About JHI
Aims and scope
Journal of Human Immunity (JHI) publishes papers that provide novel insights into the physiology and pathology of human immunity through the study of genetic defects and their phenocopies, including the study of leukocytes and other cells. The journal focuses on human inborn errors of immunity, encompassing conditions as diverse as infection, autoimmunity, autoinflammation, malignancy, and allergy. Human inborn errors of immunity include monogenic disorders with complete (Mendelian traits) or incomplete (non-Mendelian) penetrance. The journal welcomes other types of genetic basis (e.g., digenic) if causality is genetically unquestionable or if the immunological mechanism is documented (or both). Single patient and single kindred genetic studies are welcome, as are small and large series of patients. We will publish descriptions of new genotypes, immunological phenotypes, and clinical phenotypes, which may result from hitherto understudied ancestries or environments. The journal also welcomes other papers if they are clearly relevant to human inborn errors of immunity.
Criteria
To warrant publication in JHI, a manuscript must provide novel research findings of broad interest and clear in vivo relevance. Biomedical studies immediately relevant to disease will receive high priority.
Manuscript types
Articles present comprehensive studies providing novel and significant insight into an area of interest to our general readership. Articles are fully documented reports of original research, but should be as concise as possible without compromising the documentation of the data. Manuscripts containing purely descriptive observations or reports of new techniques in the absence of new biological insights will be considered if directly relevant to human inborn errors of immunity. Articles should be no more than 40,000 characters (not including spaces, figure legends, methods, and references), with up to 10 figures and/or tables. Articles may have up to five supplemental figures and references are unlimited.
Letters are typically but not necessarily brief reports providing new immunological or clinical insights from single patient cases. They can also be a small series of patients, or other findings that benefit from being published in a concise format, because of their importance or because of their brevity. They must not exceed 1,500 words, five references, and one figure or table. No supplemental materials or abstracts are permitted.
Front matter formats
Most front matter in JHI is commissioned by the editors. However, we do accept proposals for the following formats.
Reviews are peer-reviewed, comprehensive overviews on a topic of interest to the broad JHI readership. Reviews are usually 4,000–6,000 words in length and include three to four figures/tables. The number of references is unlimited.
Perspectives are similar pieces that offer a more speculative view of a topic related to human inborn errors of immunity or human immunity at large.
News & Views highlight primary research articles published in JHI and are not peer reviewed.
Editorial process
At JHI, we strive to provide exceptional service to our authors by ensuring timely, objective, and rigorous decision making.
Upon submission, manuscripts are reviewed by the Editor-in-Chief or Deputy Editor and an Associate Editor for general suitability and strength of advance. An initial decision is usually reached within one week.
We take requests for exclusions seriously and honor these requests whenever possible. Please note, however, that we may not honor requests for exclusion of our Associate Editors. The assignment of an Associate Editor is solely at the discretion of the in-house Editor-in-Chief, and Associate Editors do not act as external reviewers. Editors recuse themselves from the evaluation process when there is a conflict of interest.
If sent for external review, each manuscript is reviewed by several leading scientists in the relevant field. Decisions on reviewed manuscripts are usually reached within one month.
When submission of a revised manuscript is invited following external review, there is no deadline for resubmission. However, the novelty and priority will be reassessed accordingly, and the manuscript may be sent to the original reviewers and/or new reviewers. To expedite publication, only one major revision of each paper will be considered. A second, minor revision is common.
Authors can appeal editorial decisions through the manuscript submission system. They may also transfer their manuscript, reviewer comments, and reviewer identities to another journal through our transfer system (see our Transfer policy). Reviewers may opt out of having their identity transferred.
Manuscripts submitted by the Editor-in-Chief, Deputy Editor, and Associate Editors
Papers submitted by the Editor-in-Chief, Deputy Editor, and Associate Editors undergo external peer review and are handled solely by JHI consulting editors.
Editorial board
JHI is led by an Editor-in-Chief supported by a Deputy Editor, Associate Editors, a Scientific Advisory Board, and Boards of Society and Regional Editors.
The Editor-in-Chief is appointed by IAPIDS and Rockefeller University Press.
Appointment of Deputy Editor, Associate Editors, members of the Scientific Advisory Board, and Regional Editors are made by the Editor-in-Chief.
JHI Associate Editors are leading scientists representing the main research areas within the scope of the journal. In collaboration with the Editor-in-Chief and the Deputy Editor, Associate Editors are responsible for making timely, thoughtful, and objective editorial decisions on manuscripts in their research area.
The Scientific Advisory Board provides guidance to the Editor-in-Chief. Three members of the Scientific Advisory Board also have a Consulting Editor role with the responsibility of making timely, thoughtful, and objective editorial decisions on manuscripts submitted by the Editor-in-Chief, the Deputy Editor, and Associate Editors.
Society Editors are appointed by the Editor-in-Chief upon nomination of three members by each of the IAPIDS societies and other societies in the field of human inborn errors of immunity. Society Editors may serve as peer reviewers. They connect the JHI with the Societies in the field of human inborn errors of immunity.
Regional Editors are appointed by the Editor-in-Chief upon suggestions from the Deputy Editor and Associate Editors. Regional Editors serve as ambassadors for JHI.
About JHI
Aims and scope
Criteria
Manuscript types
Front matter formats
Editorial process
Editorial board
Editorial Policies
Authorship
Author name changes
Duplicate publication
Preprint policy
Animal and human studies
Clinical trial registration
Data integrity and plagiarism
Artificial Intelligence
Materials and data sharing
Data availability statement
Confidentiality
Voluntary demographic disclosure
Conflict of interest
Data deposition
Transfer policy
Open access
Media policy
Promotion and discoverability
Submission Guidelines
Presubmissions
Preparing for submission
Revised submissions
Source data
Manuscript organization and formatting
Reference guidelines
Figure and video guidelines
Accepted manuscripts
Short video summaries
Production and proofs
Appeals
Corrections and refutations
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