“…For example, the first two issues of Annals had several papers on the neurobiology of sexual offending (e.g., Hucker, Langevin, & Bain, 1988), something that the field has picked up again as new brain scanning technologies have become more available (e.g., Cantor et al, 2015). Early issues of the journal included preliminary results from the Sex Offender Treatment Evaluation Project run in California, still the largest and arguably the most important randomized clinical trial evaluating treatment for adults who have sexually offended (Miner, Marques, Day, & Nelson, 1990; the final evaluation results were also published in this journal, by Marques, Wiederanders, Day, Nelson, & Van Ommeren, 2005), and validation studies of phallometric testing for sexual arousal to rape (e.g., Lalumière & Quinsey, 1993; Marshall, Seidman, & Barbaree, 1991). Seminal articles on etiology, assessment, and treatment have been published over the past 30 years: We have come a long way, and there is still much more work to do.…”