Journal of Proteome Research

The Journal of Proteome Research is a peer-reviewed scientific journal published since 2002 by the American Chemical Society.[2] Its publication frequency switched from bimonthly to monthly in 2006. The current editor-in-chief is John R. Yates.[3]

Journal of Proteome Research
DisciplineProteomics
LanguageEnglish
Edited byJohn R. Yates
Publication details
History2002–present
Publisher
American Chemical Society (United States)
FrequencyMonthly
4.268[1] (2016)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4J. Proteome Res.
Indexing
CODENJPROBS
ISSN1535-3893 (print)
1535-3907 (web)
LCCN2001211122
OCLC no.47082747
Links

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is abstracted and indexed in EBSCOhost, PubMed, Scopus, and the Web of Science. In 2013, J. Proteome Res. had an impact factor of 5.001 as reported in the 2013 Journal Citation Reports by Thomson Reuters, ranking it 10th out of 75 journals in the category “Biochemical Research Methods”.[4] The impact factor in 2015 was 4.173.[5]

Google scholar lists the journal as 2nd in the category "Proteomics, Peptides & Aminoacids" [6] with an h5-index of 67. The most cited papers in the last 5 years are "Andromeda: A Peptide Search Engine Integrated into the MaxQuant Environment" (Cox et al., 2011), "More than 100,000 Detectable Peptide Species Elute in Single Shotgun Proteomics Runs but the Majority is Inaccessible to Data-Dependent LC− MS/MS" (Michalski et al., 2011) and "Universal and Confident Phosphorylation Site Localization Using phosphoRS" (Taus et al., 2011).

gollark: Presumably if the supertask doesn't converge it will just refuse to run.
gollark: Maybe people begin seeing it in their dreams, if you like more fantasy-leaning stuff.
gollark: I have no idea how you would actually storyize the maze thing. Maybe people are trapped in it. Maybe it mysteriously appears under a mountain or something.
gollark: That is them.
gollark: > Computers with infinite processing speed (supertasks) but very limited memory.

References

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