Submissions
Author Guidelines
Submitting your manuscript
At Phytopharmacological Communications, we are of the view that researchers should have significant ease in submitting their manuscripts and linking supplementary information and data to the journal. Authors wishing to submit a manuscript can do so through our online manuscript submission system. There are no page limits for the submitted manuscripts. Submitted files are only accepted in Word (.doc, .docx, .rtf) or PDF (.pdf) formats. The submitting author is responsible for the manuscript during the submission, peer-review, and further manuscript processing.
Terms of Submission
Submitted manuscripts are processed on the assumption that they have not been published elsewhere nor are being considered for publication anywhere. The submitted manuscript must be approved by all the contributing co-authors. All the relevant institutional approvals must be obtained by the submitting author before making a submission. The date of receipt is established by the acknowledgment from the editorial office. The submitted manuscript may be edited for improved readability. Further correspondence regarding the manuscript will be carried out through the corresponding author before the publication of the manuscript. Any inquiry concerning the accepted manuscript should be directed toward the editorial office.
Peer review
At Phytopharmacological Communications, we believe that robust and well-conducted peer review supports the advance of research and discovery by ensuring that research results are robust and trustworthy. Therefore, peer review is an integral part of publishing at Phytopharmacological Communications. All submitted articles go through an initial editorial assessment and then through peer review for editorial appropriateness, ethical standards, and technical soundness. A handling editor will first assess the submitted manuscript for editorial standards and whether the manuscript is within the scope of Phytopharmacological Communications. If the manuscript meets the basic editorial standards and lies within the scope of the journal, the editor will solicit the reviews of at least two external reviewers in a single-blind design where the reviewer’s names are not disclosed to the authors. The reviewers will assess the manuscript as per the journal's guidelines and send their assessments to the editor who will make a decision to accept or reject the manuscript. The editors make their decisions independent of the management of the journal. Occasionally, with submissions having serious societal, ethical, biosecurity, and security implications, our editors may seek advice outside standard peer review.
Concurrent submissions
Authors are not allowed to have more than 3 manuscripts submitted to the journal at a time. This is done to ensure sufficient diversity within the authorship of the journal. This policy applies only to peer-reviewed articles.
Preprints
Phytopharmacological Communications supports and encourages manuscript deposition in preprint servers. Deposition in preprint servers does not compromise the novelty of the manuscript. However, preprint must be cited in the manuscript. All manuscripts previously appeared in institutional repositories, and/or in a thesis will also be considered for publication.
Article types
The following type of articles will be considered for publication in Phytopharmacological Communications.
(i) Research Articles
Articles presenting the results of original research studies are welcomed. The submitted manuscript should include the methods used to carry out the study and a thorough analysis of the results of the study.
(ii) Reviews
Phytopharmacological Communications accepts reviews including systematic reviews and meta-analyses providing an overview of the published studies in a particular subject area. Sometimes reviews are invited.
(iii) Clinical Case Reports
Phytopharmacological Communications accepts clinical case reports which convey unique or rare, important, and best practice messages. We welcome case reports from all areas of Medicine if the report investigates and discusses molecular aspects of the case.
Formatting
All manuscripts submitted to Phytopharmacological Communications include page and line numbers and should be structured as follows:
Title and Authorship Information
The following information should be included:
- Manuscript title
- Full author names
- Full institutional mailing addresses
- Email addresses
Institutional Affiliations
At Phytopharmacological Communications, we believe that it should be simple for authors to link their institutions to their publications. The readers should also be able to understand these affiliations and that the institutions should have access to the published work by both past and present employees. Responsibility for affiliations rests with the authors and the journal is neutral to jurisdictional claims in institutional affiliations.
Corresponding authors
At Phytopharmacological Communications, we believe that the corresponding author should be empowered to act on behalf of all co-authors during the manuscript assessment and publication process.
Abstract
Each manuscript must be accompanied by an abstract. The abstract should be self-contained, citation-free, and should not contain more than 250 words.
Introduction
An introduction section must be a part of the manuscript where the authors present their research hypothesis and objectives. It should be succinct, with no headings.
Materials and Methods
This section should describe the methods used to carry out the study in sufficient detail to allow other researchers to replicate their results if they so desire. This section can be further subdivided into several sections if more than one method is used, e.g., materials and reagents, in vitro and in vivo studies, different animal models, statistical analysis, etc. If methods from previous articles are used, those articles must be cited. Checking for the license requirements and permissions for methods, software, tools, and questionnaires if any, are the responsibilities of the authors.
Results
This section should contain the results of the experiments conducted during the course of the study. Results should be properly analyzed before their description in text, tables, or figures. Extensive repetition of the results in tables and figures should be avoided if already described in the text.
Discussion
This section should discuss the results obtained in the study and how they relate to the existing literature. Novel findings should be justified on the basis of unambiguous results. Authors are encouraged to carefully make informed speculations on the basis of their results. However, claims not supported by the results should be avoided.
Main Text (Review only)
Reviews may be divided into various sections or may be combined.
Conclusions
This section should highlight the findings of the study and its main conclusions citing their relevance and significance.
Data Availability
Manuscript should include a data availability statement describing how readers can access the data obtained in the study. Authors should clearly outline the reasons if data could not be released.
Conflicts of Interest
Authors must declare a conflict of interest if any. Authors should also explain why a research interest may represent a conflict. If authors do not have any conflict of interest, they should still make a statement to that effect. Submitted authors are responsible for these statements on behalf of other coauthors.
Funding Statement
At Phytopharmacological Communications, we believe that due credit should be given to the funding sources by the authors. The readers should also be made aware of these funding sources and that the funding sources should have access to the published work that they sponsor. If the research was performed as part of an employment and the researchers did not obtain specific funding for the study, name of the employer should be mentioned. Please declare if the funding agency had any role in the manuscript writing, editing, and approval of the manuscript.
Author Contributions
The journal requires detailed information about individual contributions to the work. This information should be provided on submission. However, if not provided on submission, this information can be provided at subsequent revision stages, facilitated by the Editorial Office. The responsibility for ensuring that the contributions of all authors are mentioned correctly lies with the submitting author.
Acknowledgments
Anyone who contributed towards the study or manuscript, and who is not on the author's list, should be acknowledged. All acknowledgments should appear at the end of the manuscript just before the references.
References
Manuscripts may be submitted with any referencing style. Authors are responsible for the completeness and accuracy of the references. No uncited references should be present in the ‘References’ section. Please remove any uncited references if present. If the manuscript is accepted, the references will be changed to Chicago style.
Units of measurement
International Systems of Units (SI) should be used to measure and describe any quantity, with appropriate units.
Preparation of figures
Figures and tables should be provided within the main submission file in PDF format. They should not be sent as separate files. If the manuscript is accepted, the authors will be requested to provide each figure electronically in a separate file. Figures should be provided in the following formats; (Illustrator, EPS, WMF, FreeHand, CorelDraw, PowerPoint, Excel, etc.) or bitmap formats (Photoshop, TIFF, GIF, JPEG, etc.). All figures must be cited in the text.
Preparation of tables
Each table must have a descriptive title. If numerical units are used, the units should be provided in the column heading. Tables should be cited consecutively in the manuscript. Vertical rules should not be used.
Supplementary materials
Authors can provide additional files related to the manuscript that might be of interest to the readers. Authors are responsible to provide supplementary information in the complete, ready to publish form. Our production team will not modify supplementary information. “Supplementary Information” title should be added before the ‘References’ section with a concise description of each supplementary file.
Proofs
Proof of the accepted manuscripts will be sent to the submitting authors. Corrected proofs should be returned within 3days after which they will be promptly published.
Copyright and permissions
For an article to be published certain publishing rights are required which are obtained in the form of a publishing agreement between Phytopharmacological Communications and the author. Authors retain the copyright of their manuscripts, and all Open Access articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is properly cited.
Reporting guidelines
In order to maximize the reproducibility and transparency of the manuscripts, authors are encouraged to use appropriate reporting guidelines. Reviewers and editors are requested to use the same in the review process. Following guidelines for relevant article types are encouraged.
- SRQR for qualitative studies
- CONSORT for randomized controlled trials
- STREGA for genetic association studies
- PRISMA for systematic review and meta-analyses
- CARE for case reports
- TREND for non-randomized trials
- STROBE for observational studies
- STARD for diagnostic accuracy studies
- ARRIVE for animal experiments
Ethical guidelines
In any studies on human or animal subjects, the following ethical guidelines must be observed. For any experiments on humans, all work must be conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki (1964). The consent of human participants in research is of utmost importance prior to taking biometric, biomedical, and clinical data. The participants should be clearly and explicitly informed about the research details and no form of coercion or manipulation should be involved in order to gain consent.
Consent of human participants
The consent of human participants in research is of utmost importance prior to taking biometric, biomedical, and clinical data. The participants should be clearly and explicitly informed about the research details and no form of coercion or manipulation should be involved in order to gain consent.
Correction and Retractions
At Phytopharmacological Communications, it is our duty to ensure that the published literature meets the highest standards of integrity and we must act quickly to address any concerns regarding the work that we publish.
Personal data
We, at Phytopharmacological Communications, believe that personal data should be disclosed only with the full permission of the individual to whom the data pertains.
Plagiarism
We believe that Phytopharmacological Communications has a responsibility to investigate any instances of plagiarism that it detects.
Research data
We believe that Phytopharmacological Communications should support community best practices in the sharing and archiving of research data.
Third-Party Submissions
At Phytopharmacological Communications, we believe in legal publishing and reuse, and therefore, it is vital to secure the correct rights to third party content.
Image Integrity
Adding, removing, enhancing, obscuring, or introducing features into images is not allowed. Adjusting color, contrast and brightness are acceptable if and only they do not obscure the content that is depicted in the original image. To improve clarity, image manipulation is acceptable. However, manipulation for other purposes could be seen as scientific and ethical abuse and will be dealt with accordingly.
Appeals
Phytopharmacological Communications would consider appeals by the submitting authors whose papers have been rejected only if they are accompanied by sufficient justification. If the authors feel that their manuscript was rejected due to a misunderstanding of a technical or scientific aspect of the manuscript, they can lodge an appeal by quoting the original manuscript number.
Submission Preparation Checklist
All submissions must meet the following requirements.
- The submission has not been previously published, nor is it before another journal for consideration (or an explanation has been provided in Comments to the Editor).
- The submission file is in OpenOffice, Microsoft Word, or RTF document file format.
- Where available, URLs for the references have been provided.
- The text is single-spaced; uses a 12-point font; employs italics, rather than underlining (except with URL addresses); and all illustrations, figures, and tables are placed within the text at the appropriate points, rather than at the end.
- The text adheres to the stylistic and bibliographic requirements outlined in the Author Guidelines.
Research Articles
Section default policy
Copyright Notice
Author(s) who publish article in Phytopharmacological Communications (PPC), agree to the following terms:
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Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under license Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY) that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgment of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
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Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in this journal.
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Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work.
Privacy Statement
The names and email addresses entered in this journal site will be used exclusively for the stated purposes of this journal and will not be made available for any other purpose or to any other party.