OPEN-ACCESS PEER-REVIEWED
FOREWORD
Roland J.W. Meesters
Inholland University of Applied Sciences, Department of Life Sciences and Chemistry, Amsterdam, the Netherlands and Universidad de los Andes, Department of Chemistry, Bogotá D.C., Colombia.
Journal of Applied Bioanalysis. Vol.3. No.1. pages 1-4 (2017)
Published 15 January 2017. https://doi.org/10.17145/jab.17.001 | (ISSN 2405-710X)
Correspondence: Dr. Roland J.W. Meesters. Present address: Inholland University of Applied Sciences, Department of Life Sciences and Chemistry, De Boelelaan 1109, 1081 HV Amsterdam, the Netherlands and and Universidad de los Andes, Department of Chemistry, Bogotá D.C., Colombia. Phone: +31 (0)681585826.
Citation:
Meesters RJ. Welcome to the third volume of the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis. J Appl Bioanal 3(1), 1-4 (2017).
Open-access and Copyright: ©2017 Meesters RJ. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY) which permits any use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
Funding/Manuscript writing assistance: The author has no financial support or funding to report and also declares that no writing assistance was utilized in the production of this article.
Competing interest: The author has declared that no competing interest exists.
Article history: Received: 28 December 2016, Revised 10 January 2017, Accepted 12 January 2017.
Keywords
Bioanalysis, journal of applied bioanalysis, bioanalytical chemistry, research.
As last year, I would like to take at the beginning of the new year the opportunity to take a look back on the past year [1]. The Journal of Applied Bioanalysis celebrates it’s second anniversary with the publication of the third volume this year. The journal is an Open Access peer-reviewed journal that focusses on the publication of articles on all different aspects of Bioanalysis. The journal provides a platform for the publication of different types of scientific communications; including original research, critical reviews, short communications, expert opinion and other of latest relevant and significant developments in the bioanalysis discipline.
The audience of the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis are scientists, bioanalytical chemists and technicians working in pharmaceutical sciences, clinical laboratories, therapeutic drug monitoring, (clinical) toxicology, forensic sciences as well in sports doping and drugs of abuse analysis.
Highlights 2016
The journal was rewarded in the month July with the DOAJ Seal from the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ) [2]. The DOAJ is an on-line directory that indexes and provides access to high-quality, open access peer-reviewed journals. The DOAJ Seal is a mark of certification for open access journals, awarded to journals that achieve a high level of openness, adhere to Best Practice and high publishing standards. At the time of writing this article, there were about 9300 journals indexed at DOAJ, around 500 journals were awarded the DOAJ Seal (approx. 5.4%). In the month August, the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis (CODEN JABODF) became indexed at the Chemical Abstracts Services (CAS) [3] from the American Chemical Society (ACS) in Columbus, Ohio, USA. This database contains approx. 8000 chemical journals and chemistry related articles from all journals are indexed.
Upcoming Highlights 2017
Being an open access journal, we naturally support every initiative for making science and scientific information freely available on the world wide web. Therefore, the journal started it’s collaboration with ScienceOpen Inc.[4]. All volumes of the journal are now also available on the ScienceOpen.com website and network. ScienceOpen.com is a freely accessible research network for discovering and evaluating scientific information. The ScienceOpen network contains about 27 million articles and article records.
Furthermore, the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis collaborates now also with ReviewerCredits.com [5] and Publons.com [6]. ReviewerCredits and Publons are completely free and independent organisation from publishers of academic journals. Peer-reviewers of manuscripts of journals collaborating with ReviewerCredits can earn redeemable credits for the reviews performed and accumulate a personal Reviewer Index. This index reflects then the peer-reviewer’s activity as a reviewer, hence, the contribution for the advancement of science. Peer reviewers can use their Reviewer Index on their resume or for grants request. We agreed upon with Reviewercredits.com that peer-reviewers of manuscripts from Journal of Applied Bioanalysis will receive double credits for their peer-review of Journal of Applied Bioanalysis manuscripts. Moreover, this year the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis will start in collaboration with Betasciencepress Academy offering workshops on Scientific writing and Publishing and Peer-review of scientific manuscripts.
Figures and Tables
[Click to enlarge]
Number of issues
The four issues of the second volume of the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis published a variety of articles in areas such as therapeutic drug monitoring, sample preparation, natural product research, food analysis, proteomics and other applications of bioanalysis. Published were editorial, expert opinion, original and review articles. The details of the ten most accessed and downloaded papers published in the four issues of the second volume of the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis can be seen in (Table 1).
Demographics of readers and authors
The Journal of Applied Bioanalysis has developed in short time a diverse reader audience around the globe. Scientists/visitors from 97 different countries around the world viewed and/or downloaded articles published in the second volume at the journal’s homepage [8]. The majority of journal’s homepage visits and article downloads came from visitors located in the Americas (26.22%), Europe (57.94%) and Asia (11.06%) while also views from other continents were observed (Figure 1). Authors published in volume 2 of the journal originated from four different continents as presented in Figure 2.
Journal of Applied Bioanalysis presence on social media
The editorial office understands the importance social media has for achieving a strong presence in the bioanalytical community and on the world wide web. Social media is a great medium to inform, announce new issues and reach out to readers interested in bioanalytical chemistry and open access publishing. The journal’s presents itself on LinkedIn [7], Twitter [8], Google+ [9] and Facebook [10]. On these different social media sites, the journal provides its followers/members with the latest journal updates, news or other interesting information
Special issues
I would like to invite you kindly to contact the editorial office if you have a proposal for a special issue based on a topic of high current interest that is broad enough to attract a reasonable audience but at a topic that is also narrow enough to keep a strong focus. In this way, the journal can keep contributing to the growth of free accessible high-quality bioanalytical articles as well continuing in playing its part in making the bioanalytical community (more) aware of the great possibilities of open access publishing, specific in this exciting and constantly changing area of analytical chemistry.
Last but not least, I like to thank the dedicated support of all editorial board members, authors, peer-reviewers and last but not least all readers and thank them with the knowledge that without them the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis would not have been possible
References
1. Meesters RJ. First anniversary of the Journal of Applied Bioanalysis. J Appl Bioanal 2(1), 1-5 (2016).
2. www.doaj.org
3. www.cas.org
4. www.scienceopen.com
5. www.reviewercredits.com
6. https://publons.com/journal/38278/journal-of-applied-bioanalysis
7. www.linkedin.com
8. www.twitter.com/JABeditor
9. https://plus.google.com/u/1/101575665770787138132/posts/p/pub
10. www.facebook.com/JABjournal
11. Sandoval Parra MA, Rincon Pabon JP, Meesters RJ. Bioanalytical evaluation of dried plasma spot microsampling methodologies in pharmacokinetic studies applying Acetaminophen as model drug. J Appl Bioanal 2(1), 25-37 (2016). [CrossRef]
12. Cross TG, Hornshaw MP. Can LC and LC-MS Ever Replace Immunoassays? J Appl Bioanal 2(4), 108-116 (2016). [CrossRef]
13. Giri B. A perspective on the sensitivity of paper-analytical devices for bioanalysis. J Appl Bioanal 2(1), 6-9 (2016). [CrossRef]
14. Pamreddy A and Panyala NR. Top-down proteomics: applications, recent developments and perspectives. J Appl Bioanal 2(2), 52-75 (2016). [CrossRef]
15. Xu X. In vivo Characterization of Therapeutic Monoclonal Antibodies. J Appl Bioanal 2(1), 10-15 (2016). [CrossRef]
16. Meesters RJ. Open Access Week 2015 survey: results and conlcusions. J Appl Bioanal 2(2), 46-48 (2016). [CrossRef]
17. Frasca V. Biophysical characterization of antibodies with isothermal titration calorimetry. J Appl Bioanal 2(3), 90-102 (2016). [CrossRef]
18. Ďurišová M. Computational Analysis of Pharmacokinetic Behavior of Ampicillin. J Appl Bioanal 2(3), 84-89 (2016). [CrossRef]
19. Sarazin C and Riollet P. Fast analysis of potassium, sodium, calcium, and magnesium cations in total parenteral nutrition formulations with the Wyn-CE Capillary Electrophoresis System coupled with a contactless conductivity detection. J Appl Bioanal 2(2), 76-80 (2016). [CrossRef]
20. Fan L. HSPA-A universal graphical user interface for the Hamilton Microlab STAR liquid handler. J Appl Bioanal 2(1), 38-44 (2016). [CrossRef]