Key Dimensions and Scopes of Scientific Journals
Scientific journals don't operate as a single, uniform system — they're a sprawling ecosystem defined by overlapping rules about what counts as science, who gets to evaluate it, and where the results land. The dimensions covered here map the actual boundaries of scientific journal publishing: coverage scope, inclusion and exclusion criteria, geographic reach, regulatory frameworks, and the contextual variables that make two journals in the same discipline behave very differently from each other. Understanding these dimensions matters because the boundaries are contested, consequential, and frequently misunderstood by researchers navigating them for the first time.
- Common scope disputes
- Scope of coverage
- What is included
- What falls outside the scope
- Geographic and jurisdictional dimensions
- Scale and operational range
- Regulatory dimensions
- Dimensions that vary by context
Common scope disputes
The most persistent argument in scientific publishing isn't about impact factors or open access fees — it's about what qualifies as a scientific journal in the first place. The dispute runs along at least 3 distinct fault lines.
The first is the peer review boundary. Peer review is widely treated as the defining characteristic of legitimate scientific publication, but the mechanism varies enough across journals that two publications can both claim peer review while operating almost nothing alike. Single-blind, double-blind, open peer review, and post-publication peer review all carry the same label while applying fundamentally different scrutiny. The peer review process determines not just quality but reproducibility, and conflating these variants creates real downstream problems for researchers citing findings.
The second dispute concerns preprints. Servers like bioRxiv and arXiv distribute scientific manuscripts before peer review, and a growing faction of researchers treats posting there as a form of publication. Traditional journal editors and many institutional grant offices disagree. The preprint servers vs. refereed journals debate has sharpened since 2020, when preprint findings drove major policy decisions before formal review completed.
The third fault line is predatory publishing. An estimated 10,000+ journals operate without credible peer review while mimicking the visual and structural markers of legitimate outlets (Beall's List research, documented in Nature coverage circa 2017). These journals occupy a contested zone — they issue DOIs, list editorial boards, and collect article processing charges, yet fail the substantive criteria most researchers apply.
Scope of coverage
Scientific journals, as a category, cover the full range of empirical and theoretical inquiry across the natural sciences, social sciences, engineering, and medicine. The types of scientific journals extend from highly specialized single-discipline outlets (covering, say, only cephalopod neurobiology) to broad multidisciplinary platforms publishing across dozens of fields in a single issue.
Coverage is typically defined along 3 axes: disciplinary scope, article type, and methodological approach. A journal covering only randomized controlled trials in cardiovascular medicine has a tightly constrained scope on all 3 axes simultaneously. A journal like PLOS ONE deliberately neutralizes disciplinary and methodological constraints, accepting any scientifically sound study regardless of field or novelty of finding.
What is included
Scientific journals include, at minimum, the following content categories:
- Original research articles — primary empirical findings presented with methodology, results, and interpretation
- Review articles — systematic or narrative synthesis of existing literature within a defined question
- Methods articles — descriptions of new experimental, computational, or analytical techniques
- Letters and communications — abbreviated reports of time-sensitive findings
- Case reports (primarily in medicine) — single-patient or single-site observations meeting specific reporting standards
- Editorials and commentaries — opinion and interpretation from named authors, typically distinguished from formally evaluated research content
- Corrections and retractions — formal modifications to the published record, governed by retractions and corrections standards
For a journal to be indexed in major databases like PubMed, Scopus, or Web of Science, the publication must demonstrate consistent peer review, defined scope, and an ISSN registration. Web of Science alone indexes approximately 21,000 journals as of its most recent public figures (Clarivate).
What falls outside the scope
The boundaries matter as much as the inclusions. Scientific journals, properly defined, exclude:
- Conference proceedings published without independent peer review, even when they contain original data
- Technical reports issued by government agencies or corporate R&D divisions without external referee scrutiny
- Theses and dissertations, which undergo committee review but not the independent multi-reviewer process journals require
- Science journalism and magazines (including publications like Scientific American and Discover), which communicate findings but do not publish primary research
- Gray literature — working papers, policy briefs, and preprints that have not completed the publication pipeline
- Newsletters and society bulletins, even from prestigious organizations, unless they contain formally refereed sections
The home of this reference network on scientific publishing treats these distinctions as foundational rather than pedantic — they determine which sources count in systematic reviews, which outputs qualify for institutional research assessment, and which findings enter the formal scientific record.
Geographic and jurisdictional dimensions
Scientific publishing has a pronounced geographic asymmetry. Journals affiliated with North American and European institutions dominate the most-cited tiers of the literature. The US-based scientific journals overview reflects a system where federal funding from agencies including the NIH and NSF flows heavily into outputs published domestically, though the authors and peer reviewers are globally distributed.
Jurisdiction matters in 3 specific ways:
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Funding mandates: The US Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) issued a memo in August 2022 directing all federal agencies to require immediate open access for federally funded research by December 31, 2025 (OSTP Public Access Memo, 2022). This affects any journal publishing work supported by NIH, NSF, DOE, or equivalent agencies. The federal open access mandate details how this reshapes submission choices.
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Copyright jurisdiction: US copyright law governs works created by US authors or published by US entities, determining what licensing terms are legally enforceable. Copyright and licensing in scientific publishing has become genuinely complicated since Creative Commons licenses and publisher agreements overlap in ways courts have rarely been asked to adjudicate.
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Indexing geography: Some national and regional indexing systems — SciELO for Latin America, ERIH PLUS for European humanities and social sciences — serve regional research communities with different scope criteria than globally dominant indexes.
Scale and operational range
The scale of scientific journal publishing is genuinely staggering when examined concretely. An estimated 3 million refereed articles are published annually across all disciplines (STM Association Global Brief, 2021), distributed across roughly 30,000 active refereed journals. The market for article processing charges (APCs) was valued at approximately $2 billion annually by 2020, with charges at top journals reaching $11,390 per article (for Nature journals as published by Springer Nature).
Journals operate at radically different scales. A society journal in a niche discipline might publish 40 articles per year with a 4-person editorial office. A large commercial journal may process 50,000 submissions annually, maintaining a stable of 10,000+ peer reviewers drawn from a global author pool. The article processing charges and journal indexing databases pages explore how these scale differences affect researcher decisions.
Regulatory dimensions
Scientific journals aren't subject to a single regulatory framework, but they operate under overlapping obligations that function like regulation in practice.
| Regulatory Domain | Governing Body / Standard | Scope |
|---|---|---|
| Human subjects research | US Department of Health and Human Services (45 CFR Part 46) | Any journal publishing clinical or behavioral research involving human participants |
| Animal research reporting | ARRIVE Guidelines (NC3Rs) | Preclinical life science publications |
| Clinical trial registration | ICMJE requirement for ClinicalTrials.gov registration | All medical journals following ICMJE recommendations |
| Research data availability | Funder mandates (NIH Data Management Policy, effective 2023) | Federally funded US research |
| Open access compliance | OSTP mandate (2022) | US federally funded publications |
| Plagiarism and duplicate publication | COPE (Committee on Publication Ethics) guidelines | Journal-level editorial policy |
Research ethics and publication standards govern how journals respond when submitted manuscripts involve human subjects, undisclosed conflicts of interest, or data that cannot be reproduced. The data availability and reproducibility requirements now embedded in many top journals represent a significant shift from the pre-2015 norm of treating raw data as a private asset.
Dimensions that vary by context
The same journal can operate differently depending on which dimension is being measured. A journal with a high impact factor in its field may have a low h-index compared to journals in adjacent disciplines simply because citation norms differ. Physics journals have citation half-lives measured in years; medical journals in months.
Key dimensions that shift based on context:
By discipline: Review timelines in mathematics routinely exceed 12 months; some high-volume biomedical journals complete first review in under 3 weeks. Neither timeline is aberrant — they reflect field norms.
By access model: Open access publishing journals distribute costs to authors (or their funders) through APCs; subscription journals distribute costs to readers (or their institutions). Hybrid journals do both simultaneously, sometimes charging authors APCs while the journal remains behind a paywall for non-subscribers — a practice that has drawn sustained criticism from funders including the Wellcome Trust.
By institutional affiliation: Society-owned journals and commercially owned journals often share identical external appearances but operate with different incentive structures. A society journal may prioritize field-building and subsidize publication costs from membership dues. A commercial journal may prioritize volume and margin.
By indexing status: A journal's Scimago Journal Rank score and Eigenfactor score can diverge substantially because they weight citation networks differently. Researchers relying on one metric while ignoring the other get a systematically incomplete picture of a journal's relative standing.
Checklist — factors determining a journal's effective scope:
- [ ] Disciplinary focus stated in aims and scope document
- [ ] Article types explicitly listed as accepted or excluded
- [ ] Methodological restrictions (e.g., quantitative only, RCTs only)
- [ ] Language of submission and publication
- [ ] Geographic restrictions on authorship or subject populations
- [ ] Indexing database membership (determines discoverability)
- [ ] Peer review model specified (single-blind, double-blind, open)
- [ ] Data sharing requirements at submission
- [ ] APC schedule and waiver policy
- [ ] Affiliation with COPE, ICMJE, or COPE's DOAJ criteria