Browse Inside eLife

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  1. Early-Career Reviewers Pool: Authors can now select and nominate early-career reviewers for their work

    Long used by our Reviewing Editors, a vetted list of ∼600 early-career reviewers is now available to prospective authors when searching for suitable reviewers during the submission process.
    1. Genetics and Genomics
    2. Neuroscience

    Preprints Reviewed by eLife: A “tour-de-force” study of neuronal maturation

    Read what peer reviewers thought about a recent preprint on chromatin accessibility and neuronal maturation.
  2. eLife Latest: Announcing a new technology direction

    eLife’s technology strategy shifts from building a suite of open-source products for use by publishers to a renewed focus on building open scholarly infrastructure to support the ‘publish, review, curate’ model.
  3. Call for Pitches: “When politics come into play”

    Tell us how political events have changed the way you conduct research.
  4. Open Peer Reviewers in Africa: Nominations are now open to recruit future peer-review trainers across the continent

    AfricArXiv, Eider Africa, eLife, PREreview, and the Training Centre in Communication (TCC Africa) invite nominations for researchers in the fields of life sciences and medicine who will help co-create and then disseminate resources promoting best open peer-review practices in Africa.
  5. eLife Latest: A new vision for transforming research communication

    eLife’s plans for the future encompass our core values of openness, integrity and inclusiveness.
  6. eLife Latest: Applications open for new Reviewing Editors from Latin America and the Caribbean

    eLife is looking to recruit researchers from these regions with an open call for self-nominations to its editorial board.
  7. For Authors: Why publish with eLife?

    eLife is committed to publishing high-quality research in all areas of biology and medicine, and to reforming peer review and publishing.
  8. Call for Pitches: “When things don’t go to plan”

    Tell us about what went wrong – and what came next.
  9. Peer Review: Highlighting preprints reviewed by eLife during February

    Read what peer reviewers thought about three recent preprints on the links between heart disease and breast cancer, proton pumps and malaria, and the response of neurons to mechanical forces.