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Virology (journal)

Virology is a peer-reviewed scientific journal in virology. Established in 1955 by George Hirst, Lindsay Black and Salvador Luria, it is the earliest English-only journal to specialize in the field. The journal covers basic research into viruses affecting animals, plants, bacteria and fungi, including their molecular biology, structure, assembly, pathogenesis, immunity, interactions with the host cell, evolution and ecology. Molecular aspects of control and prevention are also covered, as well as viral vectors and gene therapy, but clinical virology is excluded.[1] As of 2013, the journal is published fortnightly by Elsevier.

Virology
DisciplineVirology
LanguageEnglish
Edited byMichael Emerman
Publication details
History1955–present
Publisher
FrequencyBiweekly
Delayed, after 12 months; hybrid
3.616 (2020)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4 (alt) · Bluebook (alt1 · alt2)
NLM (alt) · MathSciNet (alt )
ISO 4Virology
Indexing
CODEN (alt · alt2) · JSTOR (alt) · LCCN (alt)
MIAR · NLM (alt) · Scopus
CODENVIRLAX
ISSN0042-6822 (print)
1096-0341 (web)
LCCNa57005753
OCLC no.231794724
Links
  • Journal homepage
  • Online access

History edit

The field of virology began in the 1890s, with the discovery of infectious agents small enough to pass through filters sufficiently fine to catch bacteria.[2] The first specialist journal in the field, Archiv für die gesamte Virusforschung, appeared in 1939. Published by Springer-Verlag out of its Vienna office, its papers were in a mixture of languages, mainly German, French and English, and as the Second World War continued, publication became erratic.[2][3][4][5] Most research continued to be published in non-specialist scientific and medical journals, with the research communities studying the viruses of animals, plants and bacteria remaining separated from one another.[2][6]

George Hirst, Lindsay Black and Salvador Luria saw the need for a journal that united basic science research across all viruses, regardless of their host species.[7] They established Virology in 1955, and the journal first appeared in May of that year.[2][8][9] It was the first English-only journal to focus on virology,[2] and is the oldest United States-based journal in the specialism.[10] Hirst was the founding editor-in-chief, with Black and Luria being co-editors.[2] Between them, they covered the major disciplines of viruses infecting animals (Hirst), plants (Black) and bacteria (Luria).[11][12][13]

Unlike several other long-established general journals in the field, such as the Journal of Virology from the American Society for Microbiology and the Society for General Microbiology's Journal of General Virology (which both first appeared in 1967), Virology is a commercial journal which has never been associated with an academic society.[2][14][15] It was originally published by Academic Press, and then under the Academic Press imprints of purchasers Harcourt, Brace & World and Elsevier.[14][16]

However, since 1 October 2020, it was declared as the official journal of the World Society for Virology[17]

The journal was soon successful. Robert Wagner, founding editor of the Journal of Virology, describes Virology in the mid-1960s as "the well-established Academic Press journal Virology, which had an excellent reputation and to which many virus researchers, including myself, submitted their very best papers."[14] Seven issues in two volumes were published in the initial year, with a total of 538 pages. In 1959, the frequency increased to monthly, with three annual volumes, and the journal had nearly quadrupled in size by its sixth year.[2][18] The frequency increased to 14 issues per year in 1976, returning to monthly in 1987, and then increasing again over 1994–95 to reach twice monthly in 1996.[18]

The first issue contained a broad mix of research including papers on bacteriophages, the plant viruses, tobacco mosaic and potato virus X, and the animal viruses, influenza, Rift Valley fever and poliovirus. Authors included Renato Dulbecco, Alfred Hershey, Raymond Latarjet, André Michel Lwoff and Marguerite Vogt, among others. The journal had an international authorship from the start, with authors from the United States and France, two major centres of phage research at that date, as well as Japan.[9] The early content was biased towards virus structure and replication, which made up two-thirds of the content in the mid-1960s, but have gradually been replaced by research into pathogenesis, immunity and interactions with the host cell, which made up more than two-thirds of the journal in 1999.[2] The early journal was particularly known for publishing research into plant viruses. Wagner writes "our competitor, Virology, had emphasized plant viruses to such a degree that this area had become a paramount part of their publishing effort and most plant virologists looked upon Virology as their journal."[14] This focus changed over time, and by 1999, animal viruses were the subject of over 88% of the journal's content.[2]

 
Salvador Luria, one of Virology's founders

Hirst served as editor-in-chief for 21 years until 1975, and his influence on the journal was enormous. When he retired, his co-editors wrote that "he has defined the journal's objectives and established its style."[2] Hirst has had only three successors:[8] Wolfgang Joklik served for 18 years (1975–1994) and was succeeded by Robert A. Lamb (1994–2012).[2][19] Michael Emerman (Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, USA), took over in January 2013 until January 2019 when he was replaced by Richard Kuhn of Purdue University .[8][20][21] Of Hirst's co-founders, Luria, the well-known phage researcher, remained a co-editor for 18 years; Black was the plant virus editor until 1965.[2][12] Another well-known co-editor was Arnold J. Levine (1975–1984), who left Virology to become editor-in-chief of the Journal of Virology.[2]

Modern journal edit

Papers are accepted on all viruses, irrespective of host species, but the modern journal's primary focus is on animal viruses.[2] The journal content is divided by topic, rather than by type of virus.[1] The journal publishes occasional special issues, including reviews-only issues in 2011 and 2013.[22] From January 2013, recent content is available freely online after 12 months, with immediate free access to reviews and special issues.[23][24] Virology also participates in a hybrid open-access scheme, so that authors can pay for articles to be available online without delay.[1]

Abstracting and indexing edit

Virology has a 2020 impact factor of 3.616, according to Journal Citation Reports.[25] The journal is abstracted and indexed in:[16][26]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Elsevier: Virology: Guide for Authors (accessed 18 February 2013)
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Joklik WK. (1999) When two is better than one: Thoughts on three decades of interaction between Virology and the Journal of Virology. J Virol 73: 3520–3523 (text)
  3. ^ National Library of Medicine: NLM catalog: Archiv für die gesamte Virusforschung (accessed 18 February 2013)
  4. ^ SpringerLink: Archives of Virology: All Volumes & Issues (accessed 18 February 2013)
  5. ^ van Helvoort T. When did virology start? ASM News 62: 142–145
  6. ^ Hirst GK. (1962) Development of virology as an independent science. British Medical Journal 26 May: 1431–1437 (pdf)
  7. ^ Schlesinger RW, Granoff A (1994) "George K. Hirst (1909–1994)" Virology 200: 327
  8. ^ a b c Elsevier: Michael Emerman named editor-in-chief of Virology (accessed 17 February 2013)
  9. ^ a b Science Direct: Virology Volume 1, Issue 1, Pages 1-139 (May 1955) (accessed 17 February 2013)
  10. ^ Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center: Michael Emerman: Virology's new editor-in-chief (accessed 17 February 2013)
  11. ^ George Keble Hirst, 84, is dead; a pioneer in molecular virology. New York Times (26 January 1994) (accessed 18 February 2013)
  12. ^ a b Brakke MK, Reddy DVR. (1998) Lindsay M. Black, 1907 to 1997. Phytopathology 88: 872 (pdf) (accessed 18 February 2013)
  13. ^ National Library of Medicine: Profiles in Science: The Salvador E. Luria Papers (accessed 18 February 2013)
  14. ^ a b c d Wagner RR. (1999) The Journal of Virology: a Personal Retrospective. J Virol 73: 3515–3519 (text)
  15. ^ Postgate J (July 1995), "Fifty years of the SGM", Trends in Microbiology, 3 (7): 249–50, doi:10.1016/S0966-842X(00)88935-0, PMID 7551634
  16. ^ a b National Library of Medicine: NLM catalogue: Virology (accessed 18 February 2013)
  17. ^ Söderlund-Venermo, M.; Varma, A.; Guo, D.; Gladue, D. P.; Poole, E.; Pujol, F. H.; Pappu, H.; Romalde, J. M.; Kramer, L.; Baz, M.; Venter, M.; Moore, M. D.; Nevels, M. M.; Ezzikouri, S.; Vakharia, V. N.; Wilson, W. C.; Malik, Y. S.; Shi, Z.; Abdel-Moneim, A. S. (6 December 2021). "World Society for Virology First International Conference: Tackling Global Virus Epidemics". Virology. 35 (2): 248–52. doi:10.1016/j.virol.2021.11.009. PMC 8646940. PMID 34902730.
  18. ^ a b Science Direct: Virology Contents (accessed 18 February 2013)
  19. ^ Northwestern University: Lamb Laboratory: Curriculum Vitae: Robert Andrew Lamb (accessed 17 February 2013)
  20. ^ Elsevier: Virology Editorial Board (accessed 17 February 2013)
  21. ^ "Virology's New Editor-in-Chief Dr. Richard Kuhn - Department of Biological Sciences - Purdue University".
  22. ^ Elsevier: Virology: Special Issues (accessed 18 February 2013)
  23. ^ Elsevier: Virology: Index (accessed 17 February 2013)
  24. ^ Elsevier: Open up your research: publish in Virology (accessed 17 February 2013)
  25. ^ "Virology". 2020 Journal Citation Reports. Web of Science (Science ed.). Clarivate. 2021.
  26. ^ Elsevier: Virology: Abstracting and Indexing (accessed 18 February 2013)

External links edit

  • Official website

virology, journal, confused, with, virology, journal, virology, current, research, published, omics, publishing, group, virology, peer, reviewed, scientific, journal, virology, established, 1955, george, hirst, lindsay, black, salvador, luria, earliest, englis. Not to be confused with Virology Journal or Virology Current Research published by the OMICS Publishing Group Virology is a peer reviewed scientific journal in virology Established in 1955 by George Hirst Lindsay Black and Salvador Luria it is the earliest English only journal to specialize in the field The journal covers basic research into viruses affecting animals plants bacteria and fungi including their molecular biology structure assembly pathogenesis immunity interactions with the host cell evolution and ecology Molecular aspects of control and prevention are also covered as well as viral vectors and gene therapy but clinical virology is excluded 1 As of 2013 the journal is published fortnightly by Elsevier VirologyDisciplineVirologyLanguageEnglishEdited byMichael EmermanPublication detailsHistory1955 presentPublisherElsevierFrequencyBiweeklyOpen accessDelayed after 12 months hybridImpact factor3 616 2020 Standard abbreviationsISO 4 alt Bluebook alt1 alt2 NLM alt MathSciNet alt ISO 4VirologyIndexingCODEN alt alt2 JSTOR alt LCCN alt MIAR NLM alt ScopusCODENVIRLAXISSN0042 6822 print 1096 0341 web LCCNa57005753OCLC no 231794724LinksJournal homepage Online access Contents 1 History 2 Modern journal 3 Abstracting and indexing 4 References 5 External linksHistory editThe field of virology began in the 1890s with the discovery of infectious agents small enough to pass through filters sufficiently fine to catch bacteria 2 The first specialist journal in the field Archiv fur die gesamte Virusforschung appeared in 1939 Published by Springer Verlag out of its Vienna office its papers were in a mixture of languages mainly German French and English and as the Second World War continued publication became erratic 2 3 4 5 Most research continued to be published in non specialist scientific and medical journals with the research communities studying the viruses of animals plants and bacteria remaining separated from one another 2 6 George Hirst Lindsay Black and Salvador Luria saw the need for a journal that united basic science research across all viruses regardless of their host species 7 They established Virology in 1955 and the journal first appeared in May of that year 2 8 9 It was the first English only journal to focus on virology 2 and is the oldest United States based journal in the specialism 10 Hirst was the founding editor in chief with Black and Luria being co editors 2 Between them they covered the major disciplines of viruses infecting animals Hirst plants Black and bacteria Luria 11 12 13 Unlike several other long established general journals in the field such as the Journal of Virology from the American Society for Microbiology and the Society for General Microbiology s Journal of General Virology which both first appeared in 1967 Virology is a commercial journal which has never been associated with an academic society 2 14 15 It was originally published by Academic Press and then under the Academic Press imprints of purchasers Harcourt Brace amp World and Elsevier 14 16 However since 1 October 2020 it was declared as the official journal of the World Society for Virology 17 The journal was soon successful Robert Wagner founding editor of the Journal of Virology describes Virology in the mid 1960s as the well established Academic Press journal Virology which had an excellent reputation and to which many virus researchers including myself submitted their very best papers 14 Seven issues in two volumes were published in the initial year with a total of 538 pages In 1959 the frequency increased to monthly with three annual volumes and the journal had nearly quadrupled in size by its sixth year 2 18 The frequency increased to 14 issues per year in 1976 returning to monthly in 1987 and then increasing again over 1994 95 to reach twice monthly in 1996 18 The first issue contained a broad mix of research including papers on bacteriophages the plant viruses tobacco mosaic and potato virus X and the animal viruses influenza Rift Valley fever and poliovirus Authors included Renato Dulbecco Alfred Hershey Raymond Latarjet Andre Michel Lwoff and Marguerite Vogt among others The journal had an international authorship from the start with authors from the United States and France two major centres of phage research at that date as well as Japan 9 The early content was biased towards virus structure and replication which made up two thirds of the content in the mid 1960s but have gradually been replaced by research into pathogenesis immunity and interactions with the host cell which made up more than two thirds of the journal in 1999 2 The early journal was particularly known for publishing research into plant viruses Wagner writes our competitor Virology had emphasized plant viruses to such a degree that this area had become a paramount part of their publishing effort and most plant virologists looked upon Virology as their journal 14 This focus changed over time and by 1999 animal viruses were the subject of over 88 of the journal s content 2 nbsp Salvador Luria one of Virology s founders Hirst served as editor in chief for 21 years until 1975 and his influence on the journal was enormous When he retired his co editors wrote that he has defined the journal s objectives and established its style 2 Hirst has had only three successors 8 Wolfgang Joklik served for 18 years 1975 1994 and was succeeded by Robert A Lamb 1994 2012 2 19 Michael Emerman Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Seattle USA took over in January 2013 until January 2019 when he was replaced by Richard Kuhn of Purdue University 8 20 21 Of Hirst s co founders Luria the well known phage researcher remained a co editor for 18 years Black was the plant virus editor until 1965 2 12 Another well known co editor was Arnold J Levine 1975 1984 who left Virology to become editor in chief of the Journal of Virology 2 Modern journal editPapers are accepted on all viruses irrespective of host species but the modern journal s primary focus is on animal viruses 2 The journal content is divided by topic rather than by type of virus 1 The journal publishes occasional special issues including reviews only issues in 2011 and 2013 22 From January 2013 recent content is available freely online after 12 months with immediate free access to reviews and special issues 23 24 Virology also participates in a hybrid open access scheme so that authors can pay for articles to be available online without delay 1 Abstracting and indexing editVirology has a 2020 impact factor of 3 616 according to Journal Citation Reports 25 The journal is abstracted and indexed in 16 26 BIOSIS Biological Abstracts Chemical Abstracts Current Contents Mife Sciences Current Contents Clinical Medicine EMBASE Excerpta Medica Genetics Abstracts Immunology Abstracts MEDLINE Index Medicus Science Citation Index Scopus Tropical Diseases Bulletin CSA Virology and AIDS AbstractsReferences edit a b c Elsevier Virology Guide for Authors accessed 18 February 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Joklik WK 1999 When two is better than one Thoughts on three decades of interaction between Virology and the Journal of Virology J Virol 73 3520 3523 text National Library of Medicine NLM catalog Archiv fur die gesamte Virusforschung accessed 18 February 2013 SpringerLink Archives of Virology All Volumes amp Issues accessed 18 February 2013 van Helvoort T When did virology start ASM News 62 142 145 Hirst GK 1962 Development of virology as an independent science British Medical Journal 26 May 1431 1437 pdf Schlesinger RW Granoff A 1994 George K Hirst 1909 1994 Virology 200 327 a b c Elsevier Michael Emerman named editor in chief of Virology accessed 17 February 2013 a b Science Direct Virology Volume 1 Issue 1 Pages 1 139 May 1955 accessed 17 February 2013 Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center Michael Emerman Virology s new editor in chief accessed 17 February 2013 George Keble Hirst 84 is dead a pioneer in molecular virology New York Times 26 January 1994 accessed 18 February 2013 a b Brakke MK Reddy DVR 1998 Lindsay M Black 1907 to 1997 Phytopathology 88 872 pdf accessed 18 February 2013 National Library of Medicine Profiles in Science The Salvador E Luria Papers accessed 18 February 2013 a b c d Wagner RR 1999 The Journal of Virology a Personal Retrospective J Virol 73 3515 3519 text Postgate J July 1995 Fifty years of the SGM Trends in Microbiology 3 7 249 50 doi 10 1016 S0966 842X 00 88935 0 PMID 7551634 a b National Library of Medicine NLM catalogue Virology accessed 18 February 2013 Soderlund Venermo M Varma A Guo D Gladue D P Poole E Pujol F H Pappu H Romalde J M Kramer L Baz M Venter M Moore M D Nevels M M Ezzikouri S Vakharia V N Wilson W C Malik Y S Shi Z Abdel Moneim A S 6 December 2021 World Society for Virology First International Conference Tackling Global Virus Epidemics Virology 35 2 248 52 doi 10 1016 j virol 2021 11 009 PMC 8646940 PMID 34902730 a b Science Direct Virology Contents accessed 18 February 2013 Northwestern University Lamb Laboratory Curriculum Vitae Robert Andrew Lamb accessed 17 February 2013 Elsevier Virology Editorial Board accessed 17 February 2013 Virology s New Editor in Chief Dr Richard Kuhn Department of Biological Sciences Purdue University Elsevier Virology Special Issues accessed 18 February 2013 Elsevier Virology Index accessed 17 February 2013 Elsevier Open up your research publish in Virology accessed 17 February 2013 Virology 2020 Journal Citation Reports Web of Science Science ed Clarivate 2021 Elsevier Virology Abstracting and Indexing accessed 18 February 2013 External links edit nbsp Scholia has a venue profile for Virology Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Virology journal amp oldid 1198592614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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