FEBS Letters

FEBS Letters  
Abbreviated title (ISO 4)
FEBS Lett.
Discipline Molecular biosciences
Edited by Felix Wieland
Publication details
Publisher
Wiley on behalf of FEBS
Publication history
1968–present
Frequency 24 issues/year
After 12 months/Hybrid
3.169
Indexing
ISSN 0014-5793 (print)
1873-3468 (web)
LCCN 68006508
CODEN FEBLAL
OCLC no. 1569056
Links

FEBS Letters is a peer-reviewed scientific journal covering all aspects of molecular biosciences, including molecular biology and biochemistry. The aim of the journal is to publish primary research as short reports in the form of Research Letters and Hypotheses, as well as secondary research in the form of Review articles. FEBS Letters is published by Wiley on behalf of the Federation of European Biochemical Societies (FEBS). The editorial office of FEBS Letters is based in Heidelberg, Germany.

History

The first cover of FEBS Letters published in July 1968

The initial idea of FEBS Letters as a journal for rapid communication of short reports in biochemistry, biophysics and molecular biology was proposed by the Secretary General of FEBS, W.J. Whelan, at the 4th FEBS Meeting held in Oslo in 1967.[1][2][3] After further discussions and preparations, the first issue of FEBS Letters appeared in July 1968[4] with Satya Prakash Datta acting as Managing Editor. The initial editorial policy urged the authors to submit their manuscripts directly to a member of the Editorial Board, who independently evaluated them and, if needed, consulted external referees.[5] Apart from original research articles, early on FEBS Letters started publishing short reviews, hypotheses, discussion articles and meeting reports, as well as a number of supplements to regular issues extensively covering topical subjects.[3] In 2000 the handling of manuscripts was centralized and the editorial process amended and standardized.[6]

Satya Prakash Datta, who served as Managing Editor until 1985, was succeeded by Giorgio Semenza (1986-2000) and Matti Saraste (2000-2001). Since 2001, the Managing Editor is Felix Wieland.[7]

The journal published 144 articles in 1968, and from then on steadily increased its output to reach an all-time high of 1733 published articles in 1999.[8]

Editorial and publishing concept

FEBS Letters staff consists of the Managing Editor, the Editorial Office and the Editorial Board. The Editorial Board is composed of Academic Editors, who are exclusively active scientists working in different fields of the molecular biosciences.

In accordance with the Managing Editor, the staff at the Editorial Office evaluates all submissions based on editorial policy and general scientific criteria. Manuscripts that pass through the pre-screening process are distributed to appropriate Academic Editors. The Academic Editors evaluate the manuscripts, supervise the peer-review process and make final decisions autonomously. The handling time from submission to first decision is on average 2.3 weeks.[6] Manuscripts accepted for publication are processed by Wiley and published both online and in print, bundled in 24 issues per year.

FEBS Letters follows a typical scientific society publishing model, where the income generated by the journal is used by FEBS to fund its activities, i.e. FEBS fellowships, advanced courses and workshops, congresses, and travel grants.[9]

Special Issues

Cover of the Synthetic Biology Special Issue, FEBS Lett. 586 (15)

FEBS Letters publishes four to six Special Issues per year. Special Issues are collections of topical Review articles written by distinguished scientists covering the latest developments on specific topics in the molecular biosciences. Special Issue articles are commissioned, but, nevertheless, undergo the usual evaluation procedure exerted by the journal. Every year a Special Issue is directly associated with the FEBS Congress and consists of a compilation of Review articles contributed by speakers presenting their work at the congress.

Access

All accepted articles are published online by Wiley on behalf of FEBS. The FEBS Letters archive is completely digitalized and available back to the first issue in 1968. FEBS Letters follows a subscription-based model with a delayed and hybrid open access policy. All articles are made available to non-subscribers for free after 12 months, with Review articles and Hypotheses being available for free immediately. FEBS Letters also offers authors an immediate open access solution for Research Letters through Sponsored Articles.[10]

FEBS Letters Award

Every other year FEBS Letters offers a prestigious prize of €10,000 to the senior author of an outstanding Research Letter published in FEBS Letters during the previous two calendar years. The winning article is selected in an unbiased fashion by a special Award Committee formed by appointed members of the Editorial Board plus one external member. The awardee will be invited to present a plenary lecture at the FEBS Congress, where she/he will be presented with the award.[11] The award has been presented regularly since 2003.[11]

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is indexed in:


References

  1. Whelan, WJ (1974). "The foundation and early years of FEBS.". FEBS Letters 40 (0): suppl:S154–9. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(74)80698-8. PMID 4153118.
  2. Whelan, WJ (1986). "How FEBS Letters began". FEBS Letters 194 (1): v–vii. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(86)80038-2.
  3. 1 2 Datta, SP (1988). "The early days of FEBS Letters". FEBS Letters 233 (2): iii. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(88)80428-9.
  4. Šorm, F (1968). "Foreword". FEBS Letters 1 (1): I. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(68)80002-X.
  5. Datta, SP (1974). "FEBS Letters". FEBS Letters 40: S174. doi:10.1016/0014-5793(74)80705-2.
  6. 1 2 FEBS Letters (2012). "Editorial Office".
  7. Feldmann, Horst (2004). "FEBS Letters". Forty years of FEBS: 1964 to 2003: a memoir. Blackwell. pp. 97–98. ISBN 1405117648.
  8. "Scopus". Elsevier. Retrieved 26 September 2012.
  9. "FEBS Publications". Retrieved 18 October 2012.
  10. "Sponsored Articles". Elsevier. Retrieved 12 October 2012.
  11. 1 2 "FEBS Letters Young Group Leader Award". Retrieved 12 October 2012.

External links

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