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A Review of 2010 for PLoS Computational Biology

  • Rosemary Dickin,

    Affiliation Public Library of Science, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Cecy Marden,

    Affiliation Public Library of Science, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Andrew M. Collings,

    Affiliation Public Library of Science, Cambridge, United Kingdom

  • Ruth Nussinov,

    Affiliations National Cancer Institute, SAIC-Frederick, Maryland, United States of America, Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel

  • Philip E. Bourne

    pbourne@ucsd.edu

    Affiliations Department of Pharmacology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, United States of America, Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, United States of America

PLoS Computational Biology celebrated its fifth anniversary in 2010, and all in our community, either as readers, authors, or editors, should take pride in what has been accomplished in such a short space of time. In the past year we received 1,403 new Research Articles, a 295% increase from our first year of operation in 2005–2006 and a 17% increase over 2009. Of the articles submitted in 2010, 875 (62%) were rejected, and 70% of these were before review. We have seen growth not only in submissions, but in readership as well. Currently, around 16,000 readers receive the electronic table of contents, a 14% increase over the previous year. We published 392 Research Articles this year, along with 23 “front section” articles (Reviews, Perspectives, Education), down from 33 in the previous year. Eighty Associate Editors handled the combined submissions, with a total of 26 new editors joining this past year and six departing. We are proud to say that virtually every editor we asked to join accepted, a testament to how our community values the journal. These editors worked with more than 180 guest editors and 1,800 reviewers to handle the submissions, and we are of course very grateful for their support (Table S1).

Table 1 provides a list of Research Articles we have published since 2005 through October 2010 that have accrued over 10,000 downloads and shows the diversity of highly accessed papers published by the journal. Note that these are downloads from the PLoS Web site only, and do not include downloads from PubMed Central. Readers are free to review download statistics for all research and non-research articles published across the PLoS journals through the Microsoft Excel spreadsheet that can be found at http://www.ploscompbiol.org/static/plos-alm.zip. Individual article metrics and comments are available from the respective tabs associated with each article.

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Table 1. List of published Research Articles that have accrued over 10,000 downloads since launch.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002003.t001

In 2010, we launched two new features to enrich the journal: “The Roots of Bioinformatics” and “PLoS Conference Postcards”. The Roots of Bioinformatics was eloquently introduced by the Series Editor, David B. Searls, in June [1] and was followed in July by Russell F. Doolittle’s insightful reflections on the roots of protein evolution, which went back as far as the 1950s when chemistry, rather than computers, ruled [2]. More such reflections will follow in 2011. Conference Postcards act as a counterpoint to the rich roots retrospectives by providing current views of the field of computational biology, as young scientists present crisp perspectives on what they perceive as conference highlights. We published Postcards from January’s Pacific Symposium on Biocomputing (PSB) meeting held in Hawaii [3] and from the Intelligent Systems for Molecular Biology (ISMB) meeting held in Boston in July [4]. At the latter we learnt about various sessions held at ISMB, namely the Highlights session, the ISCB Student Council Symposium’s “speed dating” event, and reports from Satellite meetings. We look forward to digging deeper and receiving Postcards from further afield in 2011.

PLoS Computational Biology continues its strong relationship with the International Society for Computational Biology (ISCB) through postings on its Web site and activities at ISMB. At ISMB 2010 in Boston, PLoS Computational Biology ran a Workshop entitled “Where and How to Get Published” in which we endeavored to make the path to getting published a little less inscrutable. The first half was led by journal co-founders Philip E. Bourne and Steven E. Brenner and provided guidelines on how to write a good paper, and the second half included questions and advice from editors and authors from a range of career stages, which resulted in a broad discussion of what journals want and the state of publishing today. Presenters’ materials from the Workshop are available on the new PLoS Blog (http://blogs.plos.org/plos/2010/10/materials-from-plos%E2%80%99-workshop-at-ismb-2010/).

We have three major goals for 2011. First, to reduce the time to decision for submitted manuscripts, which currently averages 10 days for those papers rejected before review and 4050 days for those reviewed. Second, to introduce a new section called “Editors’ Outlook”, which are invited mini-reviews from members of our Editorial Board who will provide insights into their respective fields, discussing what is hot and what we can expect going forward. Collectively, these will provide an ongoing and insightful look into the broad and rapidly expanding field of computational biology—a field of endeavor the journal is proud to serve.

Specifically, current experimental techniques are leading to an unprecedented increase in the rate at which data are becoming available. When combined with the vast growth in computational power, we can expect rapid growth in computational papers. Computational biology is the area that helps in organizing the data, in making sense of observations, and in using these to make experimentally testable predictions. Our third goal is to keep abreast of these developments and keep PLoS Computational Biology the number one journal in the field.

Supporting Information

Table S1.

Guest Editors and reviewers for PLoS Computational Biology in 2010.

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1002003.s001

(XLS)

References

  1. 1. Searls DB (2010) The roots of bioinformatics. PLoS Comput Biol 6(6): e1000809.
  2. 2. Doolittle RF (2010) The roots of bioinformatics in protein evolution. PLoS Comput Biol 6(7): e1000875.
  3. 3. Datta RS, Lux MW, Bourne PE (2010) PLoS Computational Biology conference postcards from PSB 2010. PLoS Comput Biol 6(4): e1000746.
  4. 4. Chalancon G, Kosloff M, Osmanbeyoglu HU, Saraswathi S (2010) PLoS Computational Biology conference postcards from ISMB 2010. PLoS Comput Biol 6(11): e1002000.