Abstract

Tics are repeated, usually suppressible movements or vocalizations. They are the defining features of tic disorders including Tourette syndrome, but many people have them for shorter durations at some point in childhood. This editorial marks the beginning of the F1000Research: Tics specialty section, an effort to provide a single portal to modern research on tics and tic disorders. Publications in F1000Research: Tics benefit from F1000Research’s novel approach to publishing, in which articles can be published within days of submission. Peer review happens after publication and is fully open. When the submitted article or a revision is approved, it is promptly submitted to repositories including NIH’s PubMed Central. In addition to research articles and reviews, F1000Research: Tics will publish study protocols, clinical practice articles, case reports, and data notes. The home page will also provide links to expert recommendations of articles that have appeared elsewhere, and to relevant posters from scientific meetings (http://f1000.com/posters/). F1000Research’s approach is enabled by the capabilities of internet publication, including space to publish the full results of a study rather than just a few graphs selected from the data. Publishing methodologically sound studies without requiring subjective editorial judgments of novelty or broad appeal brings numerous advantages, including minimizing publication bias and shining the light of openness on peer review. To celebrate the launch of the Tics section, F1000Research is offering discounted article processing charges for manuscripts submitted by March 1st 2015. I have had good experiences publishing in F1000Research, and look forward to seeing a wide range of tic-related manuscripts submitted.

Highlights

  • Tics are repeated, usually suppressible movements or vocalizations

  • Any comments on the article can be found at the end of the article

  • Tics range from unobtrusive movements and noises that go unnoticed or are misattributed to allergies or restlessness, to complex patterns of movement or words that may be so frequent, severe or uncomfortable as to be disabling[1]

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Summary

Black KJ

2. Sterling TD, Rosenbaum WL, Weinkam JJ: Publication decisions revisited: The effect of the outcome of statistical tests on the decision to publish and vice versa. 3. Kyzas PA, Denaxa-Kyza D, Ioannidis JP: Almost all articles on cancer prognostic markers report statistically significant results. 4. Dwan K, Gamble C, Williamson PR, et al.: Systematic review of the empirical evidence of study publication bias and outcome reporting bias - an updated review. PubMed Abstract | Publisher Full Text | Free Full Text

Hunsaker MR
11. Nichols TE
21. Schwarzkopf S: Referee report for
26. Carter EL: Mark Willes
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