期刊名称:ANTHROZOOS
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
ANTHROZOÖS
A Multidisciplinary Journal of the Interactions of People and Animals Official Journal of the International Society for Anthrozoology (ISAZ) International Society for Anthrozoology ISSN 0892-7936
Produced in cooperation with the International Association of Human–Animal Interaction Organizations and Humane Society of the United States, and published by Purdue University Press.
Anthrozoös is a quarterly, peer-reviewed publication whose focus is to report the results of studies, from a wide array of disciplines, on the interactions of people and animals. Academic disciplines represented include anthropology, archaeozoology, art and literature, education, ethology, history, human medicine, psychology, sociology and veterinary medicine.
The journal is indexed in Animal Behavior Abstracts, CAB Abstracts, Current Advances in Ecological & Environmental Periodicals, Bibliography, Indian Journal of Veterinary Surgery, Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts, Psychological Abstracts, Referativinyi Zhurnal: Biologia, Science Citation Index, Sociological Abstracts, Current Contents/Social & Behavioral Sciences? Focus on Veterinary Science and Medicine? Social Science Citation Index, and Veterinary Bulletin.
Instructions to Authors
CONTENT Anthrozoös will accept new contributions that describe the characteristics and consequences of interactions between people and the living environment. The focus of the report can be on the persons, the animals, the plants, or the interaction among them. Papers are welcome from the humanities, the behavioral and biological sciences, and the health sciences.
MANUSCRIPTS Please submit original and two copies. The two copies should NOT contain authors' names and addresses. All text must be double line spaced and printed on one side of each page only. Indicate clearly in a covering letter the section for which you would like your manuscript to be considered; e.g. Commentaries, Short Contributions, Reviews and Research Reports, Clinical Notes.
Manuscript Organization Title page containing title of the article (maximum 48 characters); authors' names, titles, affiliations, present addresses, and the address where proofs should be sent*; abstract; text, including, as appropriate, an introduction, methods/procedures, results, discussion, conclusion, acknowledgments, references, tables and figure legends. Any special instructions for the copy editor or printer should be affixed to the original copy. Where multiple citations are referred to in the text, place in chronological order.
*Please include phone and fax numbers as well as e-mail address, when available, for our use in case we have to contact the author for more information.
Abbreviations and Units Standard dictionary abbreviations are generally acceptable. Other abbreviations should be explained when first mentioned. Sl units are preferred.
References The Harvard System, not a numbering system, should be used for the citation of references in the text, e.g., Jones (1971) or (Jones and Smith 1971) or (Jones et al. 1971). Where more than one paper by the same author has appeared in one year the reference should be distinguished by "a," "b," "c," etc. (e.g., 1971a). The list of references should be arranged alphabetically by authors' names and chronologically per author. References cited with "et al." in the text should include all authors' names in the reference list. Journal titles should be given in full. References to books or monographs should include editors, edition and volume number, publisher, city and state or country where published, and relevant page numbers. A paper in press may be referenced if it has been accepted for publication. References to personal communications and unpublished work should appear in text only.
Sample References Smith, J. 1970. The effect of animal ownership on child development. Journal of Child Development 5:125-127.
Smith, J. and Jones, S. 1970. Animals. 2nd ed. New York: Academic Press.
Smith, J. 1970. The effect of animal ownership on child development. In Animals, 2nd ed. 8-14, ed. S. Jones. New York: Academic Press.
Tables These should be concise and typed single-spaced throughout. Tables are expensive to set and should be included only as necessary. Provide as text files when possible.
Figures Photos Please submit one set of glossy prints (no negatives) with any identifying arrows and letters marked on a corresponding photocopy. Please do not cut, or write on prints. Indicate on the back the author's name, figure number, and "top."
Charts/Graphs Since it is nearly impossible to guarantee compatibility with computer files, graphs and charts should be provided as print-outs. These are usually scanned and traced to accommodate our format.
Figure Legends Legends should contain sufficient information to allow the figure to be clearly understood without reference to the text.
TYPES OF ARTICLES The following information is given as a guide only. Note that one double-spaced typed page contains approximately 250-300 words.
Editorials By invitation only. If you have an idea for an editorial, send an outline to the Editor for consideration.
Commentaries This section provides a forum for raising issues relating to the fields of interest of the journal, including theory, methodology, ethics, statistical analysis and nomenclature. Authors may make general points or provide critiques of particular published papers. These articles should usually be no longer than 1,500 words.
Review Articles and Research Reports These should cover subjects falling within the scope of the journal and can be up to 5000 words in length. For details of how to format these, see 'Manuscript Organization'.
Clinical Notes on Animal-Assisted Therapy Contributions should be no longer than 1,500 words and should include the following sections: abstract/summary, case history, methods, results/discussion.
Short Communications Should be a complete description of a limited study (e.g. pilot project) and can include figures and tables where necessary. No abstract is required but the article should include an introduction, and as appropriate, methods, results, discussion, acknowledgements and references. Articles should be no longer than 2000 words.
CRITERIA FOR EVALUATION Anthrozoös is refereed and papers will be accepted only after appropriate blind review. The general criteria for acceptance are that the research meet standards for publication in a specialty journal appropriate to its field and that it provide new information, sound hypotheses, or insightful analyses relevant to the content area of Anthrozoös. Anthrozoös is a multidisciplinary journal, and authors should be aware that their own discipline's jargon may be unfamiliar to readers from other disciplines. Please keep jargon to a minimum and provide a complete methods section. If you are in doubt about this, please err on the side of providing fuller explanations. The Editor can always cut material but cannot add it.
MAILING ADDRESS All manuscripts and editorial correspondence should be sent to:
Dr. Anthony Podberscek, Editor Anthrozoös University of Cambridge Department of Veterinary Medicine Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 OES UK
Telephone: +44 1223 33 0846 Fax: +44 1223 33 0886 alp18@cam.ac.uk
PROOFS One set of Proofs will be sent to the corresponding author as given on the title page of the manuscript. Only typesetter's errors may be corrected at this stage.
REPRINTS Thirty reprints will be supplied free of charge to the corresponding author of all papers published in the journal.
Editorial Board
Editor-in-Chief Anthony L. Podberscek University of Cambridge, UK
Associate Editors Karen Allen State University of New York, USA
Joanna Swabe University of Utrecht, The Netherlands
Editorial Advisory Board Ralph Acampora, Hofstra University, USA Arnold Arluke, Northeastern University, USA Andrea Beetz, Friedrich-Alexander University, Germany Penny Bernstein, Kent State University, USA Liliane Bodson, Universit?de Liège, Belgium Brenda Bryant, University of California Davis, USA Rebecca Cassidy, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK Juliet Clutton-Brock, The Natural History Museum, London, UK Grahame Coleman, Monash University, Australia Marion Copeland, Holyoke Community College, USA Alan Costall, University of Portsmouth, UK Mary Ann Elston, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Marie-Jos?Enders Slegers, University of Utrecht, The Netherlands Clifton Flynn, University of South Carolina Spartanburg, USA Erika Friedmann, University of Maryland School of Nursing, USA Samuel Gosling, The University of Texas at Austin, USA Kasey Grier, University of South Carolina, USA Harold Herzog, Western Carolina University, USA Lindsay Matthews, AgResearch Ruakura, New Zealand Petra Mertens, University of Minnesota, USA Ádám Miklósi, University of Eotvos, Hungary Jean-Louis Millot, University of Besancon, France Gene Myers, Western Washington University, USA Elizabeth Paul, University of Bristol, UK Jo-Ann Shelton, University of California, USA
Full instructions for authors can be obtained here or from the Editor-In-Chief:
Dr Anthony L. Podberscek University of Cambridge Department of Veterinary Medicine Madingley Road Cambridge CB3 0ES, UK
Ph: +44-(0)1223- 330846 Fax: +44-(0)1223-330886 E-mail: alp18@cam.ac.uk
Send all manuscripts, books for review and correspondence to the Editor-in-Chief.
Subscriptions Subscription information can be found at: www.thepress.purdue.edu/journals/anthrozoos.asp or by contacting:
Anthrozoös Purdue University Press PO Box 388 Ashland, OH 44805 USA
Ph: 1-800-247 6553 Fax: 419 ?281-6883 E-mail: orders@bookmaster.com Website: www.thepress.purdue.edu
ISAZ Members
The journal is part of the ISAZ membership package. Contact Dr Kathy Kruger, Membership Secretary, for details: kkruger@vet.upenn.edu
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