期刊名称:FLY

ISSN:1933-6934
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC, 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, USA, PA, 19106
  出版社网址:http://www.landesbioscience.com/journals/cancer.html
期刊网址:http://www.landesbioscience.com/journals/fly/
影响因子:2.16
主题范畴:BIOCHEMISTRY & MOLECULAR BIOLOGY

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



About the journal

Fly strives to be a definitive resource that will promote the field.

 

Average 25-day turnaround from manuscript submission to decision.

 

Flexible formats for papers: no pre-set lengths for papers; no pre-set formats; your creative ideas will be considered; papers will be considered by Fly regardless of length.

 

Lower publication costs than most journals.

 

All papers are made open access after one year. Open access may be purchased at the time of acceptance making your paper free to all readers from the day it is first published online. Optional open access can be purchased for $750.

 

Fly is abstracted/indexed in: Medline/PubMed, Science Citation Index Expanded (available as Current Contents/Life Sciences, Zoological Record, Biological Abstract and Biosis Previews).

Everyone in the Drosophila community will see your paper. All papers are published online and can be downloaded as PDFs. Our website draws researchers by featuring Fly Jobs where you can announce or seek an open postdoc position, and FlyBay, an interactive feature where you can ask the community for a particular chromosome, reagent, transgene, plasmid, etc. On FlyBay you can also advertise if you have a tool that you would like to share


Instructions to Authors

Editorial Policy
When a manuscript is submitted, the Editors assume that no similar paper has been or will be submitted for publication elsewhere. Further, it is understood that all authors listed on a manuscript have agreed to its submission. Upon acceptance, authors must sign a License to Publish.
Download License to Publish form.

Manuscripts should conform to the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals (URMSBJ), which can be found in full at
www.icmje.org. This is in addition to their need to conform to our general guidelines about layout, etc. In particular, the attention of authors is drawn to the following conditions (which are extracted from the URMSBJ):

Authorship
Authorship credit should be based on 1) substantial contributions to conception and design, or acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation of data; 2) drafting the article or reviewing/revising it critically for important intellectual content and 3) final approval of the version to the published. Each authors should meet all three of these criteria. Acquisition of funding, or general supervision of a research group, are not valid criteria for authorship. Individuals who have a lesser involvement should be thanked in the acknowledgements. If meeting these requirements causes problems for a particular manuscript, authors are encouraged to contact the 
Editor-in-Chief for advice on alternative ways other contributors can be listed.

Acknowledgment of Funding
Authors should list all sources of funding for the research described in a manuscript in the 'Acknowledgments' section.

Conflict of Interest
Potential conflicts of interest exist when an author or reviewer has financial or personal interests in a publication that might, in principle, influence their scientific judgment. Financial interests include, but are not limited to, stock-holding, consultancy, paid expert testimony and honoraria; they also include any limitations on freedom to publish that are imposed on an author by an employer or funding agency. In order to encourage transparency without impeding publication, authors are required to include a statement at the end of a manuscript that lists all potential financial interests or, if appropriate, that clearly states that there are none. Possible conflicts of interest of a personal nature should also be communicated to the
Editor-in-Chief, who will discuss with the author whether these ought to be listed. Peer reviewers are also required to inform the Editor-in-Chief of any potential conflicts of interest, financial or otherwise.

Ethical Statements
If a study involves any ethical issues, which include patient confidentiality and treatment of animals, the paper must be accompanied by a statement to the effect that the authors complied with all of the legal requirements pertaining to the location(s) in which the work was done.
Indicate whether the procedures were approved by the Ethics Committee of Human Experimentation in your country, or are in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975.

Corrections and retractions
Authors are obliged to notify the 
Editor-in-Chief at once if they find that a published manuscript contains an error, plagiarism or fraudulent data. The journal will publish a correction, retraction or notice of concern at the earliest possible date: authors are encouraged to contact the Editor-in-Chief to discuss the most appropriate course of action.

Duplicate or redundant publication
We only publish original manuscripts that are not also published or going to be published elsewhere.
Duplicate publications, or redundant publications (re-packaging in different words of data already published by the same authors) will be rejected. If  detected after publication, the Editor reserves the right to publish a notice of the fact without requiring the authors' approval. Competing manuscripts on the same study, for example by collaborators who have split into rival teams after the data were gathered, are acceptable only under special circumstances: please contact the 
Editor-in-Chief for advice.

Plagiarism and other fraud
If the Editor has reason to suspect that a manuscript is plagiarized or fraudulent, he reserves the right to bring his concerns to the authors' sponsoring institution and any other relevant bodies.

Limits to freedom of expression
We are committed to academic freedom. It does, however, have to operate within the laws of the USA, where it is published. Although a liberal democracy that is committed to academic freedom, it does have certain legal restrictions on the publication of specific types of material (for example, defamation of character, incitement to racial hatred, material intended to aid terrorism, etc.). In the unlikely event that a manuscript contains material that contravenes these restrictions, the journal reserves the right to request that the material is removed from the manuscript or that the manuscript is withdrawn. In any case, the journal requires authors to take full legal responsibility for what they have written.


Availability of Materials and Data
It is expected that authors should be able to provide any materials and/or protocols used in published experiments to other qualified researchers for their own use. Materials include (but are not limited to): cells DNA, antibodies, reagents, organisms, mouse strains, and Drosophila strains. These should be made available in a timely manner and it is acceptable to request reasonable payment to cover the cost of maintenance and transport.




For materials such as mutant strains and cell lines, authors should use established public repositories and provide relevant accession numbers wherever possible. 



Repositories include:



Jackson Laboratory (mouse strains)

Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center at Indiana University (fly strains)

Drosophila Genomics Resource Center (DNA clones and cell lines)

MMRRC (Mutant Mouse Regional Resource Centers)

UK Stem Cell Bank



 

Papers reporting protein or DNA sequences and molecular structures should provide an accession number to any of the three major collaborative databases: DDBJ, EMBL or GenBank. It is only necessary to submit to one database as data are exchanged between DDBJ, EMBL and GenBank on a daily basis. The suggested wording for referring to accession-number information is: 'These sequence data have been submitted to the DDBJ/EMBL/GenBank databases under accession number U12345.'

Note: You must include FlyBase ID numbers in your Materials and Methods section

For all alleles of genes and other genetic reagents (such as transgenes), FlyBase identification numbers (FBids) must be supplied in the Methods section. Please list every chromosome used in your experiments, with the FBid in parentheses. This will aid in the curation by FlyBase of your published paper, and generally make it easier for everyone who reads your paper to know precisely what genetic reagents you used.

New alleles and transgenes that you have generated for your paper will of course not yet have FBids. They will be assigned by FlyBase after publication.

FlyBase identification (FBid) numbers can be found in FlyBase (www.flybase.org).

If you have any questions about the appropriate FBids for your particular chromosomes, please contact FlyBase directly: flybase-help@morgan.harvard.edu.


Peer Review
Each contribution is typically vetted by at least two expert reviewers who are either members of the Editorial Board or are recruited by Board members.

For original articles or short reports, reviewers will generally be asked to comment on the following aspects of the submitted manuscripts:

•   significance to the field

•   study of data

•   quality of data

•   quality of controls

•   whether conclusions are justified

•   whether the effects are meaningful

•   whether the study is described clearly

•   the novelty of the work


If the reviewers believe the paper is potentially acceptable, but could be improved, specific suggestions will be made for improvement.

Final acceptance of all submitted manuscripts is a decision made by the Editor(s) in consultation with the Editorial Board and reviewers. If a manuscript does not meet the standards of the journal or is otherwise lacking in scientific rigor or contains major deficiencies, the reviewers will attempt to provide constructive criticism to assist the authors in ultimately improving their work for publication, here or elsewhere. Manuscripts not invited for resubmission will not be reconsidered.

If a manuscript receives favorable reviews but is not accepted outright following the initial review, it may be invited for reconsideration with the expectation that the authors will fully address the reviewer’s criticisms. Resubmitted manuscripts with major revisions will be sent back for peer review.

Accepted papers will be rapidly posted to the journal website as an E-publication (ahead of print).


Open Access Policy
Landes Bioscience recognizes that some authors prefer that their research be freely available to all potential readers upon publication, and that certain funding agencies (Howard Hughes Medical Institute, MRC, NIH, Wellcome Trust) request open access of agency-funded research within six months to one year of publication.
To address these requests, we provide the following options for our authors and readers:

(1) One year after publication. ALL papers will become open access to ALL users throughout the world after having been published online for one year. Authors may deposit a PDF of the final manuscript with PubMed Central or UK PubMed Central once the paper has been made freely availble at the journal's website.

(2) Immediately upon publication. Authors may purchase open access of their paper at the proof stage and the paper will be made freely available at our website. Again, if the paper is funded by a NIH, MRC or Wellcome Trust grant, authors may deposit a PDF of the final manuscript with PubMed Central or UK PubMed Central. The fee for open access is $900 for original papers (Research Papers or Reports) and $750 for all other types of papers.

NIH Manuscript Submission System
UK PubMed Central Manuscript Submission System

COMING SOON – If you purchase open access for your paper (see #2 above), Landes Bioscience will post your paper with PubMed Central.  If you wish to have your paper posted with PubMed Central one year after publication (#1 above), we will take care of this for a nominal fee  outlined on the publication charge form authors receive with galley proofs.


Manuscript Submission

Online Submission
Fly utilizes an online submission and tracking system designed to provide a better, more efficient service to authors.
•   Authors can submit manuscripts online from anywhere in the world.
•   Authors can track their manuscript through the peer review process.
•   Author files are automatically converted into a PDF (Portable Document Format) file and submissions are acknowledged by email.
•   Editors and reviewers access the PDF files on the website.

Click here to submit your manuscript to Fly.

Previously Submitted
Fly recognizes that excellent papers may have been erroneously rejected by other journals. We will reconsider papers that have been rejected by Nature, Science, Nature Medicine, Nature Cell Biology, Cell, Cancer Cell, Cell Metabolism, Developmental Cell, NEJM, Lancet, Genes & Development and some other journals in the original format of those journals, thus saving the authors effort and time. Authors are encouraged to enclose the reviewers' and/or editorial comments from the journals mentioned above. This will expedite the evaluation of the article. In some instances, the article may be accepted based on the previous review. This allows urgent and competitive research to be published soon after submission. Papers submitted using the Select Submission Track can be accepted within 1-2 days.

Please submit your paper and contact the
Editor-in-Chief with the manuscript number and a PDF with the previous review. Upon acceptance, authors should provide the paper in Fly’s format.

Pre-submission inquiries
Pre-submission inquiries are not necessary but are welcome. These may include either an abstract or a full-length manuscript as an email attachment (Microsoft Word). Pre-submission inquiries should be emailed to the
Editor-in-Chief (Kristen M. Johansen).

Non-Native Speakers of English
Authors who are not native speakers of English and submit manuscripts to international journals, often receive negative comments from referees or editors about English-language usage. These problems can contribute to a decision to reject a paper. To help reduce the possibility of such problems, we strongly encourage such authors to take at least one or both of the following steps:

Have your manuscript reviewed for clarity by a colleague whose native language is English.

Use a service such as one of those listed at the end of our guidelines. An editor will improve the English to ensure that your meaning is clear and identify problems that require your review. Note that the use of such a service is at the author's own expense and risk, and does not guarantee that the article will be accepted. Landes Bioscience accepts no responsibility for the interaction between the author and the service provider or for the quality of the work performed.


Manuscript Preparation

Types of Papers

Research Papers/Reports
Research Papers or Reports should include the following sections:

Abstract: A single paragraph of fewer than 250 words. The primary goal of the abstract should be to make the general significance and conceptual advance of the work clearly accessible to a broad readership. References should not be cited in the abstract.

Key words: Include 5-10 for indexing purposes.

Introduction.

Results: Present results in a logical sequence in tables and illustrations. In the text, explain, emphasize or summarize the most important observations. Units of measurement should be expressed in accordance with Systeme International d'Unites (SI Units).

Discussion: Do not repeat in detail data given in the Results section. Emphasize the new and important aspects of the study. Relate observations to other relevant studies. On the basis of your findings (and others'), discuss possible implications/conclusions. When stating a new hypothesis, clearly label it as such.

Patients and Methods/Materials and Methods: Describe the selection of patients or experimental animals, including controls. Do not use patients' names or hospital numbers. Identify methods, apparatus (manufacturer's name and address) and procedures in sufficient detail to allow other workers to reproduce the results. Provide references and brief descriptions of methods that have been published. When using new methods, evaluate their advantages and limitations. Identify drugs and chemicals, including generic name, dosage and route(s) of administration.

Indicate whether the procedures were approved by the Ethics Committee of Human Experimentation in your country, or are in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975.

For reagents listed in the Materials and Methods section, the company that supplied the reagent and the catalog number should be listed in parentheses; do not list the company location.

References: No more than 85.

Tables: Tables should be numbered consecutively with Arabic numerals and include descriptive titles and legends.

Figure legends.

Reviews
Reviews should be recognized as scholarly by specialists in the field being covered, but should also be written with a view to informing readers who are not specialized in that particular field, and should therefore be presented using simple prose. Please avoid excessive jargon and technical detail. Reviews should capture the broad developments and implications of recent work. The opening paragraph should make clear the general thrust of the review and provide a clear sense of why the review is now particularly appropriate. The concluding paragraph should provide the reader with an idea of how the field may develop or future problems to overcome, but should not summarize the article. To ensure that a review is likely to be accessible to as many readers as possible, it may be useful to ask a colleague from another discipline to read the review before submitting it. Submitted reviews are subject to the same page charges as full-length reports—whether and how page charges will apply for commissioned reviews will be determined upon each comission. Reviews should include an abstract of 150 words and should cite no more than 150 references. Please include 5-10 key words for indexing purposes.

Commentaries and Views
Commentaries and Views may be short and focused opinion articles, commentaries on papers recently published in Fly or elsewhere, or commentaries on significant conceptual changes, important trends or new directions in the field. These may include figures and up to 30 references. Please include an abstract of 150-200 words and 5-10 key words for indexing purposes.

Meeting Reports
Meeting Reports are summaries of presentations from recent meetings in the field. Authors are encouraged to contact the
Editor-in-Chief with proposals for meeting reports. Also, please contact the meeting organizers to verify that reports will be permitted. Please include an abstract of 150-200 words and 5-10 key words for indexing purposes.

Extra Views

Extra Views are essentially an auto-commentary. The Editor or Editorial Board will solicit authors of the most significant recent and forthcoming papers published elsewhere to provide a short summary with additional insights, new interpretations or speculation on the relevant topic. These manuscripts may include data or models, which due to space limitations were not included or discussed in the original paper.

In other words, the authors may provide biased and uncensored points of views, complementing their article. As with other papers published in Fly, addenda will appear online, in print, and eventually on MedLine/Pubmed. Extra Views will appear simultaneously, or very soon after, publication of the original paper. There will be no page charges for Extra Views and you are encouraged to include figures; however, please note the journal policy regarding color charges.

Abstract: 150-200 words

Keywords: Include 5-10 for indexing purposes

Citation: Citation for the original article including the full author list, title of article and journal information should be included on the title page

Student Short Reviews

Student short reviews are written by single-author graduate students. They should be recognized as scholarly by specialists in the field, but should also be written in simple prose with the goal of informing readers who are not specialized in that particular field. Papers are not limited by length (or word count), but should be written succinctly in clear, grammatical English.

Student short reviews should include the following sections:

Title page, including title, running title, author's name and affiliation

Key words: 5-10 for indexing purposes

Abbreviations and Acronyms: (optional) List those used throughout the text

Abstract: 100-150 words

Text: prepared in MS Word, double-spaced, numbered pages

References: max. 75

Tables: (with descriptive titles and legends)

Figure legends

Figures: At least one summary figure is required. However, additional figures are encouraged to illustrate key concepts



Methods & Technical Advances

Methods and Technical Advances articles must present original research that focuses mainly on a new experimental technique, procedure, or reagent that provides a significant advance in the field. These papers should follow the same structure as Research Papers or Brief communications.

Abstract: 100 words maximum

Keywords: Include 5-10 for indexing purposes

Letter to the Editor
A short, focused text with references, addressing a specific publication in Fly. Before such a Letter is published, the author of the original published article will be given the opportunity to reply to the Letter. If the author wishes to reply, the Letter and Reply Letter will be published together in the same issue of the journal.


Organization
All manuscripts should be in English. Please ensure that manuscripts are clear, concise and grammatically correct.

Text should be prepared in MS Word, double-spaced, with page numbers throughout.
Organize manuscripts in the following manner:

•   Title page, including titles, author's names (first, MI, last) and affiliations

•   5-10 key words (for indexing purposes)

•   Acknowledgments

•   A list of abbreviations and acronyms used throughout the text

•   A running title of no more than 50 characters in length

•   Text (length and organization depends upon type of paper)

•   An abstract, the primary goal of which is to make the general significance and conceptual advance of the work clearly accessible to a broad readership. (References should not be cited in the abstract.)

•   References

•   Tables (with descriptive titles and legends)

•   Figure legends


There are no word limits for papers published, however, accepted manuscripts are published with the understanding that page and color charges will be assessed. Please see the section, Page and Color Charges below.

If your paper is to be published in a journal indexed by PubMed/Medline, the citation of your article will be sent to PubMed within one week of acceptance; therefore, please ensure that all information is correct.


Text Files and Tables
Please save text and table files as MS Word documents. Save tables in a file separate from text. Figure legends, however, should be at the end of the manuscript as text. Tables will be reformatted during production and therefore should only be minimally formatted in your text file.

Figures
Figures should be as small and simple as clarity permits. Unnecessary figures and panels in figures should be avoided: data presented in small tables or histograms, for instance, can generally be stated briefly in the text instead. Avoid unnecessary complexity, coloring and excessive detail. Figures should not contain more than one panel unless the parts are logically connected. Where possible, text, including keys to symbols, should be provided in the text of the figure legend rather than on the figure itself. Any image processing should be explained clearly in the Materials and Methods section of your manuscript.

To aid in the processing and turnaround of issues, we ask that authors please adhere to the following figure guidelines. Authors will be asked to revise details and images if they do not adhere to the figure protocols.

Guidelines for Figure Preparation

Image presentation
(These guidelines for image presentation are adapted from the “Instructions for Authors” that are posted on the Journal of Cell Biology web site, and are included here with permission).

As you prepare your figures, please adhere to the following guidelines to accurately present your data:

1. No specific feature within an image may be enhanced, obscured, moved, removed, or introduced. 

2. The grouping of images from different parts of the same gel, or from different gels, fields, or exposures must be made explicit by the arrangement of the figure (i.e., using dividing lines) and in the text of the figure legend. 

3. Adjustments of brightness, contrast, or color balance are acceptable if they are applied to the whole image and as long as they do not obscure, eliminate, or misrepresent any information present in the original, including the background. Non-linear adjustments must be disclosed in the figure legend.

A more detailed discussion of image presentation can be found at the following URL: http://jcb.rupress.org/content/166/1/11.full (Rossner and Yamada, J. Cell Biol. 166:11–15)

Resolution
All submitted images must be of high quality and have resolutions of at least 300 dpi ready for print.

Formats
We require figures in electronic format. Please do not send PowerPoint, MS Word, presentation, or paint files as they are inadequate for the creation of high quality images. Much of the information contained in PowerPoint or other file types is lost or skewed in the conversion of images. Figures should be provided as TIFF, Photoshop, EPS or high resolution PDF files. Compatible graphic art programs are Adobe Illustrator and Adobe Photoshop.

Figure size
Figures should be submitted at the size they are to be published. Maximum width = 7.1667 in. Maximum height = 9.6663 in.

For multi-panel figures (such as figure 1a, 1b, 1c, etc), each panel should be assembled into one image file. Do not include separate panels on multiple pages, i.e. A, B, C and D should all fit on one page. Each panel should be sized so that the figure as a whole can be reduced by the same amount and reproduced on the printed page at the smallest size at which essential details, including type, are visible and readable.

Color mode
Save all color figures in CMYK mode at 8 bits/channel. Layering type directly over shaded or textured areas and using reversed type (white lettering on a colored background) should be avoided.

Type
Please be sure to embed all fonts. Use a sans serif font such as Helvetica. The font size should be no greater than 9 pt. and no smaller than 6 pt; however, panel labels (A, B, C) should be 15 pt. uppercase (not bold). Lettering in figures (labeling of axes and so on) should be in lowercase type, with the first letter capitalized and no full stop. Please keep font size relatively the same throughout the figures so as to avoid scaling issues. Also note that readability suffers if type is layered over a pattern or color other than white or black.

Units
Units should have a single space between the number and the unit, and follow SI nomenclature or the nomenclature common to a particular field. Thousands should be separated by commas (1,000). Unusual units or abbreviations should be defined in the legend. Please use the proper microsymbol (denoting a factor of one millionth) rather than a lower case u.


References
Include in the reference list only those articles that have been published or are in press. Unpublished data or personal communications must be cited within the text.

Please use "et al." after listing the first six authors. Do not use "et al." if there are less than six authors.

The list of references should be numbered consecutively according to the first time mentioned within the article. Cite only the number assigned to the reference:

Correct: according to Jones.1
Incorrect: according to Jones1.
Correct: noted by Smith et al.1
Incorrect: Smith et al (1).

 

When referring the reader to specific references as part of a sentence please state:

Correct: For a review see refs. 20-25.
Incorrect: For a review see 20-25


Journal References

•   The reference format is the same for all of our journals. You may download the output style for Cell Cycle from Endnotes.

•   Abbreviate journal names according to the style used in Index Medicus or a comparable source and omit punctuation after journal titles. Spell out foreign or less commonly known journal names.

•   If possible, please include the PMID and DOI at the end of the reference, following the page numbers.

•   [Author's last name] [Author's initials], [First six author's last names followed by their initials]. [Title of article with only the first word capitalized]. [Journal's standard abbreviated name] [Year]; [Volume (number)]:[Inclusive pages]; [PMID]; [DOI].

 For Example:

° Moore GL, Chen H, Karki S, Lazar GA. Engineered Fc variant antibodies with enhanced ability to recruit complement and mediate effector functions. mAbs 2010; 2:181-9; PMID: 20150767; DOI: 10.4161/mabs.2.2.11158.

° Abrams SL, Steelman LS, Shelton JG, Wong EWT, Chappell WH, Basecke J, et al. The Raf/MEK/ERK pathway can govern drug resistance, apoptosis and sensitivity to targeted therapy. Cell Cycle 2010; 9: 1781 – 1791; PMID: 20436278; DOI: 10.4161/cc.9.9.11483.


Book References

•   [Author's last name] [Author's initials], [Other authors' last names followed by initials]. [Chapter title]. In: [Editor's last name] [Editor's initials], ed(s). [Book Title]. [Number of edition]. [City]:[Publisher], [Year]:[Inclusive pages].

 For Example:

° Ozoren N, El-Diery WS. Introduction to cancer genes and growth control. In: Ehrlic M, ed. DNA Alterations in Cancer: Genetic and Epigenetic Changes. Natick, MA: Eaton Publishing, 2000:3-43.


Supplementary Files
The following fees apply for any supplementary material posted with a manuscript. A $100 fee is assessed for all text, figures and/or tables. Supplementary movies carry a rate of $150 for the first five movie files and $50 for each subsequent movie file. Fees will be outlined on the publication charge form authors receive with galley proofs.

Please provide supplementary material in the following formats:

•   Text: MS Word file

•   Table/Data: MS Word file or Excel file

•   Figures: Please provide figures in a MS Word file or in a PPT file, clearly labeled with figure legends below them.

•   Video Files: Video submissions for viewing online should be Audio Video Interleave (.avi), MPEG (.mpg), or Quick Time (.qt, .mov).

 

°   AVI files can be displayed via Windows Media Player (http://www.microsoft.com/windows/windowsmedia/players.aspx); MPEG files can be displayed via Windows Media Player; Quick Time files require Quick Time software (free) from Apple (http://www.apple.com/quicktime/download/index.html)

°   Videos should be brief whenever possible (<2-5 minutes). Longer videos will require longer download times and may have difficulty playing online. Videos should be restricted to the most critical aspects of your research. A longer procedure can be restructured as several shorter videos and submitted in that form.

°   It is advisable to compress files to use as little bandwidth as possible and to avoid overly long download times. Video files should be no larger than 5 megabytes. This is a suggested maximum. If files are larger, please contact the Managing Editor.

°   A caption giving a brief overall description of the video content should be provided for each video.

°   If your paper is accepted for publication you may wish to supply the editorial office with several different resolutions of your video files. This will allow viewers with slower connections to download a lower resolution version of your video.

 

Please also provide ALL files in one PDF file. Links to supplementary data will be included in the PDF of the published manuscript and in the online abstract.


Publication Charges

For journals within their first year of publication, no page, color or supplementary fees are assessed. With the publication of Volume 2, Issue 1, a fee of $100 will be assessed for any page or partial page used, starting with and following page 5. Color charges will become effective at a rate of $340 for the initial page and $150 for each additional page. In order to eliminate color charges, an option to covert color images to grayscale will be available. A $100 fee applies for any supplementary text, figures and/or tables. Supplementary movie files will carry a fee of $150 for the first five movie files and $50 for each subsequent movie file.


Page Proofs
Page proofs will be sent to the author via email. Page proofs should be returned within two working days, preferably by email. Corrections should be marked on the actual proof and provided in a numbered list. Lengthy additions should be avoided, but where necessary should be provided in a MS Word file, with explicit instructions regarding placement.

Reprints/Pre-Prints
A reprint and pre-print order form will be sent, along with an outline of publication charges, to authors via email with page proofs.

International Edit

International Edit

A truly unique service – quality, affordable editing with a personal touch.

We are 10 career editors – unlike our competitors, we do NOT send your paper to a freelancer. This ensures careful, consistent, and confidential editing.

More than copyediting. A sentence that is perfect grammatically may still not make your point. We work with you to get it right.

Have your own personal editor for life – email us about anything, we’re here to help.

Free follow-up with every edit.

Authors do not pay until after receiving and reviewing their edit.

No registration. No hassle. We never have access to any of your personal information.


Mention code 10LN20 for a 20% discount.

 

Cover Image Submissions
Fly publishes cover illustrations that are taken from articles in each issue, or that are designed to accompany an accepted article.

The cover illustration should be scientifically interesting and visually attractive. The illustration need not be a figure from the paper, but should be closely related to the subject of the paper. If you are interested in submitting a figure for use as the cover of Fly, please email a high-resolution version of your image, conforming to the specifications below, and an explanatory caption of 50-60 words to the
Managing Editor

All potential cover images should be sized to fit on a singler letter size (8.5" x 11") page. Please remove all text, captions, etc. from the image. If you have variations of the image, you may send additional files. Please send no more than two alternate versions.

Accepted formats and resolution:
•   PSD (Adobe Photoshop: if graphics are built with layers, do not flatten), 300 dpi, CMYK at 100% size.
•   TIF, 300 dpi, CMYK at 100% size
•   JPG, 300 dpi highest quality, CMYK at 100% size.
•   EPS (scalable vector line art)
•   AI (Adobe Illustrator)


Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief

 

Kristen M. Johansen

Iowa State University
Ames, IA USA

 

Acquisitions Editor

 

Barbara Rattner

Landes Bioscience
San Diego, CA USA

 

Editorial Board

 

Andreas Bergmann

The University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center
Houston, TX USA

 

Andrea Brand

Wellcome Trust, Cancer Research UK Gurdon Institute
Cambridge, UK

 

Steven G. Britt

University of Colorado at Denver Health Sciences Center
Aurora, CO USA

 

William Chia

Temasek Lifesciences Laboratory
Singapore

 

Kevin R. Cook

Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center
Indiana University
Bloomington, IN USA

 

Madeline Crosby

FlyBase
Harvard
University
Cambridge, MA USA

 

Christos Delidakis

University of Crete and IMBB, FORTH
Heraklion, Crete, Greece

 

Dominique Ferrandon

Institute de Biologie Molecuaire et Cellulaire
Strasbourg Cedex, France

 

Janice A. Fischer

University of Texas at Austin
Austin, TX USA

 

Mark Fortini

Thomas Jefferson University
Philadelphia, PA USA

 

Matthew Freeman

MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology
Cambridge, UK

 

Mark Frye

University of California, Los Angeles
Los Angeles, CA USA

 

Iswar K. Hariharan

University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, CA USA

 

Carl Hashimoto

Yale University School of Medicine
New Haven, CT USA

 

John Jaenike

University of Rochester
Rochester, NY USA

 

Jin Jiang

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Dallas, TX USA

 

Daniel Kalderon

Columbia University
New York, NY USA

 

Justin Kumar

Indiana University
Bloomington, IN USA

 

Charalambos P. Kyriacou

University of Leicester
Leicester
, UK

 

Eric Lai

Sloan-Kettering Institute
New York, NY USA

 

Paul Lasko

McGill University
Montreal, PQ, Canada

 

Xinhua Lin

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, OH USA

 

Paul Macdonald

University of Texas at Austin
Austin, TX USA

 

Carlos A. Machado

University of Maryland
College Park, MD USA

 

Richard S. Mann

Columbia University
New York, NY USA

 

Therese A. Markow

University of California at San Diego
La Jolla, CA USA

 

Kevin Moses

Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Ashburn, VA USA

 

Patrick M. O'Grady

University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, CA USA

 

Nipam H. Patel

University of California, Berkeley
Berkeley, CA USA

 

Michael Pankratz

University of Bonn
Bonn Germany

 

Ilaria Rebay

University of Chicago
Chicago, IL USA

 

Robert Saint

University of Melbourne
Victoria, Australia

 

Francois Schweisguth

Institut Pasteur
Paris, France

 

Neal Silverman

University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, MA USA

 

Marla B. Sokolowski

University of Toronto at Mississauga
Mississauga, ON Canada

 

David Stein

University of Texas at Austin
Austin, TX USA

 

Y. Henry Sun

Academia Sinica
Taipei
, Taiwan

 

Tim Tully

Dart Neuroscience LLC

Dallas, TX USA

 

Scott Waddell

University of Massachusetts Medical School
Worcester, MA USA

 

Mariana Wolfner

Cornell University
Ithaca, NY USA

 

Bing Zhang

University of Oklahoma
Norman, OK USA

 

Kai Zinn

California Institute of Technology
Pasadena, CA USA


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