Peeriodicals

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Molecular Medicine

Updated Jun 4, 2018 1 subscriber
Nanomedicine - a Clinician’s Perspective

Introducing an array of technologies that will shape healthcare in the 21st Century. 

Editor

Matthias B. Moor

Updated Jun 5, 2018 1 subscriber
RAS small GTPases

A collection of the latest research illuminating structure, function or systems data for small GTPases of the RAS subfamily.

Editor

Matthew J. Smith

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Updated Jun 22, 2018 2 subscribers
CRISPR/Cas-mediated genome editing

A collection of the latest research in CRISPR-Cas-mediated genome editing with focus on editing of mammalian cells

Editor

Sushil Devkota

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Updated Jul 22, 2018 2 subscribers
Epi(geneti)cs Story

Lastest reviews on epigenetics (in construction)

Editor

David Sitbon

Updated Nov 20, 2018 1 subscriber
3D cell culture of the liver

Papers selected and presented by PhD student Jonathan Temple (he will officially become Editor once he has published his first article).

Editor

Raphaël Lévy

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Updated Oct 18, 2018 0 subscribers
MicroRNA: basic biology research

Collection of review papers about basic biology research related to miRNA function in human.

Editor

Xin Lai

Updated Aug 4, 2019 34 subscribers
Brazilian Reproducibility Initiative

Reproducibility, open science, meta-research and everything else we find interesting.

Editors

Clarissa F. D. Carneiro Ana Paula Wasilewska-Sampaio Kleber Neves Olavo B Amaral

Updated Feb 16, 2019 1 subscriber
Sarcoma Updates
Editor

Jan Philipp Novotný

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Updated May 1, 2019 3 subscribers
Pancreatobiliary Pathology Society

Pancreatobiliary Pathology Society PBPath Journal Watch

Editor

Serdar Balci

Unpublished 0 subscribers
Mechanobiology and cell-tissue organization for biomimetic cell culture models

Develop in vitro models integrating the impact of biophysical signals on cell decisions at multiple scales: from cell nucleus to organisms via cytoskeleton, membrane, ECM, tissue and organs.

Editor

M. Hautefeuille

Unpublished 0 subscribers
Materials for people

Mostly MOF related papers with a potential impact for a better life.

Editor

Raffaele Riccò

Updated Jan 12, 2021 1 subscriber
OrthoBiologics

Advanced therapies with biological materials for augmented healing of injured musculoskeletal tissues.

Editor

Liang Gao

Unpublished 0 subscribers
Epigenetic Toxicology
Editor

Satheeswaran Balasubramanian

Updated Sep 30, 2021 2 subscribers
Single Cell RNA-seq Analysis
Editors

Kamil Slowikowski Jean Fan

Unpublished 0 subscribers
Receptors and Signaling Pathways
Editor

Sanjay Kumar Sukumar

Updated May 16, 2024 7 subscribers
COVID, AMYLOID, AND INFLAMMATION

Literature collection of the CovAmInf workgroup.

Editors

Joshua T. Berryman Abdul Mannan Baig Artemi Bendandi Daniel Bonhenry Mattheos A.G. Koffas

Unpublished 0 subscribers
Meiosis 

Meiosis aims to compile research papers and reviews with significant impact on research on meiotic division  

Editor

Ihsan Dereli

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Copyright © 2025 The PubPeer Foundation

A peeriodical is a lightweight virtual journal with you as the Editor-in-chief, giving you complete freedom in setting editorial policy to select the most interesting and useful manuscripts for your readers. The manuscripts you will evaluate and select are existing publications—preprints and papers. Thus, a peeriodical replicates all the functions of a traditional journal, including discovery, selection and certification, except publication itself.

Why set up a peeriodical? The traditional journal has changed remarkably little in centuries and many people feel that scientific publishing is stuck in a rut, subject to a corporatist drift, and is not serving science optimally. The advent of preprints in many fields beyond those served by the ArXiv is liberating the dissemination of research, but most other journal functions have not been replaced effectively. Now you—all researchers—have the opportunity to select and certify research according to your own criteria. We expect peeriodical subject matters and editorial policies to be extremely varied. Some peeriodicals may wish to target narrow domains, while others will adopt a generalist approach. Some peeriodicals will be inclusive, focusing on discovery, whereas others may aim to enforce stringent quality criteria, prioritising certification. The point is that all approaches are permitted and supported—we hope you will innovate! You can create multiple peeriodicals. It will be users and readers who decide which peeriodicals they find useful and interesting. Users can sign up to receive alerts from any peeriodical they wish.

A peeriodical has one or more editors. Anybody can set-up a peeriodical and either operate it alone or invite colleagues to form an editorial board or community. The editors can select "manuscripts"—existing papers or preprints—to consider, either spontaneously or through suggestions from other researchers, including of course the authors. Note that there is no obligation that the manuscript be recent; for instance, we expect that some peeriodicals could focus on underappreciated classics. After all, predictions about scientific impact are generally more accurate for the past than the future. If the editors wish, they can solicit reviews for the manuscript via the Peeriodicals interface. Reviews will be published and the referees will have the option of posting anonymously or signing their review. Editors may decide at any time to accept, reject or comment on the manuscript, taking into account the comments received. They may of course suggest improvements to the manuscript or underlying study. If they justify their decision, their editorial decision will also be published.

How will Peeriodicals fit into the publishing landscape? We see them as a space without entry barriers in which researchers can innovate and explore new approaches to scientific dissemination, in parallel to the traditional publishing industry. There are related and complementary initiatives, notably the overlay journals promoted by Tim Gowers, exemplified by Discrete Analysis, but also Science Open Collections, PLoS Channels, the APPRAISE initiative and Peer Community in... Each of these projects has their own specificities and goals. Nobody yet knows exactly what the future will look like, but we strongly believe that we are about to experience a period of rapid evolution in the dissemination of science and we hope that Peeriodicals will inspire and help you to share your imagination and expertise with the whole research community.

For those starting a peeriodical, you will discover that the hardest part is building up an audience. Unfortunately, we can't yet guarantee you the exposure you would get from a paper in a glamour journal. Reviews with scientific content will be mirrored on PubPeer, offering an audience through the PubPeer browser and Zotero extensions. However, it will be largely up to you to run your publicity, most likely through social media. We are on Twitter (@PEERIODICALS) and will of course help out as we can.

Get started now by requesting an invitation with the link in the top right menu.