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Plant Physiol, May 2000, Vol. 123, pp. 1-2
Broadening the Scope While Maintaining High Impact
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INTRODUCTION |
Starting with this issue, a new editorial board assumes
responsibility for the editorial policies of Plant
Physiology. With the support of the scientific community, I will
strive to continue the policies put in place by the previous editor,
Maarten Chrispeels, and to further broaden the scope of the journal.
Under Maarten's leadership, the journal experienced a steady rise in
its "impact factor" and maintained its position as the plant
biology journal with the highest citation rate. Plant
Physiology remains unique among all plant biology journals: It is
a first-rank, peer-reviewed journal published by a scientific society;
it is run for and by scientists; and it is committed to scientific
excellence and publishing the broadest range of papers in modern plant
biology. While building on these strengths, I have also set myself the
goal of further increasing the visibility and influence of Plant
Physiology by continuing to emphasize excellence, broadening the
content, and enlivening the presentation. In this manner, I hope that
Plant Physiology will come to be viewed by plant biologists
as the journal of choice for the widest spectrum of plant science
research, the journal in which all of the fields of plant biology
converge as we enter the post-genomic era.
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HOW CAN THIS AMBITIOUS GOAL BE ACHIEVED? |
Peer-reviewed, primary research articles will continue to be the
predominant thrust of scientific information in Plant
Physiology. We will broaden the disciplinary scope of Plant
Physiology to reflect the amazing changes occurring worldwide in
plant biology. If you compare the new board with previous boards, you
will see that it is more international than ever before. I have
persuaded an international group of outstanding scientists to join our
editorial board. Although published by the American Society of Plant
Physiologists, this is not an American journal; Plant
Physiology belongs to the international community of plant
biologists, and it will continue to serve their needs and be published
for their benefit.
To broaden the scope of the journal, we have created some new areas
with their own associate editors and strengthened some existing areas.
For example, Barry Osmond (Australia) and Ernst Steudle (Germany), both
world leaders in their respective fields, have agreed to become
monitoring editors. This will strengthen the section on "Whole
Plant and Ecophysiology," for which Jan Zeevaart (U.S.), an
authority on hormone physiology, will be the Associate Editor.
Frederick Ausubel (U.S.) has agreed to be the Associate Editor for
"Plants Interacting with Other Organisms." He will be able to rely
on several new monitoring editors, who, though young, have already made
outstanding contributions to the field. The new Associate Editor for
Development is Ben Scheres (The Netherlands). He will be assisted by
several new editors in this rapidly expanding field. Joanne Chory
(U.S.) will continue as Associate Editor for "Signal Transduction and
Hormone Action." Rapid progress in the study of plant genomes
and molecular evolution dictates that we appoint an associate
editor for this field, and Susan Wessler (U.S.) has agreed to help
shape this new section. If you are in this field, expect a phone call
from Susan urging you to send us a paper from your laboratory. Vicki
Chandler (U.S.) will continue to serve as head of the section
"Molecular Biology and Gene Regulation," and John Browse (U.S.)
will lead the section devoted to "Biochemical Processes."
Don Ort (U.S.) has accepted my invitation to continue to serve as
Associate Editor for "Environmental Stress and Adaption" and
"Bioenergetics and Photosynthesis." I will take responsibility for
the "Cell Biology" section. If you look attentively at the
new list of associate and monitoring editors, you will see where the
journal is headed.
I am also introducing some new features to the journal, some of which
were announced in January. The new section Breakthrough Technologies has met with an extremely positive initial response from the plant community. Because plant science is in an unprecedented growth period, the board will attempt to provide the most rapid turnaround time feasible. Several new members have joined the board to
serve as monitoring editors responsible for this section. If you are on
the verge of writing a manuscript describing a technological breakthrough, contact Rob Last (e-mail malto: rob.last{at}cereon.com; phone 617-551-8223) and solicit his opinion. We will invigorate the
Scientific Correspondence section, which is also very
rapidly reviewed, mainly by members of the board. For this section, we will accept very short articles (one to three printed pages) covering new scientific ideas and analyzing new and interesting concepts and
paradigms. I will personally solicit such contributions and will
initially handle the review process myself. In the past, Maarten
Chrispeels handled all of the Updates himself. I have shifted this responsibility to two new feature editors, Ann Hirsch and
Wilhelm Gruissem, who will solicit Updates and occasionally Meeting Reports.
Because Plant Physiology is an extremely broad journal
covering all of plant biology, the impact or relevance of a particular article may not be immediately obvious to all readers from the title or
from a quick perusal of the abstract. To make it easier for our readers
to spot articles relevant to their research, in the near future we will
feature a new section at the front of the journal to be called On
the Inside. In this section, five interesting articles from the
issue will be highlighted. Our hope is to draw readers' attention to a
wider variety of excellent research. With the help of the other
editors, I will select the articles to be featured in this section,
which will be written by a yet-to-be-appointed science writer. The
executive committee of ASPP has granted our request to add a science
writer to the Plant Physiology staff.
Plant Physiology is rapidly moving toward electronic
submission and web-based reviewing, which undoubtedly will
substantially speed turnaround times. The electronic journal is already
available on the web 2 to 3 weeks earlier than the hard copy,
and
links to supplementary material on the web are also
in place. Criteria for publication in Plant Physiology were
set forth in January's Editorial (Vol. 122, pp. 1-2). We
aim to publish a broad spectrum of papers that bring new insights into
plant biological processes. By enhancing the level of communication among board members, we will do our best to ensure that these criteria
are applied consistently.
Finally, the success of Plant Physiology rests
not only on the quality of the work published, but also on the trust,
cooperation, and respect between the editors of the journal and the
international community of plant biologists. I assure you that as
Editor-in-Chief, I will do everything possible to secure that trust and respect.
On behalf of The Editorial Board of
Plant Physiology,
Natasha V. Raikhel, Editor-in-Chief
© 2000 American Society of Plant Physiologists
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