期刊名称:PSYCHIATRIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA

ISSN:0193-953X
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC, 1600 JOHN F KENNEDY BOULEVARD, STE 1800, PHILADELPHIA, USA, PA, 19103-2899
  出版社网址:http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/homepage.cws_home
期刊网址:http://www.elsevier.com/wps/find/journaldescription.cws_home/623373/description#description
影响因子: 2.165(2015年) 2.133(2014年) 2.717(2013年) 2.755 (2012年) 2.134(2011年)
主题范畴:PSYCHIATRY

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



About the journal

Psychiatric Clinics updates you on the latest trends in patient management; keeps you up to date on the newest advances; and provides a sound basis for choosing treatment options. Each issue focuses on a single topic in psychiatry and is presented under the direction of an experienced guest editor.

Psychiatric Clinics of North America on ScienceDirect(Opens new window)


Instructions to Authors

Health Science professionals writing for Elsevier will find a complete set of permissions guidelines and permissions request forms here. After consulting the guidelines, find the forms you need prepared for you.

Forms

Author Permission Request Form

Publisher Permission Request Form

Consent Request Form

Permissions Tracking Form

Permissions Guidelines

Request Permission

No Need to Request Permission

How to Request Permission

Special Cases

When to Request Permission

How to Write Credit Lines for Borrowed Materials

Examples of Legends with Credit Lines

 Request Permission

If illustration, table, or textual material has been published previously (even if it appeared in an Elsevier publication and/or if you were the author). Online Author Form | Publisher Form

If illustration, table, or textual material has not been published previously, but has been supplied to you as a courtesy (e.g. manufacturer provided photo of equipment; colleague provided a photograph or line drawing from personal collection).

If the illustration is a recognizable photograph of a patient. Online Consent Form

 No Need to Request Permission

If the material is original to your manuscript.

If a purely anatomic illustration will be redrawn and the artistic style of the original has not been duplicated. Anatomy cannot be copyrighted, just the artistic style in which it is rendered.

If an illustration will be redrawn and you can prove that the artistic style has been changed. Examples of sufficient change in style include: changing from a tone drawing to a line drawing or vice versa; in surgical drawings, changing the type of surgical instrument used or modifying the incision line.

If illustration, table, or textual material will be modified so much so that the information conveyed is entirely different from that in the original. Please use your best judgment on this point, and when in doubt, request permission.

If the text or illustration you are requesting is in the public domain. Examples of this include material from the U.S. Government, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the U.S. Veterans' Administration, the National Institutes of Health, Healthy People 2000, and MMWR (Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report).

 How to Request Permission

Determine who holds/owns the original copyright for the material. Usually this is made clear by the credit line/footnote under the original selection or elsewhere in the original book, journal, CD ROM, audio cassette, video, etc.

 

Make a photocopy of the entire page on which the original figure or table appears and also the title and copyright pages (if it's a book) or first page of an article. Most publishers will not grant permission without this information included in your request. Write your figure/table number as it should appear in the Elsevier Health Sciences publication next to your selection on the photocopy

Fill out a Permission Request Form (Author | Publisher), including all of the identifying information from the original source (author, title, illustration description, figure/table number, page number, publisher, copyright year). Also, indicate the new Elsevier Health Sciences (your) figure/table number on the form in the upper right-hand corner.

Attach the photocopy to the Form.

Make a copy of the request (above) for your records and send the original to the person responsible for granting permission for the copyright owner/publisher (usually the permissions editor). Keep track of permissions requested with the enclosed chart. Some publishers may require that you obtain the original author's permission as well. If this is the case, simply make a copy of what you sent to the publisher and send it off to the author. List of Permissions Addresses.

 Special Cases

Borrowing from Elsevier Health Sciences: If you are borrowing material for which Elsevier Health Sciences owns the copyright, you must request permission from:

Elsevier, Health Sciences Division
1600 John F. Kennedy Blvd., Ste 1800
Philadelphia, PA 19103-2899

Fax: 215-239-3990

Borrowing unpublished material: If you are borrowing unpublished material (e.g., tables, photographs, quotations), you must request permission from the author. The credit line for such material should read: "Courtesy of .........."

People in photographs: Obtain written consent/release from all identifiable persons shown in photographs that will be original to your manuscript. Your Editor at Elsevier Health Sciences will provide you with a Consent Form. If consent/release is not obtained, the eyes will be blocked. If the eyes are the primary reason for the photograph, consent/release is absolutely necessary. For photographs that have previously appeared in a publication (in book, journal, etc.), you do not need consent from the person in the photograph. Simply request Permission from the copyright owner of the publication as you would for any other figure, table, etc.

 When to Request Permission
Request permission immediately when you decide to include a borrowed illustration, table, or textual material in your manuscript. Each signed ("permission granted") form should be submitted to your Elsevier Health Sciences editor with its related manuscript, and failure to do so may result in the omission of the borrowed material or delay in publication.

 How to Write Credit Lines for Borrowed Materials
If material is borrowed from a book: "From Author(s) or editor(s): title of book, edition, city in which publisher is located, year, publisher name."
If material is borrowed from a journal: "From Author(s): title of article, in Editor(s): journal title abbreviation, volume, initial page number, publication or supplement number, year."
Quotations: As a rule of thumb, borrowed quotations of 250 words or more require written permission. In addition to the above information, indicate in your credit line the page number on which the quotation appeared in the original source. Please remember that 250 words is a cumulative total. If there are several short quotations from the same source that total 250 words, then you must obtain permission to use the material.

Illustrations: Obtain written permission from the original copyright owner/publisher. In the case of illustrations that will be redrawn or modified from the original illustration, it is also necessary to obtain "permission to redraw" from the copyright owner of the original illustration. Your credit line should make clear that the illustration has been changed: "Modified (or Redrawn) from _______________."

Tables: Obtain written permission from the original publisher for use of previously published tabular material. Include the original source in your credit line, just as you would for an illustration.

 Examples of Legends with Credit Lines
Note that credit lines either immediately follow your description of the table/figure in your legends or are written as References.

  FIG. 2-10 A quadruple channel pulmonary artery catheter with attachments. (From Martin L: Pulmonary physiology in clinical practice: the essentials for patient care and evaluation, St. Louis, 1987, Mosby.

  FIG. 11-2 Neural inspiratory signals during ventilation. Note the inspiratory ramp signal (left) and "braking" action of inspiratory signals early in phase I of expiration. See text. (Redrawn from Leff AR, Schumacker PT: Respiratory physiology: basics and applications, Philadelphia, 1993, W. B. Saunders.)

  TAB. 6-9 Effects of low arterial pH and hypoxemia on pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) in newborn calves. (Redrawn from Rudolph AM, Yuan S: Response of the pulmonary vasculature to hypoxia and H+ ion concentration changes, J Clin Invest, 45(3): 399, 1966.)

  Sound #2 Expiratory wheeze. (From Wilkins RL, Hodgkin JE, Lopez B: Lung sounds: a practical guide, second edition, St. Louis, 1996, Mosby.)

  (Quote of 250 words) 1 Wong DL: Whaley & Wong's essentials of pediatric nursing, fourth edition, St. Louis, 1993, Mosby, p. 273.

 


Editorial Board

Gabriella Sanniti di Baja , Co-Editor-in-Chief of Pattern Recognition Letters

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