🏷️ Academic Rebranding
Academic rebranding refers to:
The practice of renaming, repackaging, or reframing existing concepts, techniques, or tools as if they were novel, often to increase perceived innovation, publication value, or institutional prestige — without contributing new evidence or insight.
🧠 In Neurosurgical Literature
- Presenting established techniques (e.g. keyhole craniotomy, neuronavigation) as part of a “new” paradigm (e.g. Minimally Invasive Cranial Surgery)
- Rewriting clinical routines with updated buzzwords (e.g. “precision,” “micro-invasive,” “ultra-targeted”)
- Shifting terminology to generate publications or funding rather than to clarify science
“This isn’t a new approach to brain metastases — it’s academic rebranding of standard craniotomy with marketing gloss.”
⚠️ Why It Matters
- Creates the illusion of progress
- Pollutes literature with semantic inflation
- Distracts from real innovation or critical appraisal
- Risks misleading trainees and clinicians about what is actually new or validated
🔍 Related Concepts
Synonyms: semantic relabeling, publication repackaging, conceptual recycling
Opposite: Original contribution, paradigm shift, methodological innovation