{"title":"ACNS一岁时的发展里程碑","authors":"E. Steve Roach, Phillip L. Pearl","doi":"10.1002/cns3.20025","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The first year of Annals of the Child Neurology Society (ACNS) has been marked by extraordinary progress, and we pause here to review and celebrate the journal's successful launch. As an official journal of the Child Neurology Society, ACNS offers a venue for clinical and translational research articles, clinically relevant basic science articles, patient reports, teaching vignettes, and quality improvement articles. It also provides a forum for discussion of important professional issues and factors that affect the care of children with neurological disease. The society maintains its traditional relationship with Annals of Neurology, with its focus on more basic research. Several years ago, the American Neurological Association created Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology (ACTN), and the addition of ACNS by the Child Neurology Society forms an Annals “family” of journals that together support a wide range of scholarly endeavors. We have a great collaborative relationship with the editors of Annals of Neurology, and authors of manuscripts that cannot be accepted by Annals are offered consideration by ACNS or ACTN. We expect this transfer option to eventually become an important source of articles for ACNS. The first few months were spent building the journal's infrastructure. It takes considerable behind‐the‐scenes time and effort to create policies, websites, social media accounts, the editorial board, a detailed guide for authors, letter templates, and an initial reviewer database. ACNS features several innovative initiatives, including a monthly Editor's Choice article that is highlighted in an email to the society's members, a trainee mentoring program for novice writers, and ACNS Fast Track, a rapid review cycle designed to generate an initial publication decision within two weeks of submission. The first articles began to appear in December 2022. The initial ACNS articles have been remarkably good, led by a series of excellent review articles by pioneers in the field. The first article after the opening editorial was Harvey Sarnat's eloquent review of axonal pathfinding and guidance in the development of the nervous system, a basic science topic with obvious clinical relevance. Curtis Coughlin and Sidney Gospe contributed an outstanding summary of pyridoxine dependency. These authors were instrumental in unraveling the clinical features, genetics, and molecular mechanisms of pyridoxine dependency, so not surprisingly, their review is a tour de force. Nordli and Galan provide a detailed case‐based review of magnetoencephalography, a valuable tool for identifying an epileptogenic zone and for pinpointing language, motor, and visual functions in relation to a brain lesion. Fernández and Peters provide an intriguing glimpse of potential clinical uses of artificial intelligence and algorithm‐driven machine learning to process data and improve performance. The ACNS research articles have also been outstanding, although we cannot highlight all of them. Roberts and colleagues analyzed prospective observational data from 276 babies in their Neonatal Seizure Registry, concluding that inability to tolerate oral feedings by the time of","PeriodicalId":72232,"journal":{"name":"Annals of the Child Neurology Society","volume":"1 2","pages":"88-89"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/cns3.20025","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Developmental milestones as ACNS turns one year old\",\"authors\":\"E. Steve Roach, Phillip L. Pearl\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/cns3.20025\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The first year of Annals of the Child Neurology Society (ACNS) has been marked by extraordinary progress, and we pause here to review and celebrate the journal's successful launch. As an official journal of the Child Neurology Society, ACNS offers a venue for clinical and translational research articles, clinically relevant basic science articles, patient reports, teaching vignettes, and quality improvement articles. It also provides a forum for discussion of important professional issues and factors that affect the care of children with neurological disease. The society maintains its traditional relationship with Annals of Neurology, with its focus on more basic research. Several years ago, the American Neurological Association created Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology (ACTN), and the addition of ACNS by the Child Neurology Society forms an Annals “family” of journals that together support a wide range of scholarly endeavors. We have a great collaborative relationship with the editors of Annals of Neurology, and authors of manuscripts that cannot be accepted by Annals are offered consideration by ACNS or ACTN. We expect this transfer option to eventually become an important source of articles for ACNS. The first few months were spent building the journal's infrastructure. It takes considerable behind‐the‐scenes time and effort to create policies, websites, social media accounts, the editorial board, a detailed guide for authors, letter templates, and an initial reviewer database. ACNS features several innovative initiatives, including a monthly Editor's Choice article that is highlighted in an email to the society's members, a trainee mentoring program for novice writers, and ACNS Fast Track, a rapid review cycle designed to generate an initial publication decision within two weeks of submission. The first articles began to appear in December 2022. The initial ACNS articles have been remarkably good, led by a series of excellent review articles by pioneers in the field. The first article after the opening editorial was Harvey Sarnat's eloquent review of axonal pathfinding and guidance in the development of the nervous system, a basic science topic with obvious clinical relevance. Curtis Coughlin and Sidney Gospe contributed an outstanding summary of pyridoxine dependency. These authors were instrumental in unraveling the clinical features, genetics, and molecular mechanisms of pyridoxine dependency, so not surprisingly, their review is a tour de force. Nordli and Galan provide a detailed case‐based review of magnetoencephalography, a valuable tool for identifying an epileptogenic zone and for pinpointing language, motor, and visual functions in relation to a brain lesion. Fernández and Peters provide an intriguing glimpse of potential clinical uses of artificial intelligence and algorithm‐driven machine learning to process data and improve performance. The ACNS research articles have also been outstanding, although we cannot highlight all of them. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
《儿童神经病学学会年鉴》(ACNS)的第一年取得了非凡的进展,我们在此暂停一下,回顾和庆祝该杂志的成功发行。作为儿童神经病学学会的官方期刊,ACNS提供临床和转化研究文章,临床相关基础科学文章,患者报告,教学小插曲和质量改进文章的场所。它还提供了一个论坛,讨论影响神经系统疾病儿童护理的重要专业问题和因素。该学会与《神经学年鉴》保持着传统的关系,并将重点放在更基础的研究上。几年前,美国神经病学协会创建了《临床与转化神经病学年鉴》(ACTN),儿童神经病学协会加入了《临床与转化神经病学年鉴》,形成了《临床与转化神经病学年鉴》的期刊“家族”,共同支持广泛的学术努力。我们与Annals of Neurology的编辑有着良好的合作关系,对于不能被Annals接受的稿件作者,ACNS或ACTN会给予考虑。我们期望这个转移选项最终成为ACNS文章的重要来源。最初的几个月,我们主要是在建设期刊的基础设施。创建政策、网站、社交媒体账户、编辑委员会、作者详细指南、信函模板和初始审稿人数据库需要大量的幕后时间和精力。ACNS有几项创新举措,包括每月一篇编辑选择文章,在发给协会成员的电子邮件中突出显示,为新手作家提供培训指导计划,以及ACNS快速审查周期,旨在在提交的两周内产生初步发表决定。第一批文章于2022年12月开始出现。最初的ACNS文章非常好,由该领域的先驱们撰写的一系列优秀的评论文章所主导。开篇社论之后的第一篇文章是Harvey Sarnat对神经系统发展中的轴突寻路和指导的雄辩回顾,这是一个具有明显临床相关性的基础科学主题。Curtis Coughlin和Sidney Gospe对吡哆醇依赖性做出了杰出的总结。这些作者在揭示吡哆醇依赖的临床特征、遗传学和分子机制方面发挥了重要作用,因此毫不奇怪,他们的评论是一部杰作。Nordli和Galan提供了详细的基于病例的脑磁图回顾,这是一种有价值的工具,用于识别癫痫发病区,并确定与脑损伤相关的语言、运动和视觉功能。Fernández和Peters为人工智能和算法驱动的机器学习在处理数据和提高性能方面的潜在临床应用提供了有趣的一瞥。ACNS的研究文章也很突出,虽然我们不能一一列举。罗伯茨和他的同事们分析了276名新生儿癫痫发作登记的前瞻性观察数据,得出的结论是,到8岁时,无法耐受口服喂养
Developmental milestones as ACNS turns one year old
The first year of Annals of the Child Neurology Society (ACNS) has been marked by extraordinary progress, and we pause here to review and celebrate the journal's successful launch. As an official journal of the Child Neurology Society, ACNS offers a venue for clinical and translational research articles, clinically relevant basic science articles, patient reports, teaching vignettes, and quality improvement articles. It also provides a forum for discussion of important professional issues and factors that affect the care of children with neurological disease. The society maintains its traditional relationship with Annals of Neurology, with its focus on more basic research. Several years ago, the American Neurological Association created Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology (ACTN), and the addition of ACNS by the Child Neurology Society forms an Annals “family” of journals that together support a wide range of scholarly endeavors. We have a great collaborative relationship with the editors of Annals of Neurology, and authors of manuscripts that cannot be accepted by Annals are offered consideration by ACNS or ACTN. We expect this transfer option to eventually become an important source of articles for ACNS. The first few months were spent building the journal's infrastructure. It takes considerable behind‐the‐scenes time and effort to create policies, websites, social media accounts, the editorial board, a detailed guide for authors, letter templates, and an initial reviewer database. ACNS features several innovative initiatives, including a monthly Editor's Choice article that is highlighted in an email to the society's members, a trainee mentoring program for novice writers, and ACNS Fast Track, a rapid review cycle designed to generate an initial publication decision within two weeks of submission. The first articles began to appear in December 2022. The initial ACNS articles have been remarkably good, led by a series of excellent review articles by pioneers in the field. The first article after the opening editorial was Harvey Sarnat's eloquent review of axonal pathfinding and guidance in the development of the nervous system, a basic science topic with obvious clinical relevance. Curtis Coughlin and Sidney Gospe contributed an outstanding summary of pyridoxine dependency. These authors were instrumental in unraveling the clinical features, genetics, and molecular mechanisms of pyridoxine dependency, so not surprisingly, their review is a tour de force. Nordli and Galan provide a detailed case‐based review of magnetoencephalography, a valuable tool for identifying an epileptogenic zone and for pinpointing language, motor, and visual functions in relation to a brain lesion. Fernández and Peters provide an intriguing glimpse of potential clinical uses of artificial intelligence and algorithm‐driven machine learning to process data and improve performance. The ACNS research articles have also been outstanding, although we cannot highlight all of them. Roberts and colleagues analyzed prospective observational data from 276 babies in their Neonatal Seizure Registry, concluding that inability to tolerate oral feedings by the time of