Human Biology (journal)

Human Biology is a peer reviewed scientific journal, currently published by Wayne State University Press. The journal was established in 1929 by Raymond Pearl and is the official publication of the American Association of Anthropological Genetics.[1] The focus of the journal is human genetics, covering topics from human population genetics, evolutionary and genetic demography and quantitative genetics. It also covers ancient DNA studies, evolutionary biological anthropology, and research exploring biological diversity expressed in terms of adaptation. The journal also publishes interdisciplinary research linking biological and cultural diversity from evidence such sources as archaeology, ethnography and cultural anthropology studies, and more. As of February 14, 2020, the journal is on Volume 90, Issue 4.[1] The journal's current editor is Ripan S. Malhi (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign).[2]

Human Biology
DisciplineBiological anthropology Human Evolution Anthropology Human Genetics
LanguageEnglish
Edited byRipan S. Malhi
Publication details
History1929-present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
1.061 (2018)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Hum. Biol.
Indexing
CODENHUBIAA
ISSN0018-7143 (print)
1534-6617 (web)
LCCN31029123
OCLC no.1752384
Links

Publication Details

Impact Factor and Other Measurements of Importance

According to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2018 impact factor of 1.061.[1] For the year of 2014, the Eigenfactor, the rating of total importance of an academic journal, was 0.1.[1] The journal has an Article Influence score of 0.5 for the year 2014.[1] Article Influence is a ranking based on the Eigenfactor score, and is considered comparable to the Impact Factor score.

Online Publishing Details

Beginning with the February 2001 issue, Human Biology is available online through Project MUSE. Since 2006 Human Biology is also available through BioOne.[2]

gollark: I don't like it. We use a BT router with that "feature" at home and I cannot figure out how to turn it off and it *annoys me slightly*.
gollark: Self-driving cars should probably not be using the mobile/cell network just for communicating with nearby cars, since it adds extra latency and complexity over some direct P2P thing, and they can't really do things which rely on constant high-bandwidth networking to the internet generally, since they need to be able to not crash if they go into a tunnel or network dead zone or something.
gollark: My problem isn't *that* (5G apparently has improvements for more normal frequencies anyway), but that higher bandwidth and lower latency just... isn't that useful and worth the large amount of money for most phone users.
gollark: Personally I think 5G is pointless and overhyped, but eh.
gollark: It's a house using some sort of sci-fi-looking engines to take off, superimposed on the text "5G", with "London," and "is in the house." above and below it respectively.

References


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