical School, USA	
Byung Ho Choi, M.D., Ph.D., Univ California, USA	
Hak Choy, M.D., Vanderbilt Univ, USA	
Jin Mo Chung, Ph.D., Univ Texas, USA	
J. William Futrell, M.D., Univ Pittsburgh, USA	
Anthony D. Ho, M.D., Univ Heidelberg, Germany	
Ki Whan Hong, M.D., Pusan Univ, Korea	
Waun Ki Hong, M.D., Univ Texas, USA	
Masayuki Imamura, M.D., Ph.D., Kyoto Univ, Japan	
Chan Y. Jung, Ph.D., State Univ New York, USA	
EunDuck P. Kay, DDS, Ph.D., Univ Southern California, USA	
Hugo Kesteloot, M.D., Ph.D., Univ Leuven, Belgium	
Il Soon Kim, M.D., Yonsei Univ, Emeritus, Korea	
Jae Wook Kim, M.D., Ph.D., Yonsei Univ, Korea	
Jong Sung Kim, M.D., Ph.D., Univ Ulsan, Korea
Ki Whan Kim, M.D., Ph.D., Seoul Nat'l Univ, Korea
Moon Hyun Kim, M.D., Univ California, USA
Nam Hyun Kim, M.D., Ph.D., Konyang Univ, Korea
Yong Sik Kim, M.D., Ph.D., Seoul Nat'l Univ, Korea
Masaki Kitajima, M.D., Keio Univ, Japan
Jae Woon Lee, Ph.D., Pohang Univ Sci & Tech, Korea
Jin Hak Lee, M.D., Ph.D., Seoul Nat'l Univ, Korea
Kyu Chang Lee, M.D., Ph.D., Yonsei Univ, Korea
David J. Lim, M.D., Univ Southern California, USA
Shin Joong Oh, M.D., Univ Alabama, USA
Eun Sook Park, M.D., Ph.D., Yonsei Univ, Korea
Kenneth J. Pienta, M.D., Univ Michigan, USA
Jae Yoon Ro, M.D., Ph.D., Univ Ulsan, Korea
Chang Won Song, Ph.D., Univ Minnesota, USA
Hiroshi Takami, M.D., Ph.D., Teikyo Univ, Japan
Glenn Talaska, Ph.D., Univ Cincinnati, USA
William Tasman, M.D., Thomas Jefferson Univ, USA
Hirotsugu Ueshima, M.D., Ph.D., FFPHM, Shiga Univ, Japan
John G. Webster, Ph.D., Univ Wisconsin-Madison, USA
Eung Je Woo, Ph.D., Kyung Hee Univ, Korea
Heun Young Yune, M.D., FACR, Indiana Univ, USA

All correspondences, business communications and manuscripts should be directed to:

Kwan Chul Tark, M.D., Ph.D., F.A.C.S., Editor in Chief
Yonsei Medical Journal
Yonsei University College of Medicine
Shinchon dong 134, Seodaemoon ku, Seoul 120-752, Korea
Tel: 82-2-361-5061,    Fax: 82-2-393-4945,   E-Mail : ymj@yumc.yonsei.ac.kr
Yonsei Medical Journal is printed by the Design Mecca Publishing Co.




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