New Research In
Physical Sciences
Social Sciences
Featured Portals
Articles by Topic
Biological Sciences
Featured Portals
Articles by Topic
- Agricultural Sciences
- Anthropology
- Applied Biological Sciences
- Biochemistry
- Biophysics and Computational Biology
- Cell Biology
- Developmental Biology
- Ecology
- Environmental Sciences
- Evolution
- Genetics
- Immunology and Inflammation
- Medical Sciences
- Microbiology
- Neuroscience
- Pharmacology
- Physiology
- Plant Biology
- Population Biology
- Psychological and Cognitive Sciences
- Sustainability Science
- Systems Biology
Purpose and Scope
PNAS Author Center
PNAS publishes research reports, Brief Reports, Letters, Front Matter magazine content, Commentaries, Perspectives, and Colloquium Papers. In accordance with the guiding principles established by George Ellery Hale in 1914, PNAS also publishes brief first announcements of NAS members' and foreign associates' more important contributions to research and of work that appears to a member to be of particular importance. All submissions are evaluated by a member of the Editorial Board prior to acceptance. PNAS is a general science journal, and all papers should be intelligible to a broad scientific audience.
Article Types
Research reports (Contributed and Direct Submissions) describe the results of original research of exceptional importance and include a Significance Statement that describes the significance of the work. Unsolicited research reports are welcome.
View research reports
Brief Reports describe observations of immediate impact that may hold potential to initiate new avenues of research, provide compelling new data on controversies of broad interest and long-standing questions, or present a concise conceptual advance. Brief Reports are limited to 3 pages, which is approximately 1,600 words and 15 references, and typically include no more than 2 graphical elements. The word count includes manuscript text, as well as the title page, abstract, and figure legends. SI is limited to essential supporting datasets and videos (no additional methods, tables, or figures). Where appropriate, authors are encouraged to cite protocols. Brief Reports receive an accelerated review and production process of ~3 months and are open access. All Brief Reports follow the Direct Submission mode of review. Unsolicited Brief Reports are welcome.
View Brief Reports
Letters are brief comments that allow readers to constructively address a difference of opinion with authors of a recent PNAS article. Readers may comment on exceptional studies or point out potential flaws in studies published in the journal. Letters may not include requests to cite the Letter writer's work, accusations of misconduct, or personal comments to an author. Letters are limited to 500 words and 10 references, and must be submitted within 6 months of the publication of the subject article in Latest Articles. Unsolicited Letters are welcome.
View Letters
Front Matter is an expanded front magazine section that tells the stories of science in interesting ways. Sections include News Features, Science and Culture, Inner Workings, and Core Concepts, all written by science journalists. The section also includes Opinion articles. These succinct essays, which are authored by researchers, further the discourse on a topic via a clearly articulated argument armed with novel ideas or proposals. Submissions deemed appropriate are reviewed by an NAS member with the relevant expertise.
View Front Matter articles
Commentaries call attention to articles of particular note and are written only at the invitation of the Editorial Board.
View Commentaries
Perspectives present a viewpoint on an important area of research. Perspectives focus on a specific field or subfield within a larger discipline and discuss current advances and future directions. Perspectives are of broad interest to nonspecialists and may add personal insight to a field, but should be balanced and objective. Perspectives are written only at the invitation of the Editorial Board and follow the Direct Submission mode of review.
View Perspectives
Colloquium Papers are reports of scientific colloquia held under NAS auspices and are written only at the invitation of the Editorial Board.
View Colloquia
All papers are evaluated solely on their scientific merit by peers, not by professional staff editors. A three-tier review process for research reports includes review by an Editorial Board member from one of the 31 NAS disciplines, an NAS member editor, and independent peer reviewers. NAS member editors are professional scientists and active researchers. A list of Editorial Board members and their disciplines appears on our masthead.
For specific inquiries, contact PNAS
[01/20]