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期刊名称:JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY

ISSN:1066-5277
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:MARY ANN LIEBERT INC PUBL, 2 MADISON AVENUE, LARCHMONT, NY, 10538
  出版社网址:http://www.liebertpub.com/
期刊网址:http://www.liebertpub.com/CMB/default1.asp
影响因子:1.563(2008)
主题范畴:BIOCHEMICAL RESEARCH METHODS;    BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY;    COMPUTER SCIENCE, INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS;    Mathematical & Computational Biology;    STATISTICS & PROBABILITY

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



About the journal

 A bimonthly peer-reviewed journal providing a forum for the communication of technical issues associated with the analysis, management, and visualization of cellular information at the molecular level. Includes papers on genomics, mathematical modeling and simulation, distributed and parallel biological computing, designing biological databases, pattern matching and pattern detection, linking disparate databases and data, new tools for computational biology, relational and object-oriented database technology for bioinformatics, biological expert system design and use, reasoning by analogy, hypothesis formation and testing by machine, and management of biological databases. Indexed in Index Medicus, Medline, EMBASE, Excerpta Medica, Current Contents/Life Sciences.

 Journal of Computational Biology: A Journal of Computational Molecular Cell Biology


Instructions to Authors

Manuscript Submissions

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY

INSTRUCTIONS FOR AUTHORS

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY provides a forum for communication of scientific and technical issues associated with the analysis and management of biological information at the molecular level. It will accept papers on the computational, mathematical, and statistical aspects of molecular biology. This includes sequence comparison; sequence analysis and searching; DNA and protein sequence determination; DNA topological structure; protein structure; RNA secondary and tertiary structure; genetic mapping; physical mapping; molecular evolution, including phylogenetic reconstructions; parallel methods of computation; design and implementation of biological databases; biological expert system design and use; and application of artificial intelligence methods to biological systems.

Editorial Office

The editorial process is handled by the Editor-in-Chief and the Editorial Board, plus peer reviewers. Manuscripts, as well as press releases, conference announcements, workshops, and the like, should be submitted to the following address only: JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY, c/o Sorin Istrail, Co-Editor-in-Chief, Journal of Computational Biology, Celera Genomics, 45 West Gude Drive, Rockville MD 20850. Inquiries: jcb@celera.com

Submission Requirements

Please follow the instructions to authors carefully to help ensure that the review and publication of your paper is as rapid as possible. The editors reserve the right to return manuscripts which are not prepared in accordance with these instructions. If there is a question about the suitability of a manuscript, please contact a member of the Executive Editorial Board.

Submitted manuscripts must be previously unpublished and not submitted for publication elsewhere. If published in the JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY, the paper cannot be published anywhere else in the same form, regardless of language, without the consent of the Publisher. Either American or British English is acceptable. Text must be informative without being either terse or wordy. Manuscripts will not be extensively copyedited and it is expected that proofs will require only typographical corrections. There may be an extra charge for extensive changes made in proof.

Manuscript Preparation

Manuscript should be submitted electronically to jcb@celera.com.  Manuscripts may be sent in Word, PDF or PostScript formats.

Manuscripts should be legibly typed on 8.5 x 11 inch (American) or A4 (European) paper. The entire manuscript must be double spaced, including references and tables, with at least 1 inch margins on the top, bottom, and sides. Paginate the manuscript at the bottom center of each page except for the title page. Font size must be no smaller than 10 points (proportional or fixed width). Use underlines only for words or letters you wish italicized. Clearly identify unusual or handwritten symbols and Greek letters. The position of each table and figure must be marked in the margin at the location it should appear.

Formats

Mini-Review/News/Perspectives: These papers should typically be 2-4 pages long. Contacting one of the senior editors before beginning such a paper is suggested. The purpose of the mini-review is to provide a forum for the informal exchange of theories and experimental approaches.

Reviews: Brief outlines from prospective contributors are welcome, and these will also be solicited on specific subjects.

papers: Standard journal papers should report unique findings not previously published.

Communications: These papers should typically be 2 pages long; this section is for communications too brief for a full paper.

Software, Hardware, and Book Reviews: These reviews will usually be commissioned by the Editor-in-Chief or the Editorial Board, but a short (1-2 page) outline can be sent to the Editor-in-Chief unsolicited. Typical reviews will be one or two typeset pages, with a maximum of three figures.

Tables

Each table should be on a separate page following the references, numbered with Arabic numerals, and given a short, descriptive title. Indicate footnotes by superscript lower case letters rather than numbers. Cite all tables in the text where they should appear. Information in the general text should not be repeated, nor should abbreviations used in the text be spelled out. Tables should be understandable to readers without their having to refer to the text.

Figures

Figures should be numbered consecutively in Arabic numerals and given a short, descriptive title. The name of the first author, figure number, figure legend, and an arrow indicating the top should be on the back side. Cite all figures in the text where they should appear. The legends should define all symbols and new abbreviations not used in the text.

Photographs or screen dumps should be presented in final-sized form (photocopies cannot be used for reproduction). Reproduction of color art will be made at expense of author, charged at the rate of $1,200 for each page that includes color art, plus $275 per piece of color art printed.

Provide clear, sharp line art that is suitable for reproduction. No additional relettering, redrawing, or typesetting will be done; therefore, all labeling should preferably be made with lettering set. The final size of lettering in line art should be no less than 2 mm high. The size of the lettering should be in proportion to the overall dimension of the drawing. Ideally, line drawings should be submitted in the desired final size to avoid reduction.

Manuscript Elements

papers should have a title page, abstract, introduction, paper body (including such sections as methods, algorithms, findings, proofs, and discussion), acknowledgments, and references. Begin each section on a separate page.

Title Page: The title should be short, specific, and avoid jargon. The name of each author should be followed by her or his department, institution, city, with zip (postal) code, and country. The phone number and, if possible, the fax number of the author to whom correspondence should be directed is essential. The name of the corresponding author should be indicated by an asterisk. Any changes of address may be added to the footnotes. Running heads should be 50 characters or less. Up to five keywords or key phrases should be supplied to assist indexing services.

Abstract: Abstracts should have a maximum of 250 words, and be understandable to readers who have not yet read the paper. They should state the aims, results, and conclusions drawn from the study. Reference citations should not appear in abstracts. When genetic sequences are analyzed, the inclusion of appropriate accession numbers to aid cross referencing in Medline is recommended.

Text Elements: The introduction should briefly outline the paper's field, review previous relevant work, and establish the background for the work being reported.

The body of the paper should include the well-described and documented findings of the work as well as the information necessary for the reader to independently verify the findings. Authors should comment on the availability of reported programs from their own work and commercially, including availability by anonymous FTP, state from which media, and also provide program costs. Software submission to one of the public molecular biology or biology archive sites may be required, if appropriate.

The discussion section should describe the applicability of the technique and other uses for the technique. Authors are encouraged to discuss important feature constraints that they perceive in their system software.

Chemical Formulae and Mathematical Equations: Wherever possible, write mathematical equations and chemical formulae on a single line. Please submit complex chemical structures as figures. Number equations sequentially in Arabic numerals at the right margin.

References: Authors are responsible for the accuracy of the references. Published papers and those in press (state the journal that has accepted them) may be included. Text references should be cited by author and date (Smith 1976), never numbered. If more than two authors, use the first author, then et al. References should be typed in alphabetical order and follow the acknowledgments. Journal names should be abbreviated according to the World List of Scientific Periodicals. References should be presented in the following style:

Journal paper: Fujar, B.R., and Smith, R.N. 1996. Navigating gopherspace with neural implants. J. Neurol Impl. 10, 275-280.
Book: Hillis, D.M., and Moritz, C. 1991. Molecular Systematics. Sinaur Associates, Sunderland, MA.
Chapter within edited book: Knight, J.R., and Myers, E.W. 1992. Approximate regular expression pattern matching with concave gap penalties, 66-76. In Chrochemore, M., and Galil, Z., eds., Combinational Pattern Matching. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer-Verlag, New York.

Acknowledgments: List collaborations, sources of research funds, and other acknowledgments in a separate section at the end of the text.

Abbreviations

Try to restrict the use of abbreviations to SI symbols and those recommended by the IUPAC. Abbreviations should be given in parentheses after their first mention in the text if the term is used more than once. Standard units of measurement and chemical symbols of elements may be used without definition in the body of the paper.

Permissions

Use of copyrighted material requires the copyright holder's written permission, which must accompany the manuscript. Failure to do so will considerably delay the processing of your manuscript.

Personal Communications

Personal communication references can be used only when permission has been obtained in writing, and such permission must be provided to the editor before the manuscript can proceed to publication.

Conventions

In general, the JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY follows the conventions of the CBE Style Manual (Council of Biology Editors, Bethesda, MD, 1983, 5th ed.).

Follow Chemical Abstracts and its indices for chemical names. For guidance in the use of biochemical terminology follow the recommendation issued by the IUPAC-IUB Commission on Biochemical Nomenclature, as given in Biochemical Nomenclature and Related Documents, published by the Biochemical Society, UK. For enzymes, use the recommended name assigned by the IUPAC-IUB Committee on Biochemical Nomenclature, 1978, as given in Enzyme Nomenclature, published by Academic Press, New York, 1980. Where possible, use the recommended SI (Systeme Internationale) units.

Genotypes should be italicized (underline in typed copy); phenotypes should not be italicized. For bacterial genetics nomenclature, follow Demerec et al. (1977), Genetics, 54, 61-761.

Submission to Data Banks

All sequences, clones, etc. that are reported must be deposited with the appropriate archive (GenBank, GDB, ATCC, etc.). Papers reporting sequences must have an accession number before submission.

Page Proofs

All authors will see page proofs of their papers. To avoid delay, proofs should be checked immediately for typographical errors and returned to the publisher by express mail within 24 hours.

Reprints

Reprints may be ordered by using the special reprint forms that will accompany the page proofs. These forms should be returned with the proofs. Reprints ordered after the issue is printed will be charged at a higher rate.

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY is published quarterly by Mary Ann Liebert Inc., 2 Madison Avenue, Larchmont, NY 10538-1962, (914) 834-3100.


Editorial Board
Ed Board

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY

CO-EDITORS IN CHIEF
SORIN ISTRAIL, Ph.D.
Celera Genomics
MICHAEL S. WATERMAN, Ph.D.
University of Southern California & Celera Genomics

EXECUTIVE EDITORIAL BOARD
ERIC S. LANDER, Ph.D.
Whitehead Institute, MIT
PAVEL PEVZNER, Ph.D.
University of California, San Diego



ASSOCIATE EDITORS

LEONARD ADELMAN
University of Southern California

SOREN BRUNAK
Technical University
of Denmark

GARY CHURCHILL
The Jackson Laboratory

FRED COHEN
University of California
San Francisco

NICHOLAS COZZARELLI
University of California
Berkeley

SUSAN DAVIDSON
University of Pennsylvania

MIKHAIL GELFAND
Institute of Protein Research
Russian Academy of Sciences

PHIL GREEN
University of Washington

DAVID HAUSSLER
University of California
Santa Cruz

KENNETH LANGE
University of California, Los Angeles

THOMAS LENGAUER
Max Planck Institute for Informatics

EUGENE MYERS
University of California
Berkeley

STEVEN L. SALZBERG
Institute for Genomic Research 


DAVID SANKOFF
University of Montreal

RON SHAMIR
Tel Aviv University

TERRY SPEED
University of California
Berkeley

SIMON TAVAR?BR>University of Southern California

MARTIN VINGRON
Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics

EDITORIAL BOARD

ALBERTO APOSTOLICO
Purdue University and
Universit?di Padova

CRAIG J. BENHAM
Mount Sinai Medical School

DAVID BOTSTEIN
Stanford University School of Medicine

ELBERT BRANSCOMB
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

DOUGLAS BRUTLAG
Stanford University

ANDREAS DRESS
Universit鋞 Bielefeld

JOE FELSENSTEIN
University of Washington

JAMES W. FICKETT
AstraZeneca R&D, Boston

ALEXEI FINKELSTEIN
Russion Academy of Sciences

WALTER FITCH
University of California
Irvine

DAVID GALAS
Keck Graduate Institute

DAN GUSFIELD
University of California, Davis

LEROY HOOD
Insitute for Systems Biology

MINORU KANEHISA
Kyoto University

SAM KARLIN
Stanford University

RICHARD KARP
University of California, Berkeley

WEBB MILLER
Pennsylvania State University

ALAN PERELSON
Los Alamos National Laboratory

FRED S. ROBERTS
Rutgers University

CHRIS SANDER
MIT Center for Genome Research

DAVID SCHWARTZ
New York University

DAVID SEARLS
SmithKline Beecham

TEMPLE SMITH
Boston University

DAVID STATES
Washington University

MIKE STEEL
University of Canterbury
New Zealand

DE WITT SUMNERS
Florida State University

ELIZABETH THOMPSON
University of Washington

WING H. WONG
Harvard School of Public Health



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