Saturday, September 12, 2015

writing style - After introducing an acronym, how faithfully must I stick to its use?

My average scientific paper contains about a dozen of acronyms. Some of them are really helpful: for example, it much more pleasant to write fMRI instead of functional magnetic resonance imaging.



However, I really dislike writing long sentences containing several acronyms. It makes the content difficult to understand for those who are not that familiar with my (sub-)field.



It would be sometimes better to write the acronym in full. However, how "acceptable" this is after introducing an acronym?



In long papers, I would also sometimes like to write out the acronym in full in a new section (e.g. when moving from methods to results and discussion). Some co-authors do not like that.



What is the correct thing to do?




(The use of acronyms (at all) is typically partly dictated by the journal I submit to. Most of them ask to use an acronym instead of writing the name in full if it appears at least thrice in a manuscript.)

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