期刊名称:NATIONAL SCIENCE REVIEW
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal

Online ISSN 2053-714X - Print ISSN 2095-5138
National Science Review is freely available online!
National Science Review is a peer-reviewed journal aimed at reviewing cutting-edge developments across science and technology in China and around the world. The journal covers all areas of the natural sciences, including physics and mathematics, chemistry, life sciences, earth sciences, materials sciences, and information sciences.
Editorials
Written by the Editor-in-Chief, Associate Editors, Editorial board members, or prestigious invited scientists and policy makers on a broad range of topics from science to science policy and issues related to society at large.
Reviews
Extensive reviews of the recent progress in specific areas of science, including historical reviews, recent advances made by scientists internationally as well as within China, and perspective for future development.
Perspectives
Articles on the latest developments in a specific area of research , viewpoints on recent progress in science and technology, scientific research funding and administration, as well as science-related social issues.
Research Highlights
Succinct summaries and comments on a recent research achievement in the natural sciences, with emphasis on the contributions of Chinese scientists.
Letters & Commentaries
The latest general interest letters and commentaries submitted to the journal.
Interviews
In-depth interviews with leading scientists and science policy makers, both in China and abroad.
Forum
A platform for discussions on timely or controversial issues in science and technology development, science policies and funding mechanisms, and other societal issues in a variety of formats that include essays and transcripts of round-table discussions and point-counterpoint dialogues.
Special Topic
Comprehensive coverage of a specific research area with significant research progress in China or internationally. Contents include an overviwe of major advances in the field, extensive review articles, perspectives, research highlights, and interviews with prominent scientists.
Instructions to Authors
Manuscript Preparation Instructions
Journal Policies
Manuscript Preparation InstructionsOnline Search Engine Optimization (SEO)Manuscript SubmissionManuscript PreparationManuscript OrganizationTablesFiguresManuscript AcceptanceContacts at NSR
ONLINE SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION (SEO)
You can improve the online accessibility of your paper by writing optimized copy that is highly indexable across all search engines. A large number of readers find articles online by using search engines such as Google. Most searching is done using keywords or key phrases. Including key phrases that people searching are likely to use should make your article more discoverable. By taking some simple steps to optimize your article for search engines it will help your work to be discovered and read. This may in turn lead to the work being cited in others' work and will further raise the visibility of your article. Future measures, which assess the value of journals and of individual articles based on the number of times they are downloaded, are currently being developed and tested (see http://www.uksg.org/usagefactors/ and http://www.cranfieldlibrary.cranfield.ac.uk/pirus2/tiki-index.php).
MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION
Please submit manuscripts for Reviews and Perspectives that are subject to peer review through ScholarOne. Once you have prepared your manuscript, according to the instructions below, please visit the journal's online submission system. Articles should be submitted according to the instructions here.
MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION
In general, the NSR conforms to the principles laid out in the Oxford Style Manual, and the spelling conventions of the Concise Oxford Dictionary. If you are unsure about a particular point of style, please contact the editorial office.
By following the NSR style checklist you can ensure that your manuscript follows the major style points.
In addition to this, please follow the below guidance for the content of your manuscript:
Word limits
- Reviews. The main text (excluding references, footnotes, figure legends and tables) is expected not to exceed 8000 words, 10 figures and 100 references.
- Perspectives. The main text (excluding references, footnotes, figure legends and tables) should not exceed 1000 words, have less than 10 references, and only 1–2 figures.
- Research Highlights. The main text should not exceed 500 words, have less than five references, and only one figure at most. Capsule descriptions of selected articles from China’s academic journals form a sub-section. The total words for each description should not exceed 80, one figure at most, and no references.
- Letters & Commentaries. The main text should not exceed 300 words.
Layout
- Manuscripts should be prepared in Microsoft Word or LaTex. Times New Roman is the recommended font. Please do not use Chinese, Japanese or Korean fonts.
- Pages should be numbered consecutively throughout.
- Tables, maps and photographs should be provided separately but with their position within the text indicated appropriately (for example, a cue in capitals and square brackets: [INSERT TABLE 1 HERE].
- Any unusual features, such as variable line-spacing, reduced font-size, underlining, partial indenting, symbols or abbreviations, should be drawn to the attention of the typesetters with appropriate instructions: if tables and editions are to be typeset exactly as submitted, that should be indicated.
Abbreviations
Use abbreviations and symbols sparingly and only if terms are repeated frequently. Commonly used abbreviations do not need defining. All other abbreviations are defined at first mention in both the abstract and the text. A list of standard abbreviations and units is provided here.
Use abbreviated SI Units for units of measure, e.g. kg, ml, km•s-1. Use a space between the numeral and the unit of measure, except with degrees, per cent, and Svedberg (5°C, 10%, 6S). Avoid using nonstandard abbreviations in titles and headings.
MANUSCRIPT ORGANIZATION
Cover letter
Each submission must be accompanied with a cover letter. The cover letter should clearly state the significance of the work being submitted and list any special requirements for the editorial office. If authors are submitting a manuscript to be considered for a themed special issue, this should be stated in the cover letter.
Title page
Place the title page on a separate sheet and include title of article, authors’ full names and affiliations. It is important to indicate a corresponding author, together with the email address, telephone and fax numbers.
Manuscript title
The full manuscript title should be succinct (less than 100 characters) and informative. It should not contain unconventional abbreviations.
Authorship
All persons designated as authors should qualify for authorship. Each author should have participated sufficiently in the work to take public responsibility for the content. 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. Any other contributors should not be listed as authors, but rather be acknowledged appropriately in the Acknowledgments section. The corresponding author is responsible for ensuring that all authors have made bona fide, substantive contributions to the research and have seen and approved the manuscript in final form prior to submission.
Multiple corresponding authors are accepted in a single submission. The journal does not allow addition or removal of author names after submission unless exceptional circumstances are noted. A satisfactory explanation for any proposed changes in authorship will be required. We will also require a letter of consent from any person whose name has been removed indicating that they agree to the removal of their name from the author list. Owing to the complexity of these rules we strongly advise authors to fix the author list before submission and not to attempt to make changes at a later date.
Abstract
This part consists of a single paragraph not exceeding 150 words. In particular, the abstract should summarize the content of the article as briefly as possible. It should convey clearly and completely the significance and advancement of the work to the readership before they have read the paper. Abbreviations and citations to references should generally be avoided.
Keywords
Up to 6 relevant keywords should be provided below the abstract.
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements and details of non-financial support must be included at the end of the text before references and not in footnotes. Personal acknowledgements should precede those of institutions or agencies. Please note that acknowledgement of funding bodies should be given in separate Funding section.
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. ‘the National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health’ or simply 'National Institutes of Health' not ‘NCI' (one of the 27 subinstitutions) or 'NCI at NIH’ (full RIN-approved list of UK funding agencies)
- Grant numbers should be complete and accurate and provided in brackets as follows: ‘[grant number ABX CDXXXXXX]’
- Multiple grant numbers should be separated by a comma as follows: ‘[grant numbers ABX CDXXXXXX, EFX GHXXXXXX]’
- 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 [P50 CA098252 and CA118790 to R.B.S.R.] and the Alcohol & Education Research Council [HFY GR667789].
References
If you use EndNote and Reference Manager to facilitate referencing citations (not required for submission), this journal's style (Oxford SciMed) will shortly available for use. If an automatic referencing system has been used in the preparation of the paper, the references must not be left embedded in the final text file submitted.
Number references consecutively in the order in which they are mentioned in the text. Reference numbers in the text are full-sized Arabic numerals in brackets within the sentence. For 3 or more consecutive references cited all at once, use, for example, [1-4]. Format other references as [4, 5, 12], with spaces between the reference numbers.
References must be verified against the original documents and must give the exact authors’ last names, initials, and article title. Please supply the entire page range and issue number (in parentheses). If only one page number is given, indicate, in square parentheses after the title, whether the reference is a letter, an editorial, an abstract, or an electronic article. For manuscripts accepted (not submitted) but not yet published, designate the journal followed by a period and then ‘In press’. For references to papers presented at conferences, give the location (city and state or country), month, days, and year of the conference. For references published online in advance of print publication, provide the journal abbreviation followed by the digital object identifier (DOI) number in parentheses.
The reference list should be limited to published or ‘in press’ references. No ‘submitted’ manuscript should appear in the reference list. A manuscript submitted for publication but not yet accepted may be referenced in parentheses in the text. Give the author’s name, institutional affiliation, and ‘unpublished manuscript’. However, authors should not refer to ‘forthcoming’ papers or promise the future publication of results.
References to personal, written communications should be inserted in parentheses in the text rather than in the reference list. Give the person’s name, institutional affiliation, ‘personal communication’ and the year. Verbal communications are not acceptable as supporting documentation.
Full references should be provided in accordance with NSR style, the key points of which are listed here.
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.
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)'.
Please note that the responsibility for scientific accuracy and content in supplementary data remains entirely with authors.
Additional components
Authors may also provide any of the below additional components:
- A Chinese abstract of the article (about 800 words).
- A list of Abbreviations and Definitions: this should include a list of important abbreviations and definitions of key terms (20 or less). Insert the list below the References section.
- A list of the Summary Points: Using complete sentences, this can list the central points (eight or less) of the article. Insert this above the Acknowledgments and/or References section.
- A list of Future Issues: using complete sentences, this can list forward-looking research (eight or less). Insert this list above the Acknowledgments and/or References section.
- Annotation of References: In less than 15 words this section can be used to explain the significance/importance of the references (but not more than 10). Insert below the References section.
- List of related resources: this can include up to 10 references (Web sites, articles, animations) that may be of interest to readers. Insert this below the References section.
TABLES
Before submitting tables, please make sure they fulfil the following criteria:
- Submit editable electronic files for all tables. Table files must be compatible with Microsoft Word (.doc or .rtf) or Excel (.xls). Mathematically complex tables may be submitted in LaTeX or TeX. A PDF of the final tables must accompany all submissions.
- The tables should be numbered consecutively using Arabic numerals.
- Align entries under the appropriate heading or subheading. Type longer entries in block style, leaving extra space between entries.
- Units in which results are expressed should be given in parentheses at the top of each column and not repeated in each line of the table.
- Align numbers on the decimal; if numerical data are mixed, center entries in the column.
- Write out repeated entries; do not use ditto marks or leave a blank space.
- Use an em dash (–) if no information is available. If a data column heading is not applicable to a particular item, leave the space blank; do not use a dash.
- Avoid overcrowding the tables and the excessive use of words. The format of tables should be in keeping with that normally used by the journal; in particular, vertical lines, coloured text and shading should not be used.
FIGURES
Figures should be well-designed drawings or well-chosen photographs that illustrate key points in your article or that present relevant data economically. NSR illustration editors will work with you to enhance your figures’ legibility, colour, style, and consistency. Modified figures will be sent to you for approval before publication.
Please submit the artwork as a separate file. Before submitting artwork, please make sure that your image(s) fulfil the following criteria:
- Figures should be in vector image format. Vector images consist of many individual elements or vector objects, allowing each vector object to be transformed independently within the image.
- Figures should be supplied at a minimum resolution of 300 dpi. NSR’s in-house illustration editors will determine the appropriate final figure size unless you provide specific directions.
- Figures should be supplied in CMYK, not RGB. Please note that the use of red and green in figures is particularly problematic for approximately 5% of the male population. Advice on the preparation of colour-friendly figures is provided at http://jfly.iam.u-tokyo.ac.jp/html/manuals/pdf/color_blind.pdf.
- Fonts should be embedded and editable. Font colour should be black only.
- Figures should be saved as clearly named files so that they can easily be identified in terms of manuscript ID, figure number, and format, e.g. [NSR-2013-h006] Fig 1.tif.
- Figure legends should be included at the end of the main text file. Please ensure that figures and figure legends are in agreement. Symbols must NOT be included in figure legends; ALL symbols used in figures should be described in the legend using words (e.g. filled triangle, open circle).
- Take care of any copyright issues regarding the artwork. We ask that you obtain permission to use copyrighted figures. In addition, they should be cited clearly.
- If the figure is directly quoted, you should obtain permission from the copyright holder. A literature reference from where the figure has been taken should be given in the figure caption. - If this figure has been redrawn or revised, please indicate this with a parenthetical note in the figure caption.
For further information on figure submission, please click here.
Permission to reproduce figures
Permission to reproduce copyright material, for print and online publication in perpetuity, must be cleared and if necessary paid for by the author; this includes applications and payments to DACS, ARS and similar licensing agencies where appropriate. Evidence in writing that such permissions have been secured from the rights-holder must be made available to the editors. It is also the author's responsibility to include acknowledgements as stipulated by the particular institutions. Please note that obtaining copyright permission could take some time. Oxford Journals can offer information and documentation to assist authors in securing print and online permissions: please see the Guidelines for Authors section at http://www.oxfordjournals.org/access_purchase/rights_permissions.html. Should you require copies of this then please contact the editorial office of the journal in question or the Oxford Journals Rights department on journals.permissions@oup.com.
MANUSCRIPT ACCEPTANCE
Copyediting
Accepted manuscripts will be copyedited for grammar and style before proofs are generated. The authors should carefully check and proof the manuscript to ensure that all sections are correct. After the corrections are made, the article will be posted online as part of the continuous online publication of NSR.
Offprints and Issue Copies
Authors publishing in NSR are entitled to free offprints of their paper and one free copy of the issue in which their paper is published. Please contact the editorial office for more information about this arrangement.
Proofs
The journal will deliver electronic page proofs to the corresponding author with the offprint order forms. Corrections should be returned within 48 hours. ‘Note added in proof’ should only be inserted when there are essential changes. Notes added will be reviewed for appropriate content and style, and are subjected to approval by the editors. Excessive changes on the proof should be avoided unless they are for correction of errors introduced during production.
Advance Access
Advance Access articles are published online soon after they have been accepted for publication, in advance of their appearance in a printed journal. Appearance in Advance Access constitutes official publication, and the Advance Access version can be cited by a unique DOI. When an article appears in an issue, it is removed from the Advance Access page.
Articles posted for Advance Access have been copyedited and typeset and any corrections included. This is before they are paginated for inclusion in a specific issue of the journal. Once an article appears in an issue, both versions of the paper continue to be accessible and citable.
CONTACTS AT NSR
If you have any questions about these instructions, do not hesitate to contact NSR Editorial Office.
Address: 16 Donghuangchenggen North Street, Beijing 100717, China Tel: +86-10-6403-7232 Fax: +86-10-6401-6350 E-mail: nsr@scichina.org
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief
Chunli Bai, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Executive Associate Editor
Mu-ming Poo, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Associate Editors
Qikun Xue, Tsinghua University, China Responsible for Physics & Mathematics
Song Gao, Peking University, China Responsible for Chemistry
Yigong Shi, Tsinghua University, China Responsible for Life Sciences
Zhonghe Zhou, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Responsible for Earth Sciences
Max Lu, The University of Queensland, Australia Responsible for Materials Science
Lei Guo, Academy of Mathematics and Systems Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China Responsible for Information Sciences
Advisory Board
Alfred Y. Cho, AT&T Bell Laboratories, USA
Paul Ching-Wu Chu, University of Houston, USA
Robert E. Dickinson, University of Texas at Austin, USA
Jack Dongarra, University of Tennessee, USA
Else Marie Friis, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Sweden
Harry B. Gray, California Institute of Technology, USA
David J. Gross, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
Yu-Chi Ho, Harvard University, USA
Brian John Hoskins, University of Reading, UK
Sumio Iijima, Meijo University, Japan
Yuet Wai Kan, University of California, San Francisco, USA
Jean-Marie Lehn, Freiburg Institute for Advanced Studies, France
Charles M. Lieber, Harvard University, USA
Douglas N. C. Lin, University of California, Santa Cruz, USA
H. C. Hartmut Michel, Max Planck Institute for Biophysics, Germany
Daniel G. Nocera, Harvard University, USA
Ryoji Noyori, RIKEN/Institute of Physical and Chemical Research, Japan
Christos H. Papadimitriou, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Peter H. Raven, Missouri Botanical Garden, USA
Yuen-Ron Shen, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Yum-Tong Siu, Harvard University, USA
Peter J. Stang, University of Utah, USA
Lonnie G. Thompson, The Ohio State University, USA
Torsten Wiesel, Rockefeller University, USA
Alan E. Willner, University of Southern California, USA
Andrew Chi-Chih Yao, Tsinghua University, China
Shing-Tung Yau, Harvard University, USA
Editorial Board
Physics & Mathematics
Hongjun Gao, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Huajian Gao, Brown University, USA
Xiangdong Ji, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China
XiaoFeng Jin, Fudan University, China
Jiachun Li, Institute of mechanics, Chinese academy of sciences, China
Fang-hua Lin, New York University, USA
Zhiming Ma, Academy of Mathematics and Systems Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Zhongcan Ouyang, Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Jianwei Pan, University of Science and Technology of China, China
Zhi-Xun Shen, Stanford University, USA
Chang-Pu Sun, Institute of Theoretical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Gang Tian, Peking University, China
Yifang Wang, Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Xiao-Gang Wen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Xiangping Wu, National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Nanhua Xi, Academy of Mathematics and Systems Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Xincheng Xie, Peking University, China
Xiaohu Yang, Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, China
Jun Ye, University of Colorado, USA
Yanlin Ye, Peking University, China
Li You, Tsinghua University, China
Ya-xiang Yuan, Academy of Mathematics and Systems Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Fuchun Zhang, University of Hong Kong, China
Shoucheng Zhang, Stanford University, USA
Shou-Wu Zhang, Princeton University, USA
Shuang-Nan Zhang, Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Xinmin Zhang, Institute of High Energy Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Xiaojing Zheng, Xidian University, China
Shining Zhu, Nanjing University, China
Chemistry
Xinhe Bao, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Chi-ming Che, University of Hong Kong, China
Stephen Z.D. Cheng, University of Akron, USA
Chuan He, University of Chicago, USA
Guibing Jiang, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Lei Jiang, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Yadong Li, Tsinghua University, China
Wenping Liang, National Natural Science Foundation of China, China
Shengming Ma, East China Normal University, China
Weihong Tan, University of Florida, USA
Benzhong Tang, The Hong Kong University of Science & Technology, China
He Tian, East China University Of Science And Technology, China
Zhong-Qun Tian, Xiamen University, China
Lijun Wan, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Yun-Dong Wu, Peking University, China
Xiaoliang Sunney Xie, Harvard University, USA
Vivian Wing-Wah Yam, University of Hong Kong, China
Weitao Yang, Duke University, USA
Zhen Yang, Peking University, China
Life Sciences
Xuetao Cao, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, China
Lin Chen, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Xuemei Chen, University of California, Riverside, USA
Jingyun Fang, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Xiangdong Fu, University of California, San Diego, USA
George Fu Gao, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Nancy Yuk-Yu IP, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China
Li Jin, Fudan University, China
Jiayang Li, Institute of Genetics and Developmental Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Haifan Lin, Yale University, USA
Keping Ma, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Yi Rao, Peking University, China
Feng Shao, National Institute of Biological Sciences, China
Yang Shi, Harvard Medical School, USA
Hongjun Song, Johns Hopkins University, USA
Hongyang Wang, Eastern Hepatobiliary Surgery Hospital, China
Xiao-Fan Wang, Duke University, USA
Chung-I Wu, University of Chicago, USA
Hong Wu, Peking University, China
Yue Xiong, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA
Anlong Xu, Beijing University of Chinese Medicine, China
Guoliang Xu, Shanghai Institutes for Biological Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Wei Yang, National Institute of Health, USA
Junying Yuan, Shanghai Institute of Organic Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Michael Q. Zhang, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, USA
Yi Zhang, Harvard Medical School, USA
Qi Zhou, Institute of Zoology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Jian-Kang Zhu, Purdue University, USA
Earth Sciences
Yucheng Chai, National Natural Science Foundation of China, China
Deliang Chen, Gothenborg University, Sweden
Dake Chen, Second Institute of Oceanography, State Oceanic Administration, China
Minhan Dai, Xiamen University, China
Weiming Fan, Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Bojie Fu, Reseach Center for Eco-Environment Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Zhengtang Guo, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Marlon Lewis, Dalhousie University, Canada
Jian Lin, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, USA
Shaochen Liu, Research Center for Environmental Changes, Academia Sinica, China
Ho-Kwang (Dave) Mao, Carnegie Institution for Science, USA
Jin Meng, American Museum of Natural History, USA
Yaoling Niu, Durham University, UK
Huijun Wang, Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Xianfeng Wang, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Fuyuan Wu, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, China Academy of Sciences, China
Shucheng Xie, China University of Geosciences, China
Toshio Yamagata, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Yong-Fei Zheng, University of Science and Technology of China, China
Rixiang Zhu, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, China Academy of Sciences, China
Tong Zhu, Peking University, China
Materials Sciences
Markus Antonietti, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interface Science, Germany
Huiming Cheng, Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Yury Gogotsi, Drexel University, USA
Chennupati Jagadish, Australian National University, Australia
Shuit-Tong Lee, Soochew University, China
Young Hee Lee, Sungkyunkwan University, Korea
Ming Li, National Natural Science Foundation of China, China
Zhongfan Liu, Peking University, China
Ke Lu, Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Rodney S. Ruoff, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, Republic of Korea
Konrad Samwer, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, Germany
Clement Sanchez, Collège de France, France
Galen Stucky, University of California,Santa Barbara, USA
Weihua Wang, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Zhong Lin Wang, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Sishen Xie, Institute of Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Peidong Yang, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Xiaosu Yi, Beijing Institute of Aeronautical Materials, China
Aibing Yu, The University of New South Wales, Australia
Ze Zhang, Zhejiang University, China
Information Sciences
Guanrong (Ron) Chen, City University of Hong Kong, China
Runsheng Chen, Institute of Biophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Jason Cong, University of California, Los Angeles, USA
Xiaotie Deng, Shanghai Jiaotong University,China
Guangcan Guo, University of Science and Technology of China, China
Zhenjiang Hu, National Institute of Informatics, Japan
Shushen Li, Institute of Semiconductors, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Wei Li, BeiHang University, China
Huimin Lin, Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Hong Mei, Peking University, China
Depei Qian, Beihang University, China
Yuwen Qin, National Natural Science Foundation of China, China
Tieniu Tan, Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
Hailin Wang, University of Oregon, USA
Linwang Wang, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, USA
Xiaoyun Wang, Tsinghua University, China
Zongben Xu, Xi'an Jiaotong University, China
Xiaohu You, Southeast University, China
Editorial Office
Shengli Ren Managing Editor Science China Press, China Tel.: +86-10-6401-5108; Fax: +86-10-6401-6350
Yuan Gao Managing Editor Science China Press, China Tel.: +86-10-6403-7232; Fax: +86-10-6401-6350
Guilin Wang Managing Editor Science China Press, China Tel.: +86-10-6401-1971; Fax: +86-10-6401-6350
Xiuling Xu Managing Editor Science China Press, China Tel.: +86-10-6403-7232; Fax: +86-10-6401-6350
Xiaoling Yu Art Editor Science China Press, China Tel.: +86-10-6403-7232; Fax: +86-10-6401-6350 Alternative email address
Special Correspondents
Jane Qiu
Ling Wang
Editorial Consultants
Philip Ball
Paulette Baumgartl
NSR 编辑部 
地址: 北京市东皇城根北街16号,北京 100717
电话: 86 010 6403 7232
邮箱: nsr@scichina.org
责任编辑:
- 高媛 gaoyuan at scichina.org
- 徐秀玲 xuxiuling at scichina.org
- 王贵林 wangguilin at scichina.org
- 任胜利 rsl at scichina.org
美术兼网站编辑:
- 于晓玲 yuxiaoling at scichina.org/yuezoey at gmail.com
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