The Quarterly Review of Biology

The Quarterly Review of Biology is a peer reviewed scientific journal covering all aspects of biology. It was established in 1926 by Raymond Pearl. In the 1960s it was purchased by the Stony Brook Foundation when the editor H. Bentley Glass became academic vice president of Stony Brook University. The editor-in-chief is Daniel E. Dykhuizen (Stony Brook University). It is currently published by the University of Chicago Press.

The Quarterly Review of Biology
DisciplineBiology
LanguageEnglish
Edited byDaniel E. Dykhuizen
Publication details
History1926-present
Publisher
FrequencyQuarterly
Hybrid
2.321 (2017)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Q. Rev. Biol.
Indexing
ISSN0033-5770
JSTOR00335770
OCLC no.223702870
Links

Aims and scope

The journal publishes review articles. Beyond the core biological sciences, the journal also covers related areas, including policy studies and the history and philosophy of science. There is also a book review section.[1]

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is abstracted and indexed in Biological Abstracts, BIOSIS Previews, and the Science Citation Index.

gollark: Also, channels are not a particularly good primitive for synchronization.
gollark: Also, the implicit interfaces are terrible.
gollark: - lacking in generics - you have to use `interface{}`- public/private visibility is controlled by *capitalization* of all things- weird bodgey specialcasing instead of good generalizable solutions- you literally cannot express a `max` function which returns the largest of two of any type of number in a well-typed way
gollark: Go's syntax is kind of nicer but its awful type system (yes, worse than an untyped language's) is... not good.
gollark: You know, it very much might be.

References

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