

Instructions for
Authors
ONLINE MANUSCRIPT SUBMISSION: An
online submission and tracking service via Internet
facilitates a speedy and cost-effective submission of manuscripts.
The full manuscript has to be submitted online via
Bentham's Content Management System (CMS) at http://bsp-cms.eurekaselect.com/
(View
Submission Instructions)
Manuscripts must be submitted by one of the authors of the
manuscript, and should not be submitted by anyone on their
behalf. The principal/corresponding author will be required
to submit a Covering Letter along with the manuscript, on
behalf of all the co-authors (if any). The author(s) will
confirm that the manuscript (or any part of it) has not been
published previously or is not under consideration for publication
elsewhere. Furthermore, any illustration, structure or table
that has been published elsewhere must be reported, and copyright
permission for reproduction must be obtained.
For all online submissions, please provide soft copies of all the materials (main text in MS Word), figures/illustrations in TIFF, PDF or JPEG, and chemical structures drawn in ChemDraw (CDX) / ISISDraw (TGF) as separate files, while a PDF version of the entire manuscript must also be included, embedded with all the figures/illustrations/tables/chemical structures, etc. It is advisable that the document files related to a manuscript submission should always have the name of the corresponding author as part of the file name, i.e., “Cilli MS text.doc”, “Cilli MS Figure 1”, etc.
It is imperative that before submission, authors should carefully
proofread the files for special characters, mathematical symbols,
Greek letters, equations, tables, references and images, to
ensure that they appear in proper format.
References, figures, tables, structures, etc., should be referred to in the text at the place where they are first discussed. Figure legends/captions should also be provided
A successful electronic submission of a manuscript will be
followed by a system-generated acknowledgement to the principal/corresponding
author. Any queries therein should be addressed to cmm@benthamscience.org
or samina@benthamscience.org
MANUSCRIPTS PUBLISHED: The Journal publishes peer-reviewed mini- and full-length reviews, original research articles, letters and drug clinical trial studies written in English. Single topic/thematic issues may also be considered for publication
Single Topic Issues: These peer
reviewed issues may either contain invited review articles
or a mixture of review articles, research articles, letters
and drug clinical trial studies. A Single Topic Special Editor
will offer a short perspective and co-ordinate the solicitation
of manuscripts between 3-5 (for a mini-hot topic) to 6-10
(for full-length hot topic) from leading scientists. Authors
interested in editing a single topic issue in an emerging
topic of molecular medicine may submit their proposal to the
Editor-in-Chief at cmm@benthamscience.org
for consideration.
Conference Proceedings: For proposals to publish
conference proceedings in this journal, please contact us
at email: proceedings@benthamscience.org
MANUSCRIPT LENGTH:
Review Articles: The total number of words for a published comprehensive review article is from 8000 to 40000 words, and for mini-review articles from 3000 to 6000 words excluding figures, structures, photographs, schemes, tables, etc.
Research Articles: The total number of words for a published research article is from 4000 to 8000 words excluding figures, structures, photographs, schemes, tables, etc. There is a quota of 20% of published research articles per issue in this journal.
Short Communications/Letters: Letters should be 3000-6000 words excluding figures, structures, photographs, schemes, tables, etc. There is a quota of 20% of published letter articles per issue in this journal.
Randomized Drug Clinical Trial Studies: Trial studies should be 1500 to 40000 words excluding figures, structures, photographs, schemes, tables, etc.
There is no restriction on the number of figures, tables or additional files e.g. video clips, animation and datasets, that can be included with each article online. Authors should include all relevant supporting data with each article (Refer to Supplementary Material section).
MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION:
The manuscript should be written in English in a clear, direct
and active style. All pages must be numbered sequentially,
facilitating in the reviewing and editing of the manuscript.
For further convenience, our contracted service provider Eureka
Science can provide assistance to authors for the preparation
of manuscripts.
MANUSCRIPT SECTIONS FOR PAPERS:
Manuscripts submitted to the journal may be divided into the
following sections:
Covering letter
Title
Title page
Abstract
Keywords
Text organization
List of abbreviations (if any)
Conflict of interest
Acknowledgements
References
Appendices
Figures/illustrations (if any)
Chemical structures (if any)
Tables (if any)
Supportive/supplementary material (if any)
Covering Letter: It is mandatory that a signed covering letter should also be submitted along with the manuscript by the author to whom correspondence is to be addressed, delineating the scope of the submitted article declaring the potential competing interests, acknowledging contributions from authors and funding agencies, and certifying that the paper is prepared according to the 'Instructions for Authors'. All inconsistencies in the text and in the reference section, and any typographical errors must be carefully checked and corrected before the submission of the manuscript. The article contains no such material or information that may be unlawful, defamatory, fabricated, plagiarized, or which would, if published, in any way whatsoever, violate the terms and conditions as laid down in the copyright agreement. The authors acknowledge that the publishers have the legal right to take appropriate action against the authors for any such violation of the terms and conditions as laid down in the copy right agreement. DOWNLOAD
COVERING LETTER
Title: The title of the article should be precise
and brief and must not be more than 120 characters. Authors
should avoid the use of non-standard abbreviations. The title
must be written in title case except for articles, conjunctions
and prepositions.
Authors should also provide a short ‘running
title’. Title, running title, byline, correspondent,
footnote and keywords should be written as presented in original
manuscripts.
Title Page: Title page should include paper title,
author(s) full name and affiliation, corresponding author(s)
names complete affiliation/address, along with phone, fax
and email.
Abstract: The abstract should not
exceed 250 words for review and research papers, and 150 words
for letters and drug clinical trial studies summarizing the
essential features of the article.
Keywords: Provide 6 to 8 keywords in alphabetical
order.
Text Organization: The main text should begin on a separate page and should be divided into title page, abstract and the main text. The text may be subdivided further according to the areas to be discussed, which should be followed by the List of Abbreviations, Conflict of Interest, Acknowledgements and Reference section. For Research Article/Letter, the manuscript should begin with the title page and abstract followed by the main text, which must be structured into separate sections as Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, Conclusion, List of Abbreviations, Conflict of Interest, Acknowledgements and References. For Review, the manuscript should be divided into title page, abstract and the main text. The text may be subdivided further according to the areas to be discussed, which should be followed by the Acknowledgements and Reference sections. The review article should mention any previous important reviews in the field and contain a comprehensive discussion starting with the general background of the field. It should then go on to discuss the salient features of recent developments. The authors should avoid presenting material which has already been published in a previous review. The authors are advised to present and discuss their observations in brief. The manuscript style must be uniform throughout the text and 10 pt Times New Roman fonts should be used. The full term for an abbreviation should precede its first appearance in the text unless it is a standard unit of measurement. The reference numbers should be given in square brackets in the text. Italics should be used for Binomial names of organisms (Genus and Species), for emphasis and for unfamiliar words or phrases. Non-assimilated words from Latin or other languages should also be italicized e.g. in vivo, in vitro, per se, et al., etc.
Authentication of Cell Lines: The NIH acknowledges the misidentification and/or cross-contamination of cell cultures e.g. HeLa cells being used in a research study as a serious problem. In order to ensure the validation of the work and proper utilization of resources, it is a prerequisite that correct reagents be used in studies dealing with established human (tumor) cell lines that have been cultured for more than 4 years up to the date of submission of the manuscript. Cell lines such as short-term cultures of human tumors, murine cell lines (as a catalog of DNA profiles is not yet available) and tumor cell lines established in the course of the study that is being submitted, are presently exempt from this rule. To minimize the risk of working with misidentified and/or contaminated cell lines, tests such as isoenzyme analysis, karyotyping/cytogenetic analysis and, more recently, molecular techniques of DNA profiling may be carried out to authenticate cell cultures. These tests may help confirm or establish the identify profile for a cell line. Bentham Science recommends that all cell lines be authenticated prior to submitting a paper for review. Authors are therefore required to provide authentication of the origin and identity of the cells by performing cell profiling either in their own laboratory or by outsourcing an approved laboratory or cell bank. Authentication is required when a new line is established or acquired, before freezing a cell line, if the performance of the line is not consistent or results are unexpected, if using more than one cell line, and before publication of the study.
The cell lines profile should be cross-checked with the profile
of the donor tissue of other continuous cell lines such as
provided by the authentic data bank such as http://www.dsmz.de/fp/cgi-bin/str.html,
ATCC® etc.
Standard Protocol on Approvals, Registrations,
Patient Consent & Animal Protection: All clinical investigations must be conducted according to the Declaration of Helsinki principles. For all manuscripts reporting data from studies involving human participants, formal review and approval by an appropriate institutional review board or ethics committee is required. For research involving animals, the authors should indicate whether the procedures followed were in accordance with the standards set forth in the eighth edition of Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals (http://grants.nih.gov/grants/olaw/guide-for-the-care-and-use-of-laboratory-animals_prepub.pdf; published by the National Academy of Sciences, The National Academies Press, Washington, D.C.).
A specific declaration of such approval must be made in the
cover letter and in a stand-alone paragraph at the end of
the Methods section especially in the case of human studies
where inclusion of a statement regarding obtaining the written
informed consent from each subject or subject's guardian is
a must. The original should be retained by the guarantor or
corresponding author. Editors may request to provide the original
forms by fax or email.
Randomized Drug Clinical Trial Studies: Randomized Drug Clinical Trial Studies are biomedical or health-related interventional and/or observational research studies conducted in phases in human beings who will be randomly allocated to receive or not receive a preventive, therapeutic, or diagnostic intervention that follows a pre-defined protocol. The study is intended to find out whether promising approaches to the disease prevention, diagnosis, and treatment are safe and effective.
All randomized clinical trials should include a flow diagram and authors should provide a completed randomized trial checklist (see CONSORT Flow Diagram and Checklist; http://www.consort-statement.org) and a trial protocol. Authors of randomized controlled trials are encouraged to submit trial protocols along with their manuscripts. All clinical trials must be registered (before recruitment of the first participant) at an appropriate online public trial registry that must be independent of for-profit interest. Trial registry name, registration identification number, and the URL for the registry should be included at the end of the abstract and also in the space provided on the online manuscript submission form. If your research article reports the results of a controlled health care intervention, list your trial registry, along with the unique identifying number. Note that there should be no space between the letters and numbers of your trial registration number. Studies designed for other purposes, such as to study pharmacokinetics or major toxicity (e.g., phase 1 trials), are exempt.
Each manuscript should clearly state an objective or hypothesis; the design and methods (including the study setting and dates, patients or participants with inclusion and exclusion criteria, or data sources, and how these were selected for the study); the essential features of any interventions; the main outcome measures; the main results of the study; a comment section placing the results in context with the published literature and addressing study limitations; and the conclusions. Data included in research reports must be original.
Greek Symbols and Special Characters: Greek
symbols and special characters often undergo formatting changes
and get corrupted or lost during preparation of manuscript
for publication. To ensure that all special characters used
are embedded in the text, these special characters should
be inserted as a symbol but should not be a result of any
format styling (Symbol font face) otherwise they
will be lost during conversion to PDF/XML.
Authors are encouraged to consult reporting guidelines. These
guidelines provide a set of recommendations comprising a list
of items relevant to their specific research design. Chemical
equations, chemical names, mathematical usage, unit of measurements,
chemical and physical quantity & units must conform to
SI and Chemical Abstracts or IUPAC.
All kinds of measurements should be reported only in International
System of Units (SI).
List of Abbreviations: If abbreviations are used
in the text either they should be defined in the text where
first used, or a list of abbreviations can be provided.
Conflict of Interest: Financial contributions to the work being reported must be clearly acknowledged, as should any potential conflict of interest under the heading ‘Conflict of Interest’. Authors must list the source(s) of funding for the study, for each author, and for the manuscript preparation.
Acknowledgements: All individuals listed as authors must have contributed substantially to the design, performance, analysis, or reporting of the work and are required to indicate their specific contribution. Anyone (individual/company/institution) who has substantially contributed to the study for important intellectual content, or who was involved in the article’s drafting or revising must also be acknowledged.
Guest or honorary authorship based solely on position (e.g. research supervisor, departmental head) is discouraged.
The specific requirements for authorship have been defined by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE; http://www.icmje.org). Examples of authors' contributions are: 'designed research/study', 'performed research/study', 'contributed important reagents', 'collected data', 'analyzed data', 'wrote paper', etc. This information must be included in the submitted manuscript as a separate paragraph under the heading ‘Acknowledgements’. The corresponding author is responsible for obtaining permission from all co-authors for the submission of any version of the manuscript and for any changes in the authorship.
References: References must be listed in the Vancouver
Style only. All references should be numbered sequentially
[in square brackets] in the text and listed in the same numerical
order in the reference section. The reference numbers must
be finalized and the bibliography must be fully formatted
before submission.
See below few examples of references listed in the
Vancouver Style:
Journal Reference:
[1] Bossert JM, Ghitza UE, Lu L, Epstein DH, Shaham
Y. Neurobiology of relapse to heroin and cocaine seeking:
an update and clinical implications. Eur J Pharmacol 2005;
526: 36-50.
[2] Arneric SP, Sullivan JP, Briggs CA,
et al. (S)-3-methyl-5-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolidinyl)isoxazole
(ABT 418): a novel cholinergic ligand with cognition enhancing
and anxiolytic activities: I. In vitro characterization. J
Pharmacol Exp Ther 1994; 270: 310-8.
Book Reference:
[3] Crabtree RH. The Organometallic Chemistry of the Transition
Metals, 3rd ed. New York: Wiley & Sons 2001.
Book Chapter Reference:
[4] Wheeler DMS, Wheeler MM. In: Studies in Natural Products
Chemistry; Atta-ur-Rahman, Ed. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science
BV 1994; Vol. 14: pp. 3-46.
Conference Proceedings:
[5] Jakeman DL. Withers SGE. In: Carbohydrate Bioengineering:
Interdisciplinary Approaches, Proceedings of the 4th Carbohydrate
Bioengineering Meeting, Stockholm, Sweden, June 10-13, 2001;
Teeri TT, Svensson B, Gilbert HJ, Feizi T, Eds. Cambridge,
UK: Royal Society of Chemistry 2002; pp. 3-8.
URL (WebPage):
[6] Multimodality Treatment for Patients With Resectable Non-Small
Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) – BEACON Study: Bevacizumab
and Chemotherapy for Operable NSCLC. Available at: http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT00130780
[accessed June 30, 2009].
Patent:
[7] Hoch JA, Huang S. Screening Methods For The Identification
Of Novel Antibiotics. U.S. Patent 6043045, March 28, 2000.
Thesis:
[8] Mackel H. Capturing the Spectra of Silicon Solar Cells.
PhD Thesis. Canberra: The Australian National University December
2004.
E-citations:
[9] Citations for articles/material published exclusively online or in open access (free-to-view), must contain the exact Web addresses (URLs) at the end of the reference(s), except those posted on an author’s Web site unless editorially essential, e.g. ‘Reference: Available from: URL’.
Some important points to remember:
• All references must be complete and accurate.
• It is necessary to list all authors if the total number
of authors is 6 or less and for more than 6 authors use 3
authors and then et al. (the term “et al.”
should be in italics).
• Online citations should include the date of access.
• Journal abbreviations should follow the Index
Medicus/MEDLINE.
• Take special care of the punctuation convention as
described in the above-mentioned examples.
• Superscript in the in-text citations and reference
section should be avoided.
• Abstracts, unpublished data and personal communications
(which can only be included if prior permission has been obtained)
should not be given in the reference section but they may
be mentioned in the text and details provided as footnotes.
• The authors are encouraged to use a recent version
of EndNote (version 5 and above) or Reference Manager (version
10) when formatting their reference list, as this allows references
to be automatically extracted.
Appendices: In case there is a need to present
lengthy, but essential methodological details, use appendices,
which can be a part of the article. An appendix must not exceed
three pages (Times New Roman, 12 point fonts, 900 max. words
per page). The information should be provided in a condensed
form, ruling out the need of full sentences. A single appendix
should be titled APPENDIX, while more than one can be titled
APPENDIX A, APPENDIX B, and so on.
Figures/Illustrations:
All authors must strictly follow the guidelines below for
preparing illustrations for publication in Current
Molecular Medicine. If the figures are found
to be sub-standard, then the manuscripts will be rejected/
and the authors offered the option of figure improvement professionally
by Eureka Science.
The costs for such improvement will be charged to the authors.
The authors should provide the illustrations as separate files,
as well as embedded in the text file, numbered consecutively
in the order of their appearance. Each figure should include
a single illustration. Each figure should be closely cropped
to minimize the amount of white space surrounding the illustration.
If a figure consists of separate parts, it is important that
a single composite illustration file be submitted, containing
all parts of the figure.
Photographs should be provided with a scale bar if appropriate,
as well as high-resolution component files.
Scaling/Resolution:
For Line Art image type, which is generally an image based on lines and text and does not contain tonal or shaded areas, the preferred file format is TIFF or EPS, with color mode being Monochrome 1-bit or RGB, in a resolution of 900-1200 dpi.
For Halftone image type, which is generally a continuous tone
photograph and contains no text, the preferred file format
is TIFF, with colour mode being or RGB or Grayscale, in a
resolution of 300 dpi.
For Combination image type, which is generally an image containing
halftone in addition to text or line art elements, the preferred
file format is TIFF, with colour mode being or RGB or Grayscale,
in a resolution of 500-900 dpi.
Formats:
For illustrations, the following file formats are acceptable:
• Illustrator
• EPS (preferred format for diagrams)
• PDF (also especially suitable for
diagrams)
• PNG (preferred format for photos
or images)
• Microsoft Word (version 5 and above;
figures must be a single page)
• PowerPoint (figures must be a single
page)
• TIFF
• JPEG (conversion should be done using
the original file)
• BMP
• CDX (ChemDraw)
• TGF (ISISDraw)
Bentham Science does not process figures submitted in GIF
format.
If the large size of TIFF or EPS figures acts as an obstacle
to online submission, authors may find that conversion to
JPEG format before submission results in significantly reduced
file size and upload time, while retaining acceptable quality.
JPEG is a 'lossy' format. However, in order to maintain acceptable
image quality, it is recommended that JPEG files are saved
at High or Maximum quality.
Files should not be compressed with tools such as Zipit or
Stuffit prior to submission as these tools will in any case
produce negligible file-size savings for JPEGs and TIFFs,
which are already compressed.
Please do not:
1. Supply embedded graphics in your word processor (spreadsheet,
presentation) document;
2. Supply files that are optimized for screen use (like GIF,
BMP, PICT, WPG); the resolution is too low;
3. Supply files that are too low in resolution;
4. Submit graphics that are disproportionately large for the
content.
Image Conversion Tools:
There are many software packages, many of them freeware or
shareware, capable of converting to and from different graphics
formats, including PNG.
Good general tools for image conversion include GraphicConverter
on the Macintosh, PaintShop Pro, for Windows, and ImageMagick,
which is available on Macintosh, Windows and UNIX platforms.
Note that bitmap images (e.g. screenshots) should not be converted
to EPS, since this will result in a much larger file size
than the equivalent JPEG, TIFF, PNG or BMP, with no increase
in quality. EPS should only be used for images produced by
vector-drawing applications such as Adobe Illustrator or CorelDraw.
Most vector-drawing applications can be saved in, or exported
as, EPS format. In case the images have been originally prepared
in an Office application, such as Word or PowerPoint, then
the original Office files should be directly uploaded to the
site, instead of being converted to JPEG or another format
that may be of low quality.
Color Figures/Illustrations:
• The cost for each individual page of color figures/plates/illustrations is US $920.
• Color figures should be supplied in CMYK not RGB colors.
Chemical Structures:
Chemical structures must be prepared in ChemDraw/CDX and provided
as separate file.
Structure Drawing Preferences:
[As according to the ACS style sheet]
Drawing Settings:
Chain angle 120°
Bond spacing 18% of width
Fixed length 14.4 pt
(0.500cm, 0.2in)
Bold width
2.0 pt (0.071cm, 0.0278in)
Line width
0.6 pt (0.021cm, 0.0084in)
Margin width 1.6 pt
(0.096cm)
Hash spacing 2.5 pt (0.088cm, 0.0347in)
Text settings:
Font Times
New Roman
Size 12pt
Under the Preference Choose:
Units
points
Tolerances 3
pixels
Under Page Setup Use:
Paper US
letter
Scale
100%
Tables:
• Data Tables should be submitted in
Microsoft Word table format.
• Each table should include a title/caption being explanatory
in itself with respect to the details discussed in the table.
Detailed legends may then follow.
• Table number in bold font i.e. Table 1,
should follow a title. The title should be in small case with
the first letter in caps. A full stop should be placed at
the end of the title.
• Tables should be embedded in the text exactly according
to their appropriate placement in the submitted manuscript.
• Columns and rows of data should be made visibly distinct
by ensuring that the borders of each cell are displayed as
black lines.
• Tables should be numbered in Arabic numerals sequentially
in order of their citation in the body of the text.
• If a reference is cited in both the table and text,
please insert a lettered footnote in the table to refer to
the numbered reference in the text.
• Tabular data provided as additional files can be submitted
as an Excel spreadsheet.
Supportive/Supplementary Material: We do encourage to append supportive material, for example a PowerPoint file containing a talk about the study, a PowerPoint file containing additional screenshots, a Word, RTF, or PDF document showing the original instrument(s) used, a video, or the original data (SAS/SPSS files, Excel files, Access Db files, etc.) provided it is inevitable or endorsed by the journal's Editor.
Supportive/Supplementary material intended for publication
must be numbered and referred to in the manuscript but should
not be a part of the submitted paper. In-text citations as
well as a section with the heading "Supportive/Supplementary
Material" before the "References" section should
be provided. Here, list all Supportive/Supplementary Material
and include a brief caption line for each file describing
its contents.
Any additional files will be linked into the final published article in the form supplied by the author, but will not be displayed within the paper. They will be made available in exactly the same form as originally provided only on our Web site. Please also make sure that each additional file is a single table, figure or movie (please do not upload linked worksheets or PDF files larger than one sheet). Supportive/Supplementary material must be provided in a single zipped file not larger than 4 MB.
Authors must clearly indicate if these files are not for publication
but meant for the reviewers'/editors' perusal only.
PERMISSION FOR REPRODUCTION: Published/reproduced
material should not be included unless you have obtained written
permission from the copyright holder, which should be forwarded
to the Editorial Office in case of acceptance of your article
for publication.
For obtaining permission for reproducing any material published
in an article by Bentham Science Publishers, please fill in
the request FORM
and send to cmm@benthamscience.org
for consideration.
AUTHORS AND INSTITUTIONAL AFFILIATIONS: The
author will be required to provide their full names, the institutional
affiliations and the location, with an asterisk in front of
the name of the principal/corresponding author. The corresponding
author(s) should be designated and their complete address,
business telephone and fax numbers and e-mail address must
be stated to receive correspondence and galley proofs.
PAGE CHARGES: No page charges will be levied to authors for the publication of their review articles. For published research articles and letters, however, the publication charges for the first 8 pages will be US $55 per page; if the article is more than 8 pages, then charges will be US $110 per page for additional pages
LANGUAGE AND EDITING: Manuscripts submitted
containing many English typographical errors will not be published.
Manuscripts which are accepted for publication on condition
that the written English submitted is corrected, will be sent
a quote by Eureka
Science, a professional language editing company. Authors
from non-English language countries who have poor English
language written skills, are advised to contact the language
editing company prior to submitting their manuscript to the
journal. Please contact Eureka
Science for a language editing quote at e-mail: info@eureka-science.com
stating the total number of words of the article to be edited.
PROOF CORRECTIONS: Authors will receive page proofs
of their accepted paper before publications. To avoid delays
in publication, proofs should be checked immediately for typographical
errors and returned within 48 hours. Major
changes are not acceptable at the proof stage. If unable to
send corrections within 48 hours due to some
reason, the author(s) must at least send an acknowledgement
on receiving the galley proofs or the article will be published
exactly as received and the publishers will not be responsible
for any error occurring in the published manuscript in this
regard.
The corresponding author will be solely responsible for ensuring
that the revised version of the manuscript incorporating all
the submitted corrections receives the approval of all the
co-authors of the manuscript.
REPRINTS: Each first-named (corresponding)
author will receive electronically five free e-prints. Printed
reprints and e-prints may be ordered from the Publisher prior
to publication of the article. First named authors may also
order a personal print and online subscription of the journal
at 50% off the normal subscription rate by contacting the
subscription department at e-mail: subscriptions@benthamscience.org
OPEN ACCESS PLUS: Accepted articles can be published online for free open access for all to view, and be deposited by the Publishers in PubMed Central. Open access publishing provides the maximum dissemination of the article to the largest audience. Authors must pay for this service. All corresponding authors will be asked to indicate whether or not they wish to pay to have their paper made freely available on publication. If authors do not select the Open Access option, then their article will be published with standard subscription-based access at no charge.
Bentham Science offers authors the choice of open access publication of their articles at a fee of US $2,900 per published article which allows indefinite free-to-view online publication with Bentham Science.
All Editors, Board Members and those authors who have contributed
more than two articles in Bentham Science publications are
entitled to a 40% discount on open access
plus fees.
For more information please contact us at e-mail: openaccess@benthamscience.org.
FEATURED ARTICLE: Authors may opt to publicize their article(s) published with Bentham Science by highlighting their title(s) both at the journal's Homepage and the issue Contents page at a cost of US $600.
REVIEWING AND PROMPTNESS OF PUBLICATION: All papers
submitted for publication are immediately subjected to editorial
scrutiny, usually in consultation with members of the journal
Editorial Advisory Board and outside independent reviewers.
Every effort will be made to peer review submitted papers
quickly. Papers which are delayed by authors in revision for
more than 30 days will have to be re-submitted as a new submission.
Papers accepted for publication are typeset and proofs are
dispatched to authors for any corrections prior to final publication.
EXPRESS and QUICK TRACK Publication: For
this journal an optional fast publication fee-based service
is available to authors for their submitted manuscripts. These
are EXPRESS TRACK and QUICK TRACK publication which offer
two prioritized modes of rapid publication. Authors who opt
for this fee-based service do not have to pay any additional
page charges or charges for the improvement of figures (if
required).
EXPRESS TRACK allows online publication within 1 week of receipt
of the final approved galley proofs from the authors. Similarly
the manuscript can be published in the next forthcoming PRINT
issue of the journal. The total publication time, from date
of first receipt of manuscript to its online publication is
6-8 weeks, subject to its acceptance by the referees and modification
(if any) by the authors within one week.
QUICK TRACK allows online publication within 2 weeks of receipt
of the final approved galley proofs from the authors. Similarly
the manuscript can be published in the next forthcoming PRINT
issue of the journal. The total publication time, from date
of first receipt of manuscript to its online publication is
10 weeks, subject to its acceptance by the referees and modification
(if any) by the authors within one week.
Corresponding authors who opt for either EXPRESS or QUICK TRACKS will receive 25 free eprint tokens for their manuscripts.
For more information please contact the Editorial Office by
e-mail at cmm@benthamscience.org.
COPYRIGHT: Authors who publish in Bentham
Science print & online journals will transfer copyright
to their work to Bentham Science Publishers. Submission of
a manuscript to the respective journals implies that all authors
have read and agreed to the content of the Covering Letter
or the Terms and Conditions. It is a condition of publication
that manuscripts submitted to this journal have not been published
and will not be simultaneously submitted or published elsewhere.
Plagiarism is strictly forbidden, and by submitting the article
for publication the authors agree that the publishers have
the legal right to take appropriate action against the authors,
if plagiarism or fabricated information is discovered. By
submitting a manuscript the authors agree that the copyright
of their article is transferred to the publishers if and when
the article is accepted for publication. Once submitted to
the journal, the author will not withdraw their manuscript
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