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期刊名称:MICROSCOPY

ISSN:0120-6230
出版频率:Bimonthly
出版社:OXFORD UNIV PRESS, GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD, ENGLAND, OX2 6DP
  出版社网址:http://www.oxfordjournals.org/en/
期刊网址:http://jmicro.oxfordjournals.org/
影响因子:
主题范畴:MICROSCOPY
变更情况:Newly Added by 2016

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 Current Issue

Microscopy, previously Journal of Electron Microscopy, promotes research combined with any type of microscopy techniques, applied in life and material sciences. Microscopy is the official journal of the Japanese Society of Microscopy.

The journal is an international forum, open to all scientists in the field, for publishing the best research in advanced microscopy and its applications. To ensure this policy, the journal has appointed eminent scientists from around the world.

Microscopy publishes six issues a year, and papers cover the application of advanced microscopy in diverse fields. Articles cover theories, methods, techniques, and instrumentation, as well as their applications to life and material sciences.

IMPACT FACTOR AND RANKING


Year Impact Factor Si: Microscopy
2015 1.285 7 out of 10
2014 1.743
2013 1.632 6 out of 11
2012 1.438 7 out of 9
2011 1.310 7 out of 10
2010 1.770 5 out of 9
2009 1.047 8 out of 9
2008 1.139 7 out of 9
2007 1.172 7 out of 9
2006 0.777 8 out of 9

This information is taken from the Journal Citation Reports, published annually as part of the Science Citation Index by ISI.

Microscopy is covered by the following major indexing services:-

Abstracts on Hygiene and Communicable Diseases
Aluminium Industry Abstracts
Biological Abstracts
BIOSIS Previews
CAB Abstracts
Computer and Information Systems Abstracts
Corrosion Abstracts
CSA Engineering Materials Abstracts
CSA Mechanical & Transportation Engineering Abstracts
Current Contents® /Life Sciences
Electronics & Communications Abstracts Journal
Environmental Science and Pollution Management
Global Health
Horticultural Abstracts
Index Medicus/ Medline
Index Veterinarius
INIS Atomindex
Journal Citation Reports /Science Edition
METADEX
Plant Breeding Abstracts
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest 5000 International
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Biology Journals
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Central
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Health & Medical Complete
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Medical Library
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Nursing & Allied Health Source
PROQUEST DATABASE : ProQuest Pharma Collection
Review of Agricultural Entomology
Review of Medical and Veterinary Mycology
Review of Plant Pathology
Science Citation Index Expanded (SciSearch®)
Science Citation Index®
The Standard Periodical Directory
Tropical Diseases Bulletin
Veterinary Bulletin
Zoological Record


 


Instructions to Authors

Instructions to authors

1. Scope and policy
2. Types of papers accepted
3. Preparation of the manuscript
4. Authors' Responsibility
5. Reviewing process
6. Revision
7. Proofs
8. Colour cost
9. Licence form
10. Permissions
11. Open Access Options for Authors
12. Third-Party Content in Open Access papers
13. Pre-Submission Language Editing
14. Crossref Funding Data Registry

1. Scope and policy

Microscopy, the official publication of the Japanese Society of Microscopy, aims to promote research combined with any type of microscopy technique, by publishing informative articles dealing with their theories, methods, techniques and instrumentation as well as their applications to life and material sciences. Although the journal is closely associated with the society, contributions by non-society members are welcome.

2. Types of papers accepted

Articles
Articles should present new findings of broad interest and describe significant and original results to be critically evaluated.

Letters
'Letters' of exceptional interest or with novel findings will be rapidly accepted and published.

Technical Report
'Technical Reports' includes brief reports of specifications or mechanical aspects of the innovative devise, evaluation of the devise, as well as the quality assurance protocols for specimen preparation. It should be original, and be of sufficiently broad interest.

Reviews
Reviews are commissioned by the Editor-in-Chief or the Editors.

3. Preparation of the manuscript

Length
Articles are fewer than ten printed pages. This is approximately equivalent to 30 double-spaced type pages (including references, figure legends and tables). Letters and Technical Reports should not exceed four and two printed pages, respectively.

General format
All manuscripts should be typed double-spaced, including title page, abstract, text, references, tables and figure legends in 12 point type. Pages should have margins of 2.5 cm (about 1 inch).

Spelling
UK or US spelling is acceptable, but should be used consistently. UK spelling should be Oxford English, i.e. -ize endings rather than -ise (but use "analyse").

Title page
All manuscript title pages must include the following: a complete title, a running title not in excess of 45 letters including spaces, full given and last name of each contributor followed by full address, telephone number and E-mail address, name of the contributor who will deal with correspondence including proofs, and six keywords for indexing services. The total number of pages and figures being submitted should also be indicated on this page.

Sections
Articles should start with an ABSTRACT, followed by a brief INTRODUCTION, which outlines the historical or logical origins of the study, a section on METHODS and one on RESULTS, in which the findings are presented in a compact form with minimal reference to earlier literature or to possible interpretations. The DISCUSSION should be devoted to interpreting the results from various viewpoints and to considering their physical and biological significance. CONCLUDING REMARKS are obligatory. They may start with a brief summary of the results, but repetition of the abstract should be avoided. For theoretical/methodological articles, sections on METHODS and RESULTS are not obligatory.
When submitting your manuscript, select your manuscript type at the submission stage, step 1.

Letters and Technical Reports should also start with an ABSTRACT, but there should be no other individual sections afterwards.

Abstract
The abstract should be written in complete sentences and should summarize the content in no more than 250 words (for articles and Reviews) or no more than 100 words (for Letters and Technical Reports). If references are used in an abstract, they must include the author(s), journal title, volume number, starting page and year. Avoid abbreviations in abstracts as far as possible.

Main text
There should be an indication in the main text to show the most appropriate placement of each table and illustration. Acknowledgements, references, tables and figure legends should follow the main text in that order.

References
References are to be cited in the text by a number in brackets and should be numbered in order of first appearance. An example is: 'McMichael and Gotch [12] have reported ...'. Where there are more than three authors, the citation in the text should use the formulation 'et al.'. An example is: 'This observation has been reported by Shackelford et al. [24]'.

In the list of references, papers from journals should be listed thus:

Hirokawa K, Kokubo Y, Kitamura M, and Shiraishi T (1987) Fine structure of intestinal fibroblasts autoradiographic and three dimensional studies. J. Electron Microsc. 37, 213-228.

Books should be listed as:

Squire J (1981) The Structural Basis of Muscular Contraction. (Plenum Press, New York.)

McMichael A J and Gotch F (1987) T-cell antigens new and previously defined clusters. In: Leukocyte Typing III, ed. McMichael A J, pp. 31-35, (Oxford University Press, Oxford).

Tables
Tables should be typed on separate sheets and numbered consecutively with Roman numerals. They should be self-explanatory. Prepare your tables using a word processing program and save it as a .doc, .rtf or .ps file. All files in these formats will be converted to .pdf format upon submission. Please supply your tables with the same manuscript as the text.

Figures
Figures should be uploaded individually at the website in the order of which they are mentioned in the text. They should be numbered as a single series. The final size of printed figures cannot exceed 174 mm wide × 237 mm deep for a full page illustration and 84 mm wide for a single column one. All symbols, letters, numbers, and scale bars should be of sufficient size to be produced clearly at the final reduction. Letters or numbers less than 2 mm high are not acceptable in the final print. All figures should show clearly against the background.

Scanned image files should be at least 300 dpi for continuous tone images (greyscale or colour), and at least 1200 dpi for line drawing, when the figure is magnified to the size at which it will appear on the printed page.

Please note that figure quality is the responsibility of the author. During the production process, OUP will be able to advise on figure quality, if submitted figures are not adequate for print. In such cases, authors will be given the opportunity to submit better quality figures. However, OUP cannot improve the quality of figures created or presented by the author.

TIFF files are preferable. If there are two or more parts to a figure, they should be labelled as a, b, c, etc. (i.e. lower case letters).

Photographs must include magnification scale. Micrographs are reproduced without reduction unless they exceed 174 mm × 237 mm. All figures in a group should have approximately the same contrast values. The Editorial Office should be notified of any special instructions for the printer.

Colour figures will be published in the online journal but authors are required to pay the costs if figures are to appear in colour in print. See section 8 below for further information.

For useful information on creating figure files, please go to:
http://art.cadmus.com/da/index.jsp

Supplementary Data
Supporting material that is not essential for inclusion in the full text of the manuscript, but would nevertheless benefit the reader, can be made available by the publisher as online-only content, linked to the online manuscript. The material should not be essential to understanding the conclusions of the paper, but should contain data that is additional or complementary and directly relevant to the article content. Such information might include more detailed methods, extended data sets/data analysis, or additional figures/videos.
It is standard practice for appendices to be made available online-only as supplementary data. All text and figures must be provided in suitable electronic formats. All material to be considered as supplementary data must be submitted at the same time as the main manuscript for peer review. It cannot be altered or replaced after the paper has been accepted for publication, and will not be edited. Please indicate clearly all material intended as supplementary data upon submission and name the files e.g. 'Supplementary Figure 1', 'Supplementary Data', etc. Also ensure that the supplementary data is referred to in the main manuscript where necessary, for example as '(see Supplementary data)' or '(see Supplementary Figure 1)'.

Units
Use of SI units is mandatory.

Mathematics
A brief guide to setting mathematics is available here.

Referees
When submitting a manuscript, authors may suggest the names of potential referees (who have not yet seen the manuscript). The names of possible referees, if any, should not be written on the manuscripts itself, but on the cover letter to the Editor. Or, you can indicate your preferred/non-preferred referees at the submission stage, step 4.

4. Authors' Responsibility

Submission of manuscript
Submission of a paper will be taken to imply that it reports unpublished work (except for Reviews) and that it is not being considered for publication elsewhere. Duplicate or redundant publication is a serious form of misconduct. Please be mindful of this when submitting your paper. All manuscripts should be submitted online. For online submission, see Online Manuscript Submission for details.

Microscopy takes publication ethics very seriously. If misconduct is found or suspected after the manuscript is published, the journal will investigate the matter and this may result in the article subsequently being retracted.

Authorship
All persons designated as authors should qualify for authorship. The order of authorship should be a joint decision of the co-authors. Each author should have participated sufficiently in the work to take public responsibility for the content. Authorship credit should be based on substantial contribution to conception and design, execution, or analysis and interpretation of data. All authors should be involved in drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content, and must have read and approved the final version of the manuscript. Assurance that all authors of the paper have fulfilled these criteria for authorship should be given at time of online submission.

Ethical standards
In cases where a study involves the use of live animals or human subjects, authors must include in the appropriate section of the manuscript a statement that all experiments were performed in compliance with the relevant laws and institutional guidelines in accordance with the ethical standards of the Declaration of Helsinki. The institutional committees that have approved the experiments must be named.

Funding and Conflict of Interest
Funding
Details of all funding sources for the work in question should be given in a separate section entitled 'Funding'. This should appear after the 'Acknowledgements' section.

The following rules should be followed:

  • The sentence should begin: ‘This work was supported by …’
  • The full official funding agency name should be given, i.e. ‘National Institutes of Health’, not ‘NIH’ (full RIN-approved list of UK funding agencies) Grant numbers should be given in brackets as follows: ‘[grant number xxxx]’
  • Multiple grant numbers should be separated by a comma as follows: ‘[grant numbers xxxx, yyyy]’
  • Agencies should be separated by a semi-colon (plus ‘and’ before the last funding agency)
  • Where individuals need to be specified for certain sources of funding the following text should be added after the relevant agency or grant number 'to [author initials]'.

An example is given here: ‘This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health [AA123456 to C.S., BB765432 to M.H.]; and the Alcohol & Education Research Council [hfygr667789].’

Conflict of Interest
At the point of submission, Microscopy’s policy requires that each author reveal any financial interests or connections, direct or indirect, or other situations that might raise the question of bias in the work reported or the conclusions, implications, or opinions stated - including pertinent commercial or other sources of funding for the individual author(s) or for the associated department(s) or organization(s), personal relationships, or direct academic competition. When considering whether you should declare a conflicting interest or connection please consider the conflict of interest test: Is there any arrangement that would embarrass you or any of your co-authors if it was to emerge after publication and you had not declared it?

As an integral part of the online submission process, Corresponding authors are required to confirm whether they or their co-authors have any conflicts of interest to declare, and to provide details of these. If the Corresponding author is unable to confirm this information on behalf of all co-authors, the authors in question will then be required to submit a completed Conflict of Interest form to the Editorial Office. It is the Corresponding author’s responsibility to ensure that all authors adhere to this policy.

5. Reviewing process

The paper will be assigned to one Editor, who asks at least one (in the case of Letters, Technical Reports, and Reviews) or two (in the case of articles) referees to review it. The Editor in charge will ask authors for revision, if necessary, or notify rejection based on the comments by the referees. The Editor in charge will decide the acceptance or rejection of the paper. The Editor-in-Chief may take on the final decision at their request.

6. Revision

When a manuscript is returned to authors for revision prior to final acceptance, the revised version must be submitted within 3 months after it is returned.

7. Proofs

Authors are sent page proofs via email. They should be checked within 48 hours for typographical errors and returned to the publisher online.

8. Colour cost

All figures submitted to the journal in colour will be published in colour online at no cost (unless the author specifically requests that their figures be in black and white online). Authors may choose to also publish their figures in colour in the print journal for £175 per figure (reduced from £350 from 1st January 2016): you will be asked to approve this cost after your article is accepted for publication. Colour figures must have a resolution of at least 300 dots per inch at their final sizes. You will be issued an invoice at the time of publication. Figure captions must be suitably worded to apply to both the print and online versions of the article. Black and white figures will be printed without additional cost, but should be well prepared with high contrast.

Note: Orders from the UK will be subject to the current UK VAT charge. For orders from elsewhere in the EU you or your institution should account for VAT by way of a reverse charge. Please provide us with your or your institution’s VAT number.

9. Licence form

After acceptance, authors will be invited to complete an online copyright licence to publish form at our Author Services site.

Please note that by submitting an article for publication you confirm that you are the corresponding/submitting author and that Oxford University Press ("OUP") may retain your email address for the purpose of communicating with you about the article. You agree to notify OUP immediately if your details change. If your article is accepted for publication OUP will contact you using the email address you have used in the registration process. Please note that OUP does not retain copies of rejected articles.

10. Permissions

Permission to reproduce copyright material, for print and online publication in perpetuity, must be cleared. Evidence in writing that such permissions have been secured from the rights-holder must be made available to the Editorial Board. It is also the author's responsibility to include acknowledgements as stipulated by the particular institutions. Oxford University Press can offer information and documentation to assist authors in securing print and online permissions: please see the Guidelines for Authors section (http://www.oxfordjournals.org/en/access-purchase/rights-and-permissions.html).

11. Open Access options for authors

Authors have the option to publish their paper under the Oxford Open initiative; whereby, for a charge, their paper will be made freely available online immediately upon publication. After your manuscript is accepted the corresponding author will be required to accept a mandatory licence to publish agreement. As part of the licensing process you will be asked to indicate whether or not you wish to pay for open access. If you do not select the open access option, your paper will be published with standard subscription-based access and you will not be charged.

Oxford Open articles are published under Creative Commons licences. Authors publishing in the journal can use the following Creative Commons licences for their articles:
• Creative Commons Attribution licence (CC BY)
• Creative Commons Non-Commercial licence (CC BY-NC)

Please click here for more information about the Creative Commons licences.

You can pay Open Access charges using our Author Services site. This will enable you to pay online with a credit/debit card, or request an invoice by email or post. The open access charges applicable are:

Regular charge - £1850/ $3000/ €2450
Reduced rate developing country charge* - £925/ $1500/ €1225
Free developing country charge* - £0/ $0/ €0
*Visit our Developing Countries page for a list of qualifying countries

Please note that these charges are in addition to any colour charges that may apply.

Orders from the UK will be subject to the current UK VAT charge. For orders from the rest of the European Union, OUP will assume that the service is provided for business purposes. Please provide a VAT number for yourself or your institution, and ensure you account for your own local VAT correctly.

12. Third-Party Content in Open Access papers

If you will be publishing your paper under an Open Access licence but it contains material for which you do not have Open Access re-use permissions, please state this clearly by supplying the following credit line alongside the material:

Title of content
Author, Original publication, year of original publication, by permission of [rights holder]

This image/content is not covered by the terms of the Creative Commons licence of this publication. For permission to reuse, please contact the rights holder.

13. Pre-submission language editing

If English is not your first language, you may wish to have your manuscript edited for language before submitting it. This is not a mandatory step, but may help to ensure that the academic content of your paper is fully understood by journal editors and reviewers. Language editing does not guarantee that your manuscript will be accepted for publication. For further information on this service, please click here. Several specialist language editing companies offer similar services and you can also use any of these. Authors are liable for all costs associated with such services.

14. Crossref Funding Data Registry

In order to meet your funding requirements authors are required to name their funding sources, or state if there are none, during the submission process. For further information on this process or to find out more about the CHORUS initiative please click here.


Editorial Board

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

Yoshinori Fujiyoshi

Nagoya University

CO-EDITORS-IN-CHIEF

Eiji Abe

The University of Tokyo (Physical Sciences)

Shigeo Okabe

The University of Tokyo (Biological Sciences)

EDITORIAL BOARD

Physical Sciences

Hiroshi Jinnai

Tohoku University

Koji Kimoto

National Institute for Materials Science

Hiroki Kurata

Kyoto University

Seizo Morita

Osaka University

Yasukazu Murakami

Kyushu University

Yoshizo Takai

Osaka University

Jun Yamasaki

Osaka University

Gianluigi Botton

McMaster University (Canada)

Joanne Etheridge

Monash University (Australia)

Young-Woon Kim

Seoul National University (Korea)

Stephen J Pennycook

National University of Singapore (Singapore)

Gustaaf Van Tendeloo

University of Antwerp (Belgium)

Ze Zhang

Zhejiang University (China)

Biological Sciences

Toshiyuki Matsuzaki

Gunma University

Yoshinobu Mineyuki

University of Hyogo

Atsuo Miyazawa

University of Hyogo

Takeharu Nagai

Osaka University

Keiichi Namba

Osaka University

Takeshi Noda

Kyoto University

Yoshiro Takano

Tokyo Medical and Dental University

Sen Takeda

University of Yamanashi

Akitsugu Yamamoto

Nagahama Institute of Bio-Science and Technology

Yong Chul Bae

Kyungpook National University (Korea)

Yifan Cheng

University of California San Francisco (USA)

Daniel Choquet

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (France)

Winfried Denk

Max-Planck Institute for Medical Research (Germany)

Takashi Ishikawa

Paul Scherrer Institute (Switzerland)

Fei Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences (China)

Thomas Walz

Rockefeller University (USA)

EXECUTIVE ADVISER

Yoshio Bando

National Institute for Materials Science

EDITORIAL OFFICE

Microscopy, c/o Oxford Journals, Oxford University Press Tokyo, 4-17-5-3F Shiba, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8386, Japan
e-mail: microscopy.editorialoffice@oup.com phone: +81 3 5444 5858 fax: +81 3 3454 2929



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