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Instructions for Journal of Biology authors |
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General information
Manuscript text Illustrations and figures Tables Additional files Proofs and reprints Style and language |
General information
Journal of Biology is an international journal that publishes biological research articles of exceptional interest, together with associated commentary. Articles from the full spectrum of biology are appropriate for consideration, provided they are of outstanding interest and importance. (As a guide, the journal will consider articles of a standard similar to those published in Nature, Science or Cell.) Online submission process To facilitate rapid publication and to minimize administrative costs, Journal of Biology prefers online submission. The submission process is compatible with version 3.0 or later of Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator, and with most other modern web browsers. It can be used from PC, Mac, or Unix platforms. Files can be submitted as a batch, or one by one. The submission process can be interrupted at any time - when users return to the site, they can carry on where they left off. See below for examples of acceptable word processor and graphics file formats. Additional files of any type, such as movies, animations, or original data files, can also be submitted as part of the publication. During submission you will be asked to provide a cover letter. Please use this to explain why your manuscript should be published in the journal, to elaborate on any issues relating to our editorial policies detailed in the instructions for authors, and to declare any potential competing interests. Assistance with the process of manuscript preparation and submission is available from the editorial office (editorial@jbiol.com)
Article-processing charges
Policies Any manuscripts, or substantial parts of it, submitted to the journal must not be under consideration by any other journal. In general, the manuscript should not have already been published in any journal or other citable form, although it may have been deposited on a preprint server. The journal is willing to consider peer-reviewing manuscripts that are translations of articles originally published in another language. In this case, the consent of the journal in which the article was originally published must be obtained and the fact that the article has already been published must be made clear on submission and stated in the abstract. Further information on duplicate/overlapping publications can be found here. Authors are required to ensure that no material submitted as part of a manuscript infringes existing copyrights, or the rights of a third party. Authors who publish in Journal of Biology retain copyright to their work (more information). The authors are understood to give Journal of Biology permission to reproduce the article or portions of it for print and online distribution; advertisements may be included to help defray the costs of handling and distribution. Correspondence concerning articles published in Journal of Biology is encouraged. Correspondence containing data or scientific argument is subject to peer-review. Submission of a manuscript to Journal of Biology implies that all authors have read and agreed to its content, and that any experimental research that is reported in the manuscript has been performed with the approval of an appropriate ethics committee. Research carried out on humans must be in compliance with the Helsinki Declaration, and any experimental research on animals must follow internationally recognized guidelines. A statement to this effect must appear in the Methods section of the manuscript, including the name of the body which gave approval, with a reference number where appropriate. Informed consent must also be documented. Manuscripts may be rejected if the editorial office considers that the research has not been carried out within an ethical framework, e.g. if the severity of the experimental procedure is not justified by the value of the knowledge gained. Journal of Biology's publisher, BioMed Central, has a legal responsibility to ensure that its journals do not publish material that infringes copyright, or that includes libellous or defamatory content. If, on review, your manuscript is perceived to contain potentially libellous content the journal Editors, with assistance from the publisher if required, will work with authors to ensure an appropriate outcome is reached. Generic drug names should generally be used. When proprietary brands are used in research, include the brand names in parentheses in the Methods section. Journal of Biology requires authors to declare any competing financial or other interest in relation to their work. If any author has a competing interest, it should be declared in the covering letter. Any 'in press' articles cited within the references and necessary for the reviewers' assessment of the manuscript should be made available if requested by the editorial office. Submission of a manuscript to Journal of Biology implies that readily reproducible materials described in the manuscript, including all relevant raw data, will be freely available to any scientist wishing to use them for non-commercial purposes. Nucleic acid sequences, protein sequences, and atomic coordinates should be deposited in an appropriate database in time for the accession number to be included in the published article. In computational studies where the sequence information is unacceptable for inclusion in databases because of lack of experimental validation, the sequences must be published as an additional file with the article. Journal of Biology also supports initiatives aimed at improving the reporting of biomedical research. We recommend authors refer to the MIBBI Portal for prescriptive checklists for reporting biological and biomedical research where applicable.
Nucleotide sequences
Protein sequences
Structures
Chemical structures and assays
Microarray data
Computional modeling
Plasmids
BioMed Central is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). Authors who have appealed against a rejection but remain concerned about the editorial process can refer their case to COPE. For more information, visit www.publicationethics.org. BioMed Central endorses the World Association of Medical Editors (WAME) Policy Statement on Geopolitical Intrusion on Editorial Decisions. |
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General information
Manuscript text Illustrations and figures Tables Additional files Proofs and reprints Style and language |
Preparing main manuscript text
File formats
Users of other word processing packages should save or convert their files to RTF before uploading. Many free tools are available which ease this process. TeX/LaTeX users: We recommend using BioMed Central's TeX template and BibTeX stylefile. If you use this standard format, you can submit your manuscript in TeX format (after you submit your TEX file, you will be prompted to submit your BBL file). If you have used another template for your manuscript, or if you do not wish to use BibTeX, then please submit your manuscript as an RTF file. Note that figures must be submitted as separate image files, not as part of the submitted DOC/ PDF/TEX file.
Manuscript sections for Research articles
The Accession Numbers of any nucleic acid sequences, protein sequences or atomic coordinates cited in the manuscript should be provided, in square brackets and include the corresponding database name; for example, [EMBL:AB026295, EMBL:AC137000, DDBJ:AE000812, GenBank:U49845, PDB:1BFM, Swiss-Prot:Q96KQ7, PIR:S66116]. The databases for which we can provide direct links are: EMBL Nucleotide Sequence Database (EMBL), DNA Data Bank of Japan (DDBJ ), GenBank at the NCBI (GenBank), Protein Data Bank (PDB), Protein Information Resource (PIR) and the Swiss-Prot Protein Database (Swiss-Prot).
Title page
Abstract
Background
Results and Discussion
Conclusions
Materials and methods
List of abbreviations
Authors' information
Acknowledgements
Authors should obtain permission to acknowledge from all those mentioned in the Acknowledgements. Please list the source(s) of funding for the study, for each author, and for the manuscript preparation in the acknowledgements section. Authors must describe the role of the funding body, if any, in study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; and in the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.
References
Only articles and abstracts that have been published or are in press, or are available through public e-print/preprint servers, may be cited; unpublished abstracts, unpublished data and personal communications should not be included in the reference list, but may be included in the text and referred to as "unpublished data", "unpublished observations", or "personal communications" giving the names of the involved researchers. Notes/footnotes are not allowed. Obtaining permission to quote personal communications and unpublished data from the cited author(s) is the responsibility of the author. Journal abbreviations follow Index Medicus/MEDLINE. For each reference, name all authors unless there are more than 30 in which case name the first 30 followed by et al. Examples of the Journal of Biology reference style are shown below. Please take care to follow the reference style precisely; references not in the correct style may be retyped, necessitating tedious proofreading.
Links
Journal of Biology reference style Style files are available for use with popular bibliographic management software:
Article within a journal
Article within a journal supplement
In press article
Published abstract
Article within conference proceedings
Book chapter, or article within a book
Whole issue of journal
Whole conference proceedings
Complete book
Monograph or book in a series
Book with institutional author
PhD thesis
Link / URL
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General information Manuscript text Illustrations and figures Tables Additional files Proofs and reprints Style and language |
Preparing illustrations and figuresFigures should be provided as separate files. Each figure should comprise only a single file. There is no charge for the use of color. Please read our figure preparation guidelines for detailed instructions on maximising the quality of your figures, for further information please contact the Editorial Office.
Formats
Journal of Biology will edit all figures supplied by the author. For this reason it is especially important that authors should supply figures in vector form, to facilitate such editing.
Figure
legends
Please note that it is the responsibility of the author(s) to obtain permission from the copyright holder to reproduce figures or tables that have previously been published elsewhere. |
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Preparing tablesEach table should be numbered in sequence using Arabic numerals (i.e. Table 1, 2, 3 etc.). Tables should also have a title that summarizes the whole table, maximum 15 words. Detailed legends may then follow, but should be concise. Tables integral to the manuscript can be pasted into the end of the document text file, in portrait format (note that tables on a landscape page must be reformatted onto a portrait page or submitted as additional files). These will be typeset and displayed in the final published form of the article. Such tables should be formatted using the 'Table object' in a word processing program to ensure that columns of data are kept aligned when the file is sent electronically for review; this will not always be the case if columns are generated by simply using tabs to separate text. Commas should not be used to indicate numerical values. Color and shading should not be used. Larger datasets can be uploaded separately as additional files. Additional files will not be displayed in the final, published form of the article, but a link will be provided to the files as supplied by the author. Tabular data provided as additional files can be uploaded as an Excel spreadsheet (.xls) or comma separated values (.csv). As with all files, please use the standard file extensions. |
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General information
Manuscript text Illustrations and figures Tables Additional files Proofs and reprints Style and language |
Preparing additional files
Web-only material
Additional files
Additional data files may be referenced generically within the body of the article. e.g. "See additional data file 1 for the original data used to perform this analysis". Additional files are considered integral to articles published by Journal of Biology. There is no distinction between the main article and 'supplementary material'. Files will be virus-scanned on submission.
File formats
File extensions
Mini-websites
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General information
Manuscript text Illustrations and figures Tables Additional files Proofs and reprints Style and language |
Proofs and reprintsEdited text and figures will be sent to authors for approval by e-mail or fax. Corrections should be returned within 2 days, preferably by fax or courier if sending paper proofs. Proofs of PDF and XML versions may be seen on request. Accepted research articles will appear online as soon as they have been prepared for publication and will be available free of charge to any individual over the web. These articles will also be placed in PubMed Central (http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov). The journal is primarily available online but print issues are also distributed to many thousands of life scientists throughout the world. |
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General information
Manuscript text Illustrations and figures Tables Additional files Proofs and reprints Style and language |
Style and language
General
Gene names should be in italic, but protein products should be in plain type. There is no explicit limit on the length of articles submitted, but authors are encouraged to be concise. There is no restriction on the number of figures, tables or additional files that can be included with each article online. Authors should include all relevant supporting data with each article. Articles should not usually exceed 15 pages of the printed journal (there are about 750 words or 40 references to a page, and figures and tables take variable amounts of additional space). In the event of a longer article being accepted for online publication the authors may be asked to provide a shorter version for print.
Help and advice on scientific writing
Abbreviations
Units
Last revised: 1 September 2009 |
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