HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING《人脑图谱》(可官网投稿)

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING《人脑图谱》(一年十八期)。Human Brain Mapping publishes peer-reviewed basic, clinical, technical, and theoretical research in the interdisciplinary and rapidly expanding field of human brain mapping. The journal features research derived from non-invasive brain imaging modalities used to explore the spatial and temporal organization of the neural systems supporting human behavior. Imaging modalities of interest include positron emission tomography, event-related potentials, electro-and magnetoencephalography, magnetic resonance imaging, and single-photon emission tomography. Brain mapping research in both normal and clinical populations is encouraged.

杂志简称:hum brain mapp
中文译名:《人脑图谱》
收录属性:高质量科技期刊(t1), 高质量科技期刊(t2), scie(2024版), 目次收录(维普),英文期刊,
自引率:5.40%
投稿方向:医学、neuroimaging神经成像、neurosciences神经科学、radiology, nuclear medicine & medical imaging核医学

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING《人脑图谱》

SCI/E期刊基本信息

出版周期:年17期 地区:美国
中科院分区:2区
是否TOP:TOP期刊
是否综述:非综述期刊
是否OA:非OA期刊
国际标准刊号:ISSN 1065-9471/EISSN 1097-0193
杂志语言:英语
出版国家:美国

杂志官网 联系方式

出版地址:WILEY-LISS,DIV JOHN WILEY & SONS INC,111 RIVER ST,HOBOKEN,USA,NJ,07030
杂志邮箱:
投稿网址:http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/hbm
杂志官方网址:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10970193
出版商网址:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/

杂志投稿要求

投稿须知

【杂志社官方网站信息】

Author Guidelines

3. MANUSCRIPT CATEGORIES AND REQUIREMENTS

Human Brain Mapping publishes the following contribution types:

Research Articles

Review Articles

Theoretical Articles

Clinical Case Studies

Technological Reports

Synthetic Reviews

Research Articles

Results of neuroimaging research in cognitive neuroscience, neurology, psychiatry, development, aging, and brain effects of systemic disorders as sought, particularly those which utilize novel or complex image-acquisition methods (e.g., combining multiple imaging modalities) and analytic methods. Quantitative meta-analyses (e.g., activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis) should be submitted as Research Articles, rather than Review Articles. There are no restrictions on the number of pages or figures. Introduction, Materials and Methods, Results, Discussion, and Conclusion sections conforming to standard scientific reporting style are required (where appropriate, Results and Discussion may be combined).

Review Articles

Speculative and synthetic review articles on human neurophysiology and/or neuroanatomy and cognitive systems are usually invited, but submitted reviews will be considered. Proposals for Review Articles should be directed to the Editor-in-Chief, a Deputy Editor-in-Chief, or an Associate Editor, who will consult with the author before manuscript submission. Review Articles should provide a critical review and interpretation of the literature and current research directions in a given area. The text should flow smoothly, and subdivisions (e.g., Introduction, Methods, Results) within the manuscript are not necessary. There are no page limitations for Review Articles.

Technical Reports

These are reports highlighting emerging techniques, particularly those involving multiple imaging modalities and validation or description of novel algorithms.

4. PREPARING THE SUBMISSION

Free Format Submission

HBM now offers free format submission for a simplified and streamlined submission process.

Before you submit, you will need:

Your manuscript: this can be a single file including text, figures, and tables, or separate files – whichever you prefer. All required sections should be contained in your manuscript, including abstract, introduction, methods, results, and conclusions. Figures and tables should have legends. References may be submitted in any style or format, as long as it is consistent throughout the manuscript. If the manuscript, figures or tables are difficult for you to read, they will also be difficult for the editors and reviewers. If your manuscript is difficult to read, the editorial office may send it back to you for revision.

The title page of the manuscript, including statements relating to our ethics and integrity policies:

data availability statement

funding statement

conflict of interest disclosure

ethics approval statement

patient consent statement

permission to reproduce material from other sources

clinical trial registration

Your co-author details, including affiliation and email address. (Why is this important? We need to keep all co-authors informed of the outcome of the peer review process.)

An ORCID ID, freely available at https://orcid.org. (Why is this important? Your article, if accepted and published, will be attached to your ORCID profile. Institutions and funders are increasingly requiring authors to have ORCID IDs.)

To submit, login at https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/hbm and create a new submission. Follow the submission steps as required and submit the manuscript.

If you are invited to revise your manuscript after peer review, the journal will also request the revised manuscript to be formatted according to journal requirements as described below.

Cover Letters

A Cover Letter is required upon submission.

Parts of the Manuscript

The manuscript should be submitted in separate files: main text file; figures.

Main Text File

The text file should be presented in the following order:

A short informative title containing the major key words. The title should not contain abbreviations (see Wiley's best practice SEO tips). The tile should be 16 words or less;

A short running title of less than 40 characters;

The full names of the authors;

The author's institutional affiliations where the work was conducted, with a footnote for the author’s present address if different from where the work was conducted;

Acknowledgments;

Abstract and keywords;

Main text;

References;

Tables (each table complete with title and footnotes);

Figure legends;

Appendices (if relevant)

Figures and supporting information should be supplied as separate files.

Authorship

Please refer to the journal’s Authorship policy in the Editorial Policies and Ethical Considerations section for details on author listing eligibility.

In accordance with Wiley's Best Practice Guidelines on Research Integrity and Publishing Ethics and the Committee on Publication Ethics' guidance, Human Brain Mapping will allow authors to correct authorship on a submitted, accepted, or published article if a valid reason exists to do so. All authors – including those to be added or removed – must agree to any proposed change. To request a change to the author list, please complete the Request for Changes to a Journal Article Author List Form and contact either the journal's editorial or production office, depending on the status of the article. Authorship changes will not be considered without a fully completed Author Change form. [Correcting the authorship is different from changing an author's name; the relevant policy for that can be found in Wiley's Best Practice Guidelines under "Author name changes after publication."]

Acknowledgments

Contributions from anyone who does not meet the criteria for authorship should be listed, with permission from the contributor, in an Acknowledgments section. Financial and material support should also be mentioned. Thanks to anonymous reviewers are not appropriate.

Conflict of Interest Statement

Authors will be asked to provide a conflict of interest statement during the submission process. For details on what to include in this section, see the ‘Conflict of Interest’ section in the Editorial Policies and Ethical Considerations section below. Submitting authors should ensure they liaise with all co-authors to confirm agreement with the final statement.

Abstract

The abstract should not exceed 200 words unless absolutely necessary, and should under no circumstances exceed 250 words. The abstract should appear as a single paragraph, which should enable readers to quickly comprehend the thrust of the article prior to reading the article itself. Objectives, experimental design, principal observations, and conclusions should be succinctly summarized for research articles and techniques. Abbreviations should be avoided. Reference citations within the abstract are not permitted. Please provide main keywords.

Keywords

Please provide up to 7 keywords. Keywords should be taken from those recommended by the US National Library of Medicine's Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) browser list at www.nlm.nih.gov/mesh.

Main Text

Human Brain Mapping uses British/US spelling; however, authors may submit using either option, as spelling of accepted papers is converted during the production process.

Footnotes to the text are not allowed and any such material should be incorporated into the text as parenthetical matter.

References

References should be prepared according to the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (6th edition). This means in text citations should follow the author-date method whereby the author's last name and the year of publication for the source should appear in the text, for example, (Jones, 1998). The complete reference list should appear alphabetically by name at the end of the paper.

Examples of APA references are listed below. Please note that a DOI should be provided for all references where available. For more information about APA referencing style, please refer to the APA FAQ. Please note that for journal articles, issue numbers are not included unless each issue in the volume begins with page one.

Journal article

Beers, S. R. , & De Bellis, M. D. (2002). Neuropsychological function in children with maltreatment-related posttraumatic stress disorder. The American Journal of Psychiatry, 159, 483–486.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.159.3.483

Book

Bradley-Johnson, S. (1994). Psychoeducational assessment of students who are visually impaired or blind: Infancy through high school (2nd ed.). Austin, TX: Pro-ed.

Internet Document

Norton, R. (2006, November 4). How to train a cat to operate a light switch [Video file]. Retrieved from www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vja83KLQXZs

Endnotes

Endnotes should be placed as a list at the end of the paper only, not at the foot of each page. They should be numbered in the list and referred to in the text with consecutive, superscript Arabic numerals. Keep endnotes brief; they should contain only short comments tangential to the main argument of the paper.

Footnotes

Footnotes should be placed as a list at the end of the paper only, not at the foot of each page. They should be numbered in the list and referred to in the text with consecutive, superscript Arabic numerals. Keep footnotes brief; they should contain only short comments tangential to the main argument of the paper and should not include references.

Figure Legends

Legends should be concise but comprehensive—the figure and its legend must be understandable without reference to the text. Include definitions of any symbols used and define/explain all abbreviations and units of measurement.

Tables

Tables should be self-contained and complement, not duplicate, information contained in the text. They should be supplied as editable files, not pasted as images. Legends should be concise but comprehensive – the table, legend, and footnotes must be understandable without reference to the text. All abbreviations must be defined in footnotes. Footnote symbols: †, ‡, §, ¶, should be used (in that order) and *, **, *** should be reserved for P-values. Statistical measures such as SD or SEM should be identified in the headings.

Figures

Although authors are encouraged to send the highest-quality figures possible, for peer-review purposes, a wide variety of formats, sizes, and resolutions are accepted. Click here for the basic figure requirements for figures submitted with manuscripts for initial peer review, as well as the more detailed post-acceptance figure requirements.

Color Figures

Figures submitted in color may be reproduced in color online free of charge. Please note, however, that it is preferable that line figures (e.g. graphs and charts) are supplied in black and white so that they are legible if printed by a reader in black and white. If an author would prefer to have figures printed in color in hard copies of the journal, a fee will be charged by the Publisher.

Supporting Information

Supporting information is information that is not essential to the article, but provides greater depth and background. It is hosted online and appears without editing or typesetting. It may include tables, figures, videos, datasets, etc.

Click here for Wiley’s FAQs on supporting information.

Note: if data, scripts, or other artefacts used to generate the analyses presented in the paper are available via a publicly available data repository, authors should include a reference to the location of the material within their paper.

General Style Points

The following points provide general advice on formatting and style.

Abbreviations: In general, terms should not be abbreviated unless they are used repeatedly and the abbreviation is helpful to the reader. Initially, use the word in full, followed by the abbreviation in parentheses. Thereafter use the abbreviation only.

Units of measurement: Measurements should be given in SI or SI-derived units. Visit the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM) website for more information about SI units.

Numbers: Numbers under 10 are spelt out, except for: measurements with a unit (8mmol/l); age (6 weeks old), or lists with other numbers (11 dogs, 9 cats, 4 gerbils).

Trade Names: Chemical substances should be referred to by the generic name only. Trade names should not be used. Drugs should be referred to by their generic names. If proprietary drugs have been used in the study, refer to these by their generic name, mentioning the proprietary name and the name and location of the manufacturer in parentheses.

Resource Identification Initiative

Human Brain Mapping supports the Resource Identification Initiative, which aims to promote research resource identification, discovery, and reuse. This initiative, led by the Neuroscience Information Framework and the Oregon Health & Science University Library, provides unique identifiers for antibodies, model organisms, cell lines, and tools including software and databases. These IDs, called Research Resource Identifiers (RRIDs), are machine-readable and can be used to search for all papers where a particular resource was used and to increase access to critical data to help researchers identify suitable reagents and tools.

Authors are asked to use RRIDs to cite the resources used in their research where applicable in the text, similar to a regular citation or Genbank Accession number. For antibodies, authors should include in the citation the vendor, catalogue number, and RRID both in the text upon first mention in the Methods section. For software tools and databases, please provide the name of the resource followed by the resource website, if available, and the RRID. For model organisms, the RRID alone is sufficient.

Additionally, authors must include the RIIDs in the list of keywords associated with the manuscript.

To Obtain Research Resource Identifiers (RRIDs):

Use the Resource Identification Portal, created by the Resource Identification Initiative Working Group.

Search for the research resource (please see the section titled “Search Features and Tips” for more information).

Click on the “Cite This” button to obtain the citation and insert the citation into the manuscript text.

If there is a resource that is not found within the Portal, authors are asked to register the resource with the appropriate resource authority. Information on how to do this is provided in the “Resource Citation Guidelines” section of the Portal.

If any difficulties in obtaining identifiers arise, please contact rii-help@scicrunch.org for assistance.

Example Citations:

Antibodies: "Wnt3 was localized using a rabbit polyclonal antibody C64F2 against Wnt3 (Cell Signaling Technology, Cat# 2721S, RRID: AB-2215411)"

Model Organisms: "Experiments were conducted in c. elegans strain SP304 (RRID:CGC-SP304)"

Cell lines: "Experiments were conducted in PC12 CLS cells (CLS Cat# 500311/p701-PC-12, RRID:CVCL-0481)"

Tools, Software, and Databases: "Image analysis was conducted with CellProfiler Image Analysis Software, V2.0 (http://www.cellprofiler.org, RRID:nif-0000-00280)"

Article Preparation Support

Wiley Editing Services offers expert help with English Language Editing, as well as translation, manuscript formatting, figure illustration, figure formatting, and graphical abstract design – so you can submit your manuscript with confidence. Also, check out our resources for Preparing Your Article for general guidance about writing and preparing your manuscript.

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