投稿信息
稿件收录要求
History of the journal
The Royal Society was founded in 1660 to promote the new experimental philosophy of that time, embodying the principles of Sir Francis Bacon. Henry Oldenburg was appointed as the first secretary to the Society and he was also the first editor of the Society's journal Philosophical Transactions. The first issue of Philosophical Transactions appeared in March 1665 and featured Oldenburg's correspondence with leading European scientists. In its formative years Isaac Newton had seventeen papers published in the journal including his first paper - New Theory about Light and Colours - which effectively served to launch his scientific career in 1672. In the same year his new reflecting telescope was described and the original drawing was also published in the journal. Philosophical Transactions has also published the work of Charles Darwin, Michael Faraday, William Herschel and many more celebrated names in science. In 1887 the journal expanded to become two separate publications, one serving the biological sciences ('B') and the other serving the physical sciences ('A'). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society has the prestige of being the world's longest running science journal.
Find out more about the journal's history in a project carried out by the University of St Andrews.
Aims and scope
Continuing its long history of influential scientific publishing, Philosophical Transactions B publishes high quality theme issues on topics of current importance and general interest within the life sciences, guest-edited by leading authorities and comprising new research, reviews and opinions from prominent researchers. Each issue aims to create an original and authoritative synthesis, often bridging traditional disciplines, which showcases current developments and provides a foundation for future research, applications and policy decisions.
Issues are either based on the internationally acclaimed Royal Society Discussion Meetings or are stand-alone topics commissioned by the journal or proposed by the guest editors. All contributions are invited and the journal does not accept unsolicited stand-alone papers. All articles are peer reviewed and edited to the highest standards.
The journal publishes topics across the life sciences. As long as the core subject lies within the biological sciences, some issues may also include content crossing into other areas such as the physical sciences, social sciences, biophysics, policy, economics etc. Issues generally sit within four broad areas (although many issues sit across these areas):
- Organismal, environmental and evolutionary biology
- Neuroscience and cognition
- Cellular, molecular and developmental biology
- Health and disease
Editorial Board
Philosophical Transactions B has an international editorial board with expertise across the biological sciences. See who is currently on the board.
Contributing to Philosophical Transactions B
The journal only publishes invited papers as part of theme issues. Guest editing an issue gives you an opportunity to put together a collection of cutting-edge and thought-provoking papers that will be useful to other researchers in the field. Find out more about the benefits of editing or contributing to an issue.
Comments and invited replies
The journal will consider comments on individual papers. Comments bring attention to an oversight in an article or propose an opposing view. They are often a critique, providing corrections or offering new analyses. An example of a comment can be found here. Comments are self-proposed by any reader shortly after the initial article is published (ideally within 6 months of online publication), and are published in a later issue. Comments are peer-reviewed, and will only be published if it adds something to the discussion. The authors of the original paper will be invited to publish a formal reply alongside the comment. To submit a comment please contact the Editorial Office.
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, Philosophical Transactions B 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. Please also refer to our Publishing Ethics Policy.
Abstracting and indexing
Philosophical Transactions B is indexed in PubMed, PubMed Central, Web of Science and Scopus, as well as many other indexes.