期刊名称:ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE

ISSN:2054-5703
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:ROYAL SOC, 6-9 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE, LONDON, ENGLAND, SW1Y 5AG
  出版社网址:https://royalsociety.org/journals/
期刊网址:http://rsos.royalsocietypublishing.org/
影响因子:2.963
主题范畴:MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
变更情况:

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



About the journal

Royal Society Open Science: 4 (2)

Aims and Scope

Royal Society Open Science is a new open journal publishing high-quality original research across the entire range of science on the basis of objective peer-review.

The journal covers the entire range of science and mathematics and allows the Society to publish all the high-quality work it receives without the usual restrictions on scope, length or impact.

The journal has a number of distinguishing features:

  • objective peer-review (publishing all articles which are scientifically sound and useful to the community)
  • it offers open peer-review as an option
  • articles embody open data principles
  • each article has a suite of article level metrics and we encourage post-publication comments
  • the Editorial team consists entirely of practising scientists and draws upon the expertise of the Royal Society’s Fellowship
  • in addition to direct submissions, it accepts for consideration articles referred from other Royal Society journals

Royal Society Open Science welcomes the submission of all high-quality science including articles which may usually be difficult to publish elsewhere, for example, those that include negative findings. The journal covers life sciences, physical sciences, mathematics, engineering and computer science.

For information on selection criteria, article types and submitting your article please visit the information for authors page.

Open access

All papers are made freely available under an open access model immediately on publication at the Royal Society Open Science website and are deposited in PubMed Central on behalf of the author. Under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), authors retain copyright for their article but allow anyone to download, reuse, reprint, modify, distribute, and/or copy articles provided the original authors and source are cited.

Article Processing Charges

We are currently offering an ongoing waiver on all Article Processing Charges.

Publishing Format

Royal Society Open Science is published online only. Along with all Royal Society journals, we are committed to electronic archiving and providing perpetual access - see our digital preservation policy.

There is the facility for including supplementary material. This is limited to data and other materials that directly support the main conclusions of a paper, but are considered additional or secondary support for the main conclusions. Supplementary material may comprise figures, tables, datasets, derivations and videos. The main article must include enough detail to satisfy most non-specialist readers. Supplementary material up to 10MB is placed on the Society's website free of charge and deposited at the Royal Society Publishing figshare portal. Larger datasets must be deposited in recognised public domain databases by the author - accession numbers must be provided. Where a field-specific database is not available, a fully integrated workflow allows authors to deposit up to 20GB of data free of charge with the Dryad repository. Details of where to access the data and materials must be supplied at the point of submission, and include appropriate references in the article reference list.

Conditions of Publication

Articles must not have been published previously, nor be under consideration for publication elsewhere. The main findings of the article should not have been reported in the mass media. Like many journals Royal Society Open Science employs a strict embargo policy where the reporting of a scientific article by the media is embargoed until a specific time. The Editor has final authority in all matters relating to publication.

Indexing

Royal Society Open Science is indexed by a number of indexing services, including PubMed, PubMed Central and the Directory of Open Access Journals. In addition, the journal is indexed in Scopus, Web of Science and the Astrophysics Data System (ADS).


Instructions to Authors

Selection criteria

The criteria for acceptance are:

  • Original research in science, engineering or mathematics.
  • Submissions should satisfy the Editor that they sufficiently advance scientific knowledge. Negative findings, meta analyses and studies testing the reproducibility of significant work are encouraged. Experiments with little or no new content will only be considered if they provide a meaningful contribution to the literature, for instance by contributing to reproducibility studies. Work that has a strong clinical focus, including but not limited to clinical psychology, will not be considered for publication, and any exceptions will be at the sole discretion of the Editor.
  • Results reported have not been published elsewhere.
  • Conclusions are supported by the data.
  • Compliance with appropriate ethical standards, see our policy page.
  • Experimental protocols/procedure and statistical analysis performed to a high technical standard which are both methodologically and scientifically sound. Work must be high quality in terms of exhaustively analysing all the relevant scientific/methodological issues.
  • Data supporting the findings of the paper are publicly available, and appropriately cited in the manuscript reference list. Data should be accesible to referees and Editors at the point of submission.
  • Manuscripts submitted must satisfy our TOP guideline standards. Please see here for more details.

Article types

Royal Society Open Science publishes the following article types: research article, registered report, invited review, invited perspective and comment and invited reply.

Invited review: The journal will only consider submitted invited reviews for publication. The journal welcomes unsolicited review proposals, but all proposals must first be agreed by the relevant Subject Editor. Proposals for reviews should be no longer than 1 side of A4, include a structural outline with sub-headings to briefly explain description of content, and must succinctly identify the core issue(s) to be addressed. Please note that reviews transferred from other Royal Society Publishing journals will not automatically be considered for publication; instead, before the review will be considered for publication in Royal Society Open Science, a proposal must be submitted for consideration and approved by the relevant Subject Editor, only then will a review be invited from the proposing author(s). Please contact the Editorial Office with details of your proposal.

Invited Perspective:Upon election to the Royal Society, Fellows and Foreign Members are invited to contribute a Perspective article. Perspectives take the form of a review that provides the reader with an overview of the subject and give a personal insight into the advances and challenges the future may hold. Perspectives can be selective in their coverage rather than an in-depth review of an area.

Registered Report:A Registered Report (RR) is a form of journal article in which methods and proposed analyses are pre-registered and peer-reviewed prior to research being conducted (stage 1). High quality protocols are then provisionally accepted for publication before data collection commences. The format is open to attempts of replication as well as novel studies. Once the study is completed, the author will finish the article including results and discussion sections (stage 2). This will be appraised by the reviewers, and provided necessary conditions are met, will be published. Full details can be found here

Comment and invited reply: Royal Society Open Science publishes short comments on articles previously published in the journal. Comments bring attention to an oversight in a Royal Society Open Science article or propose an opposing view. They are often a critique, providing corrections or offering new analyses. Comments will be published at the discretion of the Editor. However, if factual errors are identified that affect the accuracy of the published record, a correction may be published instead. Comments are self-proposed by any reader shortly after the initial article is published (ideally within 6 months of publication). Comments and replies should be less than 4 pages and should remain concise. The comment is peer-reviewed by the corresponding author of the original article, a referee from the original article, and another impartial referee. If the comment is accepted, the authors of the original article will be invited to submit a reply, which will also be peer reviewed by the two impartial referees who assessed the comment. We will not consider unsolicited, standalone comments. Please contact the editorial office prior to submission with any queries.

Please note that we no longer publish brief reports: As of March 2016, the journal no longer publishes brief reports as a separate article type. Brief reports were used prior to this date for a number of different purposes (including acting as a communication paper or as an update paper). Should an author wish to submit a communication or update paper, they can still do so; however, it will be published under the broader article category of 'research article'. Authors can submit an update paper in relation to a peer reviewed journal article they have authored. Update papers can be used to report additional methods or controls, or add additional data or conclusions to existing work. Update papers should be used when the advance does not warrant publication of a new research article.

Open data in Royal Society Open Science

We require supporting data and information, including source code, to be made available at the time of submission of the manuscript to ensure that referees have access to the data. This is in line with our policy that all results should be reproducible and our promotion of openness in science. For more information, please refer to our data sharing policies. In order to make it as easy as possible to comply with this policy, the Royal Society Open Science submission system is fully integrated with the Dryad data repository. We also cover the cost of submitting data to Dryad up to 20GB. Data submitted as electronic supplementary material will, upon acceptance of a manuscript, be deposited at the Royal Society's figshare  portal free of charge.

Datasets and code that have been deposited in an external repository should be appropriately cited in both the reference list prior to submission and data accessibility section.

Unless there are strong extenuating circumstances for doing so, we will not generally accept statements such as "Data and materials are available upon request from the authors" in our data accessibility statements. Exceptions are at the Editor's discretion.

 

Open peer review in Royal Society Open Science

Royal Society Open Science operates optional open peer review, making the review process as transparent as possible. For more information please click here.

 

Preparing your article

Please visit our instructions for authors page for full guidelines on formatting your paper.

Please note that all manuscripts must include the following statements before the reference section at the point of submission. If statements are not included at submission, the journal will return the paper to the authors to ensure the statements are added. Accepted manuscripts will not be published without their inclusion. We ask authors to include headings for every section, but when a given statement does not apply, we ask authors to nevertheless include the statement's heading and explicitly state that it does not apply to their manuscript:

Ethics statement

If your study uses humans or animals please include details of the ethical approval received, including the name of the committee that granted approval. For human studies please also detail whether informed consent was obtained. For field studies on animals please include details of all permissions, licences and/or approvals granted to carry out the fieldwork.

 

Data accessibility

It is the policy of the journal that authors make publically available any data, code and other digital research materials supporting the results in the article. The data, code or other digital research materials should be accessible either in a publically available repository or as supplementary material, and appropriately cited in the manuscript reference list. A statement of best practice is available. Data should be available to referees and Editors at the point of submission. A ‘Data Accessibility’ section should appear at the end of the manuscript to make clear where these data etc. can be found – if no data deposition is applicable for the paper, this should be clearly stated. You will be asked to confirm that this statement is available and that suitable content has been provided. Please contact the editorial office if you feel that the information provided is insufficient for you to assess, and please include details of anything that you feel is missing in your comments to the authors.

 

Competing interests

Please declare any financial or non-financial competing interests, or state that you have no competing interests.

 

Authors' contributions

All submissions, other than those with a single author, must include an Authors’ Contributions section which individually lists the specific contribution of each author. The list of Authors should meet all of the following criteria; 1) substantial contributions to conception and design, or acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation of data; 2) drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content; and 3) final approval of the version to be published.

 

We suggest the following format: AB carried out the molecular lab work, participated in data analysis, carried out sequence alignments, participated in the design of the study and drafted the manuscript; CD carried out the statistical analyses; EF collected field data; GH conceived of the study, designed the study, coordinated the study and helped draft the manuscript. All authors gave final approval for publication.

 

All contributors who do not meet all of these criteria should be included in the acknowledgements.

 

Acknowledgements

Please acknowledge anyone who contributed to the study but did not meet the authorship criteria.

 

Funding statement

Please list the source of funding for each author.

 

Instructions for submitting new chemical compounds are also available on our Requirements for characterising chemical compounds page.

A PDF or Word document with figures embedded is acceptable at initial submission for review, however our production team will require an editable text document and individual figure files if your paper is accepted. Royal Society Open Science does not have a word limit, but writing should be clear and concise. We will not consider monographs.

How to submit

Papers must be submitted using our online submission system: http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/rsos.

Papers sent by email or post will not be considered.

LaTeX class file

Authors using LaTeX are encouraged to use the Royal Society Open Science class file. The class file and instructions are available in your author centre under 'Instructions & Forms' on our submission site. Our LaTeX class file is also available for download as a zip folder at this link.

 

Overleaf

The Overleaf service offers a template for authors to assist in the formatting of your manuscript.

Preprint repositories

In accordance with our preprint policy, we encourage authors to deposit early versions of articles in appropriate subject repositories or preprint servers. Additionally, authors submitting to Royal Society Open Science after prior deposition in arXiv benefit from a simpler article upload process using just the e-print number.

Species Descriptions

Articles describing new animal species must conform to the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature. All relevant information must be included in the main article. The online version is the relevant version for nomenclatural purposes. The article must be registered in ZooBank, the Official Registry of Zoological Nomenclature (http://zoobank.org), and contain evidence that such registration took place (e.g. exact date of registration or/and registration number). Articles describing new species must be flagged to the editorial office on submission.


Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief - Professor Jeremy Sanders CBE FRS

 

For profiles of our practising Subject Editors, click here.

Registered Reports

Subject Editor - Professor Chris Chambers

More details on Registered Reports can be found here.

Astronomy

Subject Editor - Professor Rob Ivison

For more details of our Astronomy section and its Editors, please click here.


Professor Sarah Bridle
University of Manchester
University of California, Irvine
Dr Loretta Dunne
Cardiff University
Lund University
Professor Alan Fitzsimmons
Queen's University Belfast
University of Oxford
Professor Huib van Langevelde
Leiden University
Professor Mark McCaughrean
European Space Agency's Directorate of Science
Dr Elaine Sadler
University of Sydney
Professor Ian Smail
Durham University
Dr Leonardo Testi
European Southern Observatory
Dr Mark Wyatt
University of Cambridge
     

Biochemistry & Biophysics

Subject Editor - Dr Katrin Rittinger


Professor Catherine Day
Univeristy of Otago
Dr Franca Fraternali
King's College London
Professor Kalle Gehring
McGill University
Dr Angela Gronenborn
University of Pittsburgh
Professor John Ladbury
University of Leeds
Professor Mark Leake
University of York
Professor Jim Naismith
University of St Andrews
Professor Janez Plavec
Kemijski Inštitut
Professor Savvas Savvides
Ghent University
Professor Xiadong Zhang
Imperial College London
Dr Janet Deane
University of Cambridge
Professor Erika Mancini
University of Oxford
Professor Christian Herrmann
Ruhr-Universität Bochum
   

Biology (Whole Organism)

Subject Editor - Professor Kevin Padian


Professor Mike Bruford
Cardiff University
Dr Phil Clapham
National Marine Mammal Laboratory
Dr Monica Daley
Royal Veterinary College
Dr Julia Brenda Desojo
Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Museum
Dr Dave Ferrier
University of St Andrews
Professor Walter Salzburger
University of Basel
Professor Andrew Hector
University of Oxford
Professor Berat Z. Haznedaroglu
Bogazici University
Dr. Safi K. Darden
University of Exeter
Dr Michael Doube
Royal Veterinary College
Dr Alecia Carter
Institut des Sciences de l’Evolution
Dr Corina Logan
University of Cambridge

Cellular and Molecular Biology

Subject Editor - Professor Anne Donaldson


Dr Eva Hoffmann
University of Sussex
Professor Jürg Bähler
University College London

Chemistry

Subject Editor - Professor Anthony Stace FRS

For more details of our Chemistry section and our collaboration with the Royal Society of Chemistry, please click here.


Professor Claire Carmalt
University College London
Dr Catherine Cazin
Ghent University
Dr Hazel Cox
University of Sussex
Dr Patricia Hunt
Imperial College London
Professor Hisanori Shinohara
Nagoya University
Professor John Moses
University of Nottingham

Computer Sciences

Subject Editor - Professor Marta Kwiatkowska


Professor Samson Abramsky
University of Oxford
Professor Manfred Broy
Technische Universität München
Professor Peter Buneman
University of Edinburgh
Professor Jon Crowcroft
University of Cambridge
Professor Peter Druschel
Max Planck Institute
Dr François Fages
Inria Paris-Rocquencourt
Professor Steve Furber
University of Manchester
   

Earth Sciences

Subject Editor - Professor Jon Blundy FRS


Professor David Beerling
University of Sheffield
Dr Jenny Collier
Imperial College London
Professor Matthew Collins
University of York
Dr Bethan Davies
Royal Holloway, University of London.
Professor Stephen Hesselbo
University of Exeter
Dr Benoit Ildefonse
Géosciences Montpellier
Dr Sue Loughlin
British Geological Survey
Professor Trond Torsvik
University of Oslo
Professor Simon Wallis
Nagoya University
Professor Rachel Wood
University of Edinburgh
Professor Kathy Whaler
University of Edinburgh
Professor Tim Wright
University of Leeds

Engineering

Subject Editor - Professor Kerry Rowe FREng FRS


Professor Avelino Corma Canos
 Instituto de Tecnología Química
Professor Jin Jiang
 University of Western Ontario
Professor Ian Moore
Queen's University
Professor Derek Abbott
University of Adelaide
Professor Simon Schultz
Imperial College London
Professor Jun Fu
Northeastern University, China

Genetics

Subject Editor - Professor Steve Brown FRS FMedSci


Professor Judith Hall
Child & Family Research Institute
Professor Ivo Gut
Centro Nacional de Análisis Genómico
Professor Trudi Schupbach
Princeton University
Professor Richard Benton
University of Lausanne
Professor Tanya T. Whitfield
University of Sheffield
Professor Stephan Beck
UCL Cancer Institute

Mathematics

Subject Editor - Professor Mark Chaplain FRSE


Dr Penny Davies
University of Strathclyde
Professor Ken Ono
Emory University
Professor Ruth King
University of Edinburgh
Professor Catalin Turc
New Jersey Institute of Technology
Professor Jose Antonio Carrillo de la Plata
Imperial College London
Professor Anna Marciniak-Czochra
University of Heidelberg
Dr Colva Roney-Dougal
The University of St Andrews
Professor Xiaoyu Luo
University of Glasgow
Professor Dirk Drasdo
INRIA
Professor Robert S. MacKay
University of Warwick
Professor Kevin Glazebrook
Lancaster University
Dr Vladimir Dokchitser
King's College London

 

Physics

Subject Editor - Professor Miles Padgett


Dr Silke Weinfurtner
University of Nottingham
Professor Derek Abbott
University of Adelaide
Professor Matjaž Perc
University of Maribor
Professor Robert Hadfield
University of Glasgow
Professor Carlos Nunez
Swansea University
Professor Qin Chen
Suzhou Institute of Nano-Tech and Nano-Bionics
Dr Peter Munro
University College London
Professor Zhong-Ke Gao
Tianjin University
 

Psychology and Cognitive Neuroscience

Subject Editor - Professor Essi Viding


Dr Anastasia Christakou
University of Reading
Professor Roshan Cools
Donders Institute
Dr Molly Crockett
University of Oxford
Dr Antonia Hamilton
University College London
Dr Atsushi Iriki
Riken Brain Science Institute
Dr Joshua Jacobs
Columbia University
Dr Peter Keller
University of Western Sydney
Dr Shirley Ann Rüschemeyer
University of York
Dr Mark Walton
University of Oxford
Professor Narayanan Srinivasan
University of Allahabad
Dr Geoff Bird
King's College London
Dr Jonathan Roiser
University College London
Dr Joshua Buckholtz
Harvard University
Dr Isabelle Mareschal
Queen Mary University of London
Dr Carolyn McGettigan
Royal Holloway, University of London
Professor Marcus Kaiser FRSB
Newcastle University
   

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