“Those that innovate the future understand history the best” Rick Warren
The Journal of the Korean Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons was first published in 1974 in the Korean language and remained so, until the journal
was transformed into an English version in January 2012 when it was renamed Archives of Plastic Surgery (APS).
The main objective of this transformation was to pursue globalization by encouraging
academic interaction between Asian countries and the rest of the world [1]. A concerted effort was made to invite manuscripts from the international community,
with a focus on being the most representative journal for plastic surgery in Asia,
whilst maintaining high publishing standards. APS is a peer-reviewed journal publishing articles in all fields of plastic and reconstructive
surgery, ranging from aesthetic surgery to reconstructive microsurgery, including
basic research related to all areas of plastic surgery. To ensure convenience to its
readers and easy online searchability, APS remains an open-access journal allowing readers to download and view the full text
of all journal content without a subscription. It is also indexed, tracked, and covered
internationally by representative databases, such as PubMed, PubMed Central, CrossRef,
Scopus, Embase, and Google Scholar ([Fig. 1]) [2].
Fig. 1. Manuscript submissions to Archives of Plastic Surgery from January 2012 to May 2015[2]
“Innovation is the ability to see change as an opportunity–not a threat.” Steve Jobs
APS has the vision of becoming the leading resource for plastic surgery in Asia. As part
of the first step, it has tried to rally its Asian partners by inviting national academic
societies to designate APS as their official journal. As of May 2021, four national societies have designated
APS as their official journal: Hong Kong, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand. We hope
that more societies will join this rally to strengthen the position of APS.
APS is harnessing the reach of social media through its ambassador program. Authors and
editors are encouraged to submit videos introducing their papers on social media in
order to create more opportunities to share scientific work via social media using
tweets and likes. Social media activity such as tweets have been shown to either increase
citations or reflect the underlying quality of the articles, which also predicts citations
[3]. In this modern era, these tweets and shares will undoubtedly complement other traditional
citation metrics (e.g., the impact factor) and increase the readership and status
of the journal.
APS aims to stand out as the journal of plastic surgery innovation [4], by placing the innovation section ahead of the other sections. This bold move bucks
the trend of most major journals that seek and publish results, especially from large
clinical trials or outcome studies. However, as we all know, it is not realistic to
expect many trials in a specialty with a plethora of procedures as wide and diverse
as plastic surgery. Promoting innovation and ideation may seem frivolous, but it reflects
the very essence of a plastic surgeon, and it is innovation that makes plastic surgery
different from all other specialties.
Since APS started accepting English manuscripts in 2012, we have been regularly submitting
manuscripts to the journal with good, favorable responses from the editorial team.
Some of the reasons cited from our members for submitting to APS include: (1) publication in English; (2) open-access publication, which promotes
greater public engagement, allowing wider collaborations; and (3) the fact that the
journal accepts and publishes the figures in color allowing the authors to bring their
ideas across pictorially. We thank APS for the leadership and the editors for their contributions, and we look forward to
greater collaboration in the years to come.
“Innovation is taking two things that exist and putting them together in a new way.” Tom Freston
In conclusion, innovation builds and sustains what is good and takes the practice
of today to greater heights. This is the vision of APS.
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