图书馆主页
数据库简介
最新动态
联系我们



返回首页


 刊名字顺( Alphabetical List of Journals):

  A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z|ALL


  检 索:         高级检索

期刊名称:JOURNAL OF GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY

ISSN:0022-1295
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:ROCKEFELLER UNIV PRESS, 950 THIRD AVE, 2ND FLR, NEW YORK, USA, NY, 10022
  出版社网址:http://jgp.rupress.org/
期刊网址:http://jgp.rupress.org/
影响因子:4.086
主题范畴:PHYSIOLOGY

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

 The Journal of General Physiology publishes original articles that elucidate basic biological, chemical, or physical mechanisms of broad physiological significance. Apart from solicited articles, two types of articles will be considered: Regular Articles that should be as concise as possible, but with no lower or upper page limit; and brief Letters to the Editor that comment upon, criticize, or interpret findings published in the Journal. The Journal publishes articles that strive to understand integrative function through innovative model simulations; conventional theoretical articles will be published only if they deal with subjects about which the Journal often has published experimental studies¡ªor if they are submitted as a companion to an experimental article that depends upon the theoretical article in some significant way. Methodological articles will be published only if they provide a significant advance in areas where the Journal regularly publishes experimental studies. No substantial part of an article may have been, or may be, published elsewhere.

 


Instructions to Authors

Submission Address

             Online: www.jgp.org

By email: jgp@rockefeller.edu

By mail or courier:

Olaf S. Andersen
Editor
The Journal of General Physiology
The Rockefeller University Press
1114 First Avenue
New York, NY 10021-8325 USA

[UP] Manuscript Submission

Manuscripts can be submitted electronically, either via our website (www.jgp.org), or as a PDF attachment to email (jgp@rockefeller.edu); or in hard copy form, with an accompanying floppy disk.

[UP] Electronic Submission. Manuscripts may be submitted online via our website (www.jgp.org). Clicking on the button labeled "Online Submission" will open a window with specific instructions for submitting via our web-based system. In brief, you may upload a PDF of the manuscript, or upload text and figure files and we will generate a PDF.

Alternatively, you may submit electronically by sending a letter of submission and a PDF (no larger than 5 MB) of the complete manuscript via email (jgp@mail.rockefeller.edu). If the file size of the PDF is too large for email transmission, or the figures need a higher resolution, a separate PDF of the figures can also be sent. The Manuscript Submission Form and the Publication Agreement should be faxed to (212) 327-8996. The submitting author should make sure that each author notifies the Editor that he/she wishes his/her name to appear as author of the article.

The receipt of the manuscript will be acknowledged via email. The PDF submission will be printed as soon as it is received in the Editorial Office, and the authors will be notified of any problems that might necessitate the submission of a paper copy. Please note that should a revised version of the manuscript be invited, we would need a formatted text file in either Microsoft Word or Word Perfect (LaTeX files are not acceptable), and digital figure files (see Manuscripts Invited for Revision). These files will be forwarded to the copyeditor if the manuscript is accepted.

[UP] Hardcopy Submission. A Manuscript Submission Form [download PDF version] and the Manuscript Content Verification and Provisional Copyright Assignment and Publication Agreement [download PDF version] should be submitted together with four high quality copies of the typescript and figures. Authors should identify possible reviewers, and reviewers they deem inappropriate, in a separate letter of submission (see below). Glossy prints should be submitted only if they are essential for the review. All four copies of the manuscript should be unstapled. See Manuscript Organization and Preparation below for further details. Authors should retain a copy of any manuscript they submit to the Journal, as copies normally will not be returned. Glossy prints will be returned only if requested in the letter of submission. The Journal is not responsible for lost or damaged figures.

If a manuscript has more than one author, each author must sign a letter of submission, or in some other way notify the Editor in writing that he/she wishes his/her name to appear as one of the authors of the article. The receipt of each manuscript is acknowledged, and authors should be sure that they receive this acknowledgment.

[UP] Prior Publication When submitting a manuscript, the authors should confirm on the Manuscript Submission Form and the Publication Agreement that the material has neither been published nor submitted for publication elsewhere-other than as an abstract that is less than 400 words in length and contains no figures. If any other form of publication has occurred or is contemplated, three copies of a reprint or typescript of such other publication should accompany the article submitted to the Journal and the authors should explain in a letter of submission how this publication relates to the submitted manuscript. This material will be sent with the manuscript to the reviewers, who will be asked to advise the editors whether there is overlap between the submitted articles and the other material.

Authors should note that provisional copyright to the article is transferred to The Rockefeller University Press at the time of submission (see Publication Agreement). The work therefore cannot be made available in an electronic format that is accessible via the Internet or a campus server. Any such posting will be considered a prior publication and a violation of the copyright. Doctoral theses or dissertations are not regarded as prior publications, whether they are made available in electronic form or not, unless they have been actually "published" in a widely distributable form.

[UP] Animal Protocols. Articles describing the results of experiments on vertebrates can be accepted for publication only if the experiments were conducted in accordance with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (1996. National Academy of Sciences, Washington D.C.), which is available at www.nap.edu/books/0309053773/html/index.html. The authors should confirm on the Manuscript Submission Form that these principles were followed.

[UP] Conflict of Interest. All authors are required to disclose in a letter of submission any commercial affiliations or other financial interests (consultant income, equity interests, or patent-licensing arrangements) that could create the appearance of a conflict of interest regarding the submitted manuscript. The specifics of such disclosures will remain confidential, but the Editor may recommend that a general statement be made in the Acknowledgments section. All funding sources, whether institutional, public, private, or corporate, should be listed in the acknowledgments.

[UP] Suggestions for Reviewers. To expedite the review of manuscripts, the editors appreciate when the author(s) provide the name, address, telephone and fax numbers, and email address (if known) of potential reviewers in a letter of submission. These individuals should not be recent (within the last three years) collaborators or co-authors, nor should they have provided substantial advice to the author(s) in the conduct of the work or the preparation of the manuscript. The editors will seriously consider these suggestions, as well as reasoned requests to exempt possible candidates, when selecting reviewers.

[UP] Manuscript Organization and Preparation

[UP] Word Processing Files. Although we can accept most word processing formats, we prefer Microsoft Word files. Please note that typesetting programs such as LaTeX are not compatible with our system, and cannot be used. When preparing your files, please be aware of the following guidelines:
   ?Do not try to achieve a "typeset" look as most of your formatting will be removed during the production process, and may interfere with file conversion.
   ?Use your software's built-in superscript and subscript attributes rather than changing a character's font size/position.

[UP] Style. Authors should follow the conventions set forth in the Council of Biology Editors Manual for Authors, Editors, and Publishers, Scientific Style and Format (1994. 6th edition. Published for the Council of Biology Editors, Inc., by the Press Syndicate for the University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK).

[UP] Equipment, Reagents, and Methods. List chemicals and scientific instruments used and their manufacturer. Capitalize trade names. For chemical compounds, after the first use of the trivial name give the formal name, as established by international convention (e.g., by IUB, IUPAB, IUPAC, or IUPS). Identify statistical software used.

[UP] Abbreviations and Units. Standard abbreviations may be used without definition. List all other definitions used in the manuscript in a footnote (see section on Footnotes). Terms used fewer than three times in the manuscript should not be abbreviated. Abbreviate units of measure only when used with numbers. Numbers and units must be separated by a space, e.g., 5 pA, not 5pA. The use of abbreviations in text, figures, and tables must be consistent. Use the metric system and Systèmes International d'Unités (SI) units.

Any nonstandard symbols should be defined. Unless typed, all mathematical symbols and Greek and script letters should be identified clearly in the manuscript opposite the line in which they first appear. It is particularly important to distinguish between the numeral 1 (one) and the letter l (el), and between the numeral 0 (zero) and the letter O (oh). With san serif typefaces, a distinction must also be made between the capital I and the lowercase l (el).

[UP] Format. When submitting hard copy, four high quality copies of the manuscript should be submitted. A complete set of photocopied figures should accompany each copy of the article. Original prints should be sent only if they contain detail that would by lost in photocopying, as with color figures, electron micrographs, or electrophoresis gels.

All pages should be numbered in sequence starting with the title page. Sections should be organized in the following order: title page; abstract (with key words listed beneath); Introduction; Materials and Methods; Results; Discussion; Appendices, if any; Acknowledgments; Footnotes; References; Figure Legends; Tables with Table Legends; and photocopies of figures or original figures if needed (all figures should be numbered). Schemes should not be included in the text, but attached separately with the figures. Schemes will be numbered, using roman numerals, in the order in which they appear.

[UP] Title Page. List the title of the article, the name(s) of the author(s), and department(s) and institution(s), city, state, and zip code where the work was performed. Include the institutional affiliation of each author if different from where the work was performed (multiple affiliations at one institution should be listed separately, i.e., "Department of Medicine, Department of Physiology, and Department of Biology" not "Departments of Medicine, Physiology, and Biology"), and footnote symbols (1 2 3 4) should be used to indicate the department(s) with which each author is affiliated. Give the name, complete address, telephone number, fax number, and email address of the author to whom communications about the article should be directed. Telephone and fax numbers should be included whether or not the author(s) is (are) in the United States. Acknowledgments of financial support should not appear on the title page but in the acknowledgments section.

A running title of no more than 62 letters and spaces, including the authors' names should be provided. If a running title has to be provided by the copyeditor and the author wishes it changed, the alteration will be made at the author's expense.

Unless otherwise instructed, the name, address, fax number, and email address of the corresponding author will appear as a footnote on the first page of the published article. If you wish to have two corresponding authors listed for the paper, you must designate one of them to communicate with the editorial and production offices.

(Letters to the Editor should have a title and a running title. The authors' names and affiliations should appear between the end of the text and the bibliography, not on the title page.)

[UP] Abstract. Each article should begin with an abstract. This serves as a summary of the article and will be sent to abstracting journals. The abstract cannot exceed 300 words. It should be meaningful to a wide range of readers, and should state the rationale, objectives, new findings, and conclusions of the study. No nonstandard abbreviations should be used in the abstract.

If it is found necessary to shorten an abstract in proof, the author will be charged for the expense. As the abstract may be published separately from the rest of the paper, any sources cited therein must be written out in full and enclosed in parentheses.

[UP] Keywords. At the bottom of the abstract page, list up to five key words that are not included in the title. (Use standard MESH-Medline major subject headings when possible. These headings are in the volume Medical Subject Headings: Supplement to Index Medicus, which is found in all major libraries.)

[UP] Acknowledgments State the source(s) of support in the form of grants, equipment, or materials on a separate acknowledgments page. Other appropriate acknowledgments, such as the contributions and advice of other scientists, should also be listed here. It is the responsibility of the author(s) to ensure that those acknowledged agree to the form of the acknowledgment.

[UP] Footnotes. Footnotes to the text should be numbered consecutively (except for the footnote that identifies the corresponding author). Lowercase superscript letters should be used as footnote symbols to tables.

[UP] Citations in Text. References should be made by giving the author's name and the year of publication in parentheses [e.g., (Hoshi, 1995)], except when the author's name is part of the sentence [e.g., "Hoshi (1995) showed that..."]. When a paper written by two authors is cited, both names are given [e.g., (Horn and Marty, 1988)]. If there are more than two authors, the first name is given with "et al." added [e.g., (Zagotta et al., 1994)] unless it would lead to ambiguity. In the case of ambiguity, references should be distinguished with lowercase letters [e.g., (Neyton and Miller, 1988a; Neyton and Miller, 1988b)].

Unpublished material should not appear in the reference list. Citations such as "manuscript in preparation," "manuscript submitted," "unpublished results," "unpublished observation," and "data not shown," must appear parenthetically in the text as "unpublished data." As an alternative to "unpublished data," additional images, videos, data sets, or methods not shown in the article may be included as Online Supplemental Material. When a person(s) who is not an author of the article is the source of unpublished data, those data must be cited as a "personal communication."

[UP] Personal Communications. If any kind of personal communication is cited, the author must submit to the Journal signed permission from the person whose work is cited. The permission must state that the person whose work is cited has seen and approved the actual wording of the citation.

[UP] References. The bibliography must be double spaced, and the citations should be listed alphabetically by author. Alphabetization takes precedence over the date of publication and over the number of authors. The following order is the correct one:

Armstrong, C.M. 1997. Armstrong, C.M., and B. Hille. 1998. Armstrong, C.M., R.P. Swenson, and S.R. Taylor. 1982.
(Note that the initials of the first author follow the surname, while all other initials precede the surname, and that there are no spaces between initials.)

The name of the journal should be given using the abbreviations used by PubMed.

The complete reference for a published article is:

Pape, P.C., D.-S. Jong, and W.K. Chandler. 1995. Calcium release and its voltage dependence in cut frog muscle fibers equilibrated with 20 mM EGTA. J. Gen. Physiol. 106:259-336.

Online Peer-reviewed References:   Published article with only DOI:

Tang, C., and J.P. Klinman. The catalytic function of bovine lysyl oxidase in the absence of copper. (June 6, 2001) J. Biol. Chem. 10.1074/jbc.C100138200

Published article with both DOI and pagination:

Prowse, C.N., and J. Lew. 2001. Mechanism of activation of ERK2 by dual phophorylation. J. Biol. Chem. 276:99?03. First published on October 2, 2000; 10.1074/jbc.M008137200

A chapter in a book should be cited as:

Keating, M.T. 1995. Molecular genetics of the Long QT syndrome. In Ion Channels and Genetic Diseases. D.C. Dawson and R.A. Frizzell, editors. The Rockefeller University Press, New York. 53-60.

A complete book should be cited as:

Hille, B. 1992. Ionic Channels in Excitable Membranes. 2nd ed. Sinauer Associates, Inc. Sunderland, MA. 607 pp. (Note the complete pagination.)

An abstract should be cited as:

Stehno-Bittel, L., A. Luckhoff, C. Perez, and D.E. Clapham. 1995. Receptor-operated channels on the nucleus. J. Gen. Physiol. 106:7a. (Abstr.)

[UP] Tables. All tables should be double spaced. Each table should appear on a separate, numbered page with a brief title at the top and legend and footnotes at the bottom. Whenever possible, the legend and footnotes should be on the same page as the table, not on a separate page. Tables should be designed to fit the Journal's 85-mm column width (or 176-mm page width). The order in which footnote symbols are used is determined by reading horizontally across the table. Lowercase superscript letters should be used as symbols (a, b, c). Abbreviations that are used only in a table should be defined in the footnotes to that table. Vertical rules and ditto marks should not be used.

[UP] Illustrations. Figures are cited in numerical order in the text using Arabic numerals. In the text, citations to, e.g., Figure 3 or Figures 4 and 5, are abbreviated as Fig. 3 or Figs. 4 and 5, respectively.

[UP] Figure Legends. Use the number corresponding to each figure (e.g., Figure 3). Provide a short title and brief explanation in sufficient detail to make the figure intelligible without reference to the text. Avoid duplication of explanations in text. Please provide a key to the symbols, and curves, in the figure. Do not provide any legend on the actual figure.

[UP] Figures. Figures should be designed to fit the Journal's printed page size, which is 176-mm wide by 240-mm deep. Whenever possible, figures will be reduced to a single-column width (85 mm).

The print or drawing cannot exceed 8.5 x 11 inches (or equivalent standard size). Multiple parts of a figure should be identified by the capital letters A, B, etc.; they must combine on a single print or drawing (except when the figure is comprised of a halftone and a line drawing, which must be separate).

Figures should be consistent in overall format, size, and style. Do not use two different sizes or styles of lettering in one figure. Sans serif fonts should be used for labeling.

Figures should not have titles; the key to the symbols should appear in the figure legend, rather than on the figure itself. Figures divided into parts A and B should be labeled with letters of approximately the same size as the capital letters in the figure. Figures that require extensive relettering will be relettered at the author's expense. An illustrations checklist with suggestions for improving figures will be sent to the author with the decision letter.

[UP] Requirements for Line Drawings. It is the authors' responsibility to submit artwork with symbols, lettering, and numbers that allow for reduction to an 85-mm column width. (If a figure cannot be adapted to a single column width, that should be stated in the original letter of submission.) Capital letters and numbers will be about 1.75 mm (about 6.5 points) high when reduced to the size at which they will be printed in the Journal. For example, if the original figure or glossy print has numbers 3.5 mm high, the figure will be reduced to 50% of its original size when printed in the Journal. If a figure is 230 mm wide with letters 2 mm high, it cannot be reduced to the width of a page without the letters becoming unacceptably small. When using graphing programs, the ratio of the figure width (in inches) to font size (in points) should be about 0.5. Please keep this in mind when selecting the font size and paper orientation. The line thickness in the printed figure should be approximately .25 mm (.75 points) in thickness. The size of the symbols should be comparable to that of the lowercase lettering; if the symbols are overly small in relation to the lettering, symbols such as solid squares and solid circles will not easily be distinguished by the reader. Only standard symbols (closed circle, open circle, closed diamond, open diamond, closed square, open square, closed triangle, open triangle, inverted closed triangle, inverted open triangle, x, +) are acceptable. Figures with white lettering on a black background should be avoided.

[UP] Requirements for Figures with Gel Electrophoresis. When possible, gels are reduced to a single column width (or less). Therefore, gels should be mounted and labeled as follows: figures with one to four gel lanes will be reduced to half-column width with the legend to the side; figures with multiple lanes (up to 15) will generally be reduced to a single column; figures with more than 15 lanes will be reduced to a 1.5 column width with the legend to the side.

[UP] Requirements for Halftone Illustrations. When possible, halftones will be reduced to a one-column width. When enlarging and mounting the original, the authors should crop out black background areas and other material that is irrelevant.

[UP] Requirements for Color Illustrations. When possible, color figures will be reduced to a one-column width. Authors should indicate specific sizing preferences on the back of the figures. Prints and transparencies are acceptable as originals, but not slides. The prints should be unmounted. The cost of publishing color figures will be borne by the authors. The cost of publishing a color page is $500 for the first color page and $200 for each additional color page. Several color photographs may be printed on one page.

[UP] Online Supplemental Material. An "Online Supplemental Material" section, providing a brief description of any materials submitted for online only publication (such as videos, data sets, or supplemental figures), should appear at the end of MATERIALS AND METHODS. The supplemental material will be linked to the online version. All supplemental material -- whether tables, figures, detailed derivations of equations, or movies that depict the results of experiments or simulations -- will be subject to the same rigorous review as the main manuscript.

[UP]Videos. The JGP can post video files online. Videos must be cited both at the relevant place in the text of the Results section, and in the legends of any figures that contain video stills or images related to the video. In addition, an "Online Supplemental Material" paragraph, providing a brief description of each video, must appear at the end of the Materials and Methods section. Each video must also be accompanied by a text legend, which must contain the following information: what the video is showing, the cell line or cell type being viewed, what each color represents, how often frames were collected, the frames/second display rate, and the number of any figure that has related video stills or images. Videos must be peer reviewed with the manuscript.

Videos must be QuickTime files no larger than 10 MB. We recommend Sorenson or Cinepak compression, although other codecs may be used. However, please do not use Intel Indeo because of incompatabilites across platforms. Color depth should be kept to a minimum, using grayscale for black and white videos. Frame size should be limited to 450 x 375 pixels for best viewing within a browser on most monitors. Videos should be named by order of citation appearance (e.g., video1.mov). If a video is directly related to a figure or table, name accordingly (e.g., Fig4video3.mov). Lengthy file names should be avoided. For hard copy submissions, include copies of video files on four separate CD ROMs or ZIP disks with your original manuscript submission.

[UP] Digital Images

Image acquisition and manipulation. The following information must be provided about the acquisition and processing of images:

1. Make and model of microscope
2. Type, magnification, and numerical aperture of the objective lenses
3. Temperature
4. Imaging medium
5. Fluorochromes
6. Camera make and model
7. Acquisition software
8. Any subsequent software used for image processing, with details about types of operations involved (e.g., type of deconvolution, 3D reconstructions, surface or volume rendering, gamma adjustments, etc.).

No specific feature within an image may be enhanced or moved. The grouping of images from different gels, fields, or exposures must be made explicit by the arrangement of the figure and in the text of the figure legend. Adjustments of brightness, contrast or color balance are acceptable, if they are applied to the whole image. Non-linear adjustments (e.g., gamma settings) must be disclosed in the figure legend.   All digital images in manuscripts accepted for publication will be scrutinized by our production department for any indication of improper manipulation. Questions raised by the production department will be referred to the Editors, who will request the original data from the authors for comparison to the prepared figures. Cases of deliberate misrepresentation of data will be reported to the corresponding author's home institution or funding agency.

"Digital Expert". Authors can use Digital Expert Online (a free service provided by The Sheridan Group) to check whether their image files comply with our formatting guidelines.

General Information. We encourage electronic submission of your manuscript and figures. If you are submitting hard copy and including digital image files, you must also submit a high quality, hard copy version from the same file submitted, which the printer can use to judge the result of the digital file, or if the file is unusable. Images can be provided on floppy disk, CD, or ZIP disk.

Grayscale Art. Submitted digital halftones must have an image resolution of at least 300 dpi at the specific output size. Please submit in the TIFF format.

Continuous-Tone Color Art. We can only use files in the CMYK format; make certain any submitted hard copy is created with the same CMYK format. Acceptable file formats are EPS or TIFF. Although every attempt will be made to match colors, they may not print uniformly across different platforms and output devices.

Line Art. Vector files created in illustration programs such as Adobe Illustrator, Macromedia Freehand, CorelDRAW, Deneba Canvas, etc., must be saved and submitted in EPS (Encapsulated PostScript) or TIFF format at a minimum resolution of 1,000 dpi. As a general rule, later versions of software maintain better image quality when saving in EPS or TIFF; we encourage authors to upgrade to recent versions. Only Helvetica, Arial, or Symbol fonts should be used. All fonts should be converted to outlines or paths, eliminating the possibility of character loss or change. To do this in Illustrator, select the text object and go to Type/Create Outline; in Freehand, select text object and go to Text/Convert to Paths; in Canvas, select text object and go to Object/Path/Convert to Path; in CorelDRAW, select text object and go to Arrange/Convert to Curves. For details, please see the instruction manual for your specific application. All color art MUST be in CMYK format.

Color or Grayscale with Fonts or Lines. All images that include both halftones (color or grayscale) and text or lines should be saved at 600 dpi. (a) Import grayscale or color image (minimum 600 dpi at publication size) into Adobe Photoshop (or similar program). (b) Crop the image. (c) In the "Layers" menu, select "New Layer." (d) Create labels in the new layer (make sure the anti-aliased box in the "Type Tool" window is not checked). (e) Save as TIFF.

ftp Instructions. The ftp server should only be used when specifically requested by a production editor. For Windows users, we recommend using Internet Explorer: direct your browser to ftp://ftprup.rockefeller.edu/JGP/. For Mac users, use an ftp client such as Fetch. The ftp address for the production office is ftprup.rockefeller.edu, and files should be uploaded to the "JGP" directory via anonymous ftp. Please note, all files uploaded are confidential, and the server is protected from unauthorized downloads. Authors will not be able to download any files in the Inbox (including their own). Please alert your Production Editor via email after all files have been transferred.

[UP] Manuscripts Invited for Revision

The Journal of General Physiology requests formatted text files and production quality figures for manuscripts invited for revision; should the revised manuscript be accepted, the text and figure files will be forwarded to the production office for copyediting. The Rockefeller University Press prefers Microsoft Word files, although other word processing formats (e.g., Wordperfect) can also be used. (Note that LaTeX files cannot be accepted). Please refer to Manuscript Organization and Preparation for more information on word processing files. If the revised manuscript is submitted online, digital figure files (in either EPS or TIF format) should be uploaded (PDF figures are not suitable for production). Specific requirements are listed in the Digital Images section. Hardcopy submissions must be accompanied by the text file on either floppy disk, CD ROM, or Zip disk; and a set of figures suitable for reproduction. Figures will not be returned to the authors after publication. The disk and paper versions must match exactly, and the disk must be free of viruses. The disk will not be returned. If you plan to send figures via anonymous ftp, you must state so in the cover letter.

[UP] Manuscripts Accepted for Publication

Manuscripts accepted by the Journal are considered to be the final revision received by editorial office - unless the authors explicitly have informed the editorial office that they wish to submit publication quality color figures only after the manuscript has been accepted. No changes can be made to the manuscript, except for corrections in the galley proof.

[UP] Copyediting and Production

All correspondence regarding the copyediting and production of manuscripts that have been accepted for publication should be addressed to:

The Rockefeller University Press
The Journal of General Physiology
1114 First Avenue
New York, NY 10021-5405
USA
tel.: (212) 327-7940
fax: (212) 327-8513
email: jgpcopy@mail.rockefeller.edu

[UP] Proofs. Galley proofs are either faxed or emailed (as a PDF attachment) to the corresponding author, along with instructions on handling text and figure proofs. Proofs must be returned within 48 hours. Should the corresponding author so request, galley proofs can be sent to one other author if necessary; however, only one set of galley proofs from either the corresponding author or the corresponding author's designate will be accepted by the production office. An Authors' guide will be provided with information on authors' charges for offprints and special services.    

[UP] Charges to Authors. A charge of $45.00 will be made for each printed page of type or illustrations. Authors' ability to honor these charges will not affect publication of acceptable articles. The cost of publishing color figures will be borne by the authors. The cost of publishing a color page is $500 for the first color page and $250 for each additional page. The cost of authors?text alterations in proof is $4.00 per change. Figure reshoots at the author’s request will be charged at $20.00 per black & white subject, and $90.00 per color subject.    

[UP] Offprints. Authors may purchase offprints of their articles; an order form will be sent with the galley proof and it must be returned before the Journal goes to press.


Editorial Board

Seth L. Alper
Ted Begenisich
Philip M. Best
Francisco Bezanilla
Michael Caplan
Tsung-Yu Chen
Stephen C. Cannon
Fredric S. Cohen
Ira S. Cohen
John A. Dani
Carol J. Deutsch
Philip B. Dunham
Kathleen Dunlap
Joseph J. Falke
Robert A. Farley
Haim Garty
Sharona E. Gordon

William N. Green
H. Criss Hartzell
Donald W. Hilgemann
Richard Horn
Stephen W. Jones
Jack H. Kaplan
Jeffrey W. Karpen
Jonathan C. Kentish
Stephen J. Korn
Erik Hviid Larsen
Richard S. Lewis
Bernd Lindemann
Vishwanath Lingappa
Zhe Lu
Stuart G. McLaughlin
Anna Menini
Edward Moczydlowski

Ruth Murrell-Lagnado
Jeanne M. Nerbonne
Colin G. Nichols
Pamela A. Pappone
Ian Parker
Joseph B. Patlak
Eduardo Perozo
Edward N. Pugh, Jr.
Eduardo Ríos
Thomas P. Sakmar
Steven A. Siegelbaum
F.J. Sigworth
Sidney A. Simon
Alan S. Verkman
Alan M. Weinstein
James N. Weiss
Gary Yellen



 返回页首 


邮编:430072   地址:中国武汉珞珈山   电话:027-87682740   管理员Email:
Copyright © 2005-2006 武汉大学图书馆版权所有