Historical Evidence of “Printer’s Devil” in Pediatric Cancer

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Wilson I. B. Onuigbo
Wilson I. B. Onuigbo

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Historical Evidence of “Printer’s Devil” in Pediatric Cancer

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Abstract

Printer’s devil” is an error introduced during the routine printing of manuscripts. In the author’s experience, this was used to determine the source of such an error with reference to reprints. In this context, since it is known that research profits from the slightest detectable error, this paper points to a printed error which occurred in 1893 in the Transactions of the Pathological Society of London.

References

10 Cites in Article
  1. E Garfield (1974). Errors-theirs, ours and yours.
  2. Wilson Onuigbo (1982). Printer's Devil and reprint requests.
  3. A Gregg (1945). The Furtherance of Medical Research.
  4. R Willis (1973). The Spread of Tumours in the Human Body.
  5. M Burnet (1977). MORPHOGENESIS AND CANCER.
  6. P Turner (1893). Medullary Sarcoma of both Ovaries and of the Peritoneum in a Child Aged 6.
  7. Wilson Onuigbo (1962). HISTORICAL TRENDS IN CANCER SURGERY.
  8. W Onuigbo (1971). False Firsts in Cancer Literature.
  9. K Moser (1987). Historical News.
  10. V Vicic-Hudorovic,N Hudorovic,A Gasparyan (2014). Editorial. Do we have tools for quality assurance in science editing and publishing?.

Funding

No external funding was declared for this work.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval

No ethics committee approval was required for this article type.

Data Availability

Not applicable for this article.

How to Cite This Article

Wilson I. B. Onuigbo. 2018. \u201cHistorical Evidence of “Printer’s Devil” in Pediatric Cancer\u201d. Global Journal of Medical Research - K: Interdisciplinary GJMR-K Volume 18 (GJMR Volume 18 Issue K7): .

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Journal Specifications

Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/gjmra

Print ISSN 0975-5888

e-ISSN 2249-4618

Keywords
Classification
GJMR-K Classification: NLMC Code: QZ 275
Version of record

v1.2

Issue date

December 20, 2018

Language
en
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Printer’s devil” is an error introduced during the routine printing of manuscripts. In the author’s experience, this was used to determine the source of such an error with reference to reprints. In this context, since it is known that research profits from the slightest detectable error, this paper points to a printed error which occurred in 1893 in the Transactions of the Pathological Society of London.

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Historical Evidence of “Printer’s Devil” in Pediatric Cancer

Wilson I. B. Onuigbo
Wilson I. B. Onuigbo

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