ABSTRACT
We describe a method to publish nomenclatural acts described in taxonomic websites (Scratchpads) that are formally registered through publication in a printed journal (ZooKeys). This method is fully compliant with the zoological nomenclatural code. Our approach supports manuscript creation (via a Scratchpad), electronic act registration (via ZooBank), online and print publication (in the journal ZooKeys) and simultaneous dissemination (ZooKeys and Scratchpads) for nomenclatorial acts including new species descriptions. The workflow supports the generation of manuscripts directly from a database and is illustrated by two sample papers published in the present issue.
ABSTRACT
The procedure of the online paper submission to the Journal of Korean Neuropsychiatric Association is consisted of seven steps:entering type, author, title, keyword and abstracts of the paper, author's affiliation, uploading the paper file, and completion of submission. Six steps before the completion of submission could be reversed. But after this, no change will be possible. When editor decide that the paper is eligible, correspondence author will get the acceptance letter. The review of the paper will be done by selective reviewers. They will login to the system for the evaluation. The efficacy and the convenience of this system will be heightened by user's feedback (ex, systemic error, inconvenience, improvements, and ideas).
Subject(s)
Peer ReviewABSTRACT
The electronically archived online journals may connected together and eventually evolved to the global health information server in the near future. This paper describes an online paper submission and peer-review system for the publication of a biomedical journal. The authors conducted a systematic workflow analysis for the submission and review process of a biomedical journal and developed a web-based publication system. New media will require new format. Therefore, we have to make continuous effort to improve the format best fitted for the new media and to improve our ability to adapt ourselves to the continuously changing age of information.