From the beginning microPublication Biology has been supported by a grant from the National Libraries of Medicine. However, as of April 2nd 2022, as part of our long-term sustainability plan we instituted an article processing charges (APCs) of $250 per article. This charge should cover costs but not new initiatives. No article will be refused because of an author's inability to pay page these charges.
The major goal of microPublication Biology is to rapidly place research findings into the public domain. Thus unlike other journal platforms, we publish single high quality research results, independent of perceived impact, which can be new research findings, negative results, reproduced/replicated results or “unpublished observations” from prior publications. Single results stand alone, and do not require a narrative story to placate editors. Placing such findings into the public domain not only advances the scientific endeavor, but also gives credit to the individual(s) that did the work.
Importantly, unlike other journal platforms, information from each microPublication is directly incorporated into community databases (e.g., WormBase) through the use of author populated user-friendly web forms that rely on controlled vocabularies, when available – thus advancing the goal of making the content of each microPublication computable.
Yes! microPublications are indexed in PubMed Central and are findable in both PubMed Central and PubMed. We are also indexed in EuropePMC.
Yes, you can submit your article to microPublication and deposit it in bioRxiv.
On the Guidelines for reviewers page you can find information on how to sign up to be on the reviewer’s list.
Principal Investigators, Postdocs, and senior graduate students can review articles for microPublication Biology. Before selecting a postdoc or a senior graduate student as reviewer, we ask their supervisor’s approval.
First off, at this point, you would be crazy to rely solely on microPublications for promotion. We just don't know yet how academic scientists will respond. If the data won’t be published, microPublications are clearly better than nothing. Digging deeper, let's consider co-authorships. What is the CV value of a sixth authorship? Certainly worth something, especially if augmented by first-authorships. What did you do to deserve that co-authorship? Probably it was to contribute a figure or a panel in a complex figure, or a supplemental figure. Well, a microPublication is essentially one figure, so we consider it of equal value, and possibly more valuable because you are the first author. Lastly, some microPublications are of high value and will be relatively highly cited. As you can see, microPublications have clear value to your CV already, but perhaps more importantly, to the broader scientific enterprise.
microPublication Biology aims at getting all data to the community, hence we discourage mention of ‘unpublished’ and ‘data not shown’ observations in the manuscript.
Data not shown and unpublished observations should be shown in the microPublication or microPublished as a separate submission.
Yes, you can cite any data published in microPublication Biology as you would cite any other data published in a previously published research article.
Yes, microPublication Biology accepts negative results.
These articles are extended narratives for data published as a microPublication. Each Integrations article furthers the discussion of data reported in multiple microPublications. Integrations can include a final experiment that ties published microPublication data into a cohesive report. Authors submitting Integrations should follow all Author Guidelines as stated for normal microPublications.