PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Marcus Müllner AU - Fabian Waechter AU - Sara Schroter AU - Barbara Squire TI - How should abridged scientific articles be presented in journals? A survey of readers and authors AID - 10.1503/cmaj.1040559 DP - 2005 Jan 18 TA - Canadian Medical Association Journal PG - 203--205 VI - 172 IP - 2 4099 - http://www.cmaj.ca/content/172/2/203.short 4100 - http://www.cmaj.ca/content/172/2/203.full SO - CMAJ2005 Jan 18; 172 AB - SEVERAL SCIENTIFIC AND GENERAL MEDICAL JOURNALS publish full-length articles on their Web sites and abridged versions in their print journals. We surveyed a stratified random sample of BMJ readers and authors to elicit their preferred format for the abridged print version. Each participant received a research paper abridged in 3 different formats: conventional abridged version, journalistic version and enhanced-abstract version. Overall, 45% (95% confidence interval [CI] 42%–48%) of the respondents said they liked the conventional version most, 31% (95% CI 28%–34%) preferred the journalistic version and 25% (95% CI 22%–27%) preferred the enhanced-abstract version. Twenty-eight percent (95% CI 25%–32%) indicated that use of the journalistic format for abridged articles would very likely stop them from submitting papers to BMJ, and 13% (95% CI 11%–16%) said the use of the enhanced-abstract version would stop them from submitting to BMJ. Publishers of general medical journals who publish shortened articles should consider that authors and readers prefer a more conventional style of abridged papers.