Journal of Developments in Mass Spectrometry

Journal of Developments in Mass Spectrometry

Journal of Developments in Mass Spectrometry – Call For Papers

Open Access & Peer-Reviewed

Submit Manuscript
Open Call for Mass Spectrometry Research

Call for Papers
Journal of Developments in Mass Spectrometry

Share impactful mass spectrometry research for rigorous review and global open access visibility.

%
45%APC Savings
R
4-6Weeks Review
#
GlobalResearch Community
@
24/7Open Access
Current Call

Call for Papers in Mass Spectrometry Science and Translation

JDMS invites high-quality manuscripts that advance analytical chemistry, instrumentation, data interpretation, and real-world implementation.

Journal of Developments in Mass Spectrometry welcomes studies spanning instrumentation, ionization, separation strategies, quantitative workflows, and computational interpretation.

Priority is given to manuscripts that combine methodological rigor with practical implications for assay performance, reproducibility, and analytical decision quality.

Interdisciplinary evidence connecting wet-lab methods, spectral analytics, and applied domain use cases is strongly encouraged.

Instrumentation and Ionization

Advances in sources, analyzers, interfaces, and settings that improve analytical sensitivity and specificity.

Separation and Acquisition Workflows

Robust LC-MS, GC-MS, and tandem acquisition strategies with transparent performance validation.

Quantitative and Targeted Methods

Workflows reporting calibration logic, precision, matrix effects, and reproducibility outcomes.

Spectral Informatics and AI

Machine learning and algorithmic pipelines for deconvolution, annotation, and confidence scoring.

Omics and Clinical Applications

Mass spectrometry evidence linked to translational, biomarker, or diagnostics-oriented analytical use.

Materials and Environmental Analysis

Applied workflows for complex matrices with clear controls and benchmark performance.

Quality Expectations

What Strong Manuscripts Demonstrate

Editorial triage prioritizes clarity, rigor, reproducibility, and practical scientific relevance.

  • Clearly justified study question and design logic aligned to stated objectives.
  • Transparent methods for sample preparation, acquisition settings, and validation workflows.
  • Appropriate statistical framing and uncertainty reporting for key outcomes.
  • Balanced discussion of limitations and translational boundaries.
  • Complete ethics, funding, and conflict declarations where applicable.
  • Consistent terminology and accurate references across all sections.

Submissions should explain how results influence method selection, interpretation confidence, or implementation decisions.

Studies with strong reproducibility documentation are highly valued during review and editorial decision-making.

Submission Routes

Two Submission Methods, One Review Standard

Both routes are supported by the same editorial quality framework and review governance.

Manuscriptzone

Recommended for teams requiring structured metadata entry, revision tracking, and institution-friendly workflow control.

Simple Manuscript Submission

A lightweight route for fast intake and direct editorial routing when teams prefer a simplified process.

Pre-submission Support

Scope and formatting questions can be sent to [email protected] before upload to reduce avoidable delays.

Scope note: manuscripts outside mass spectrometry relevance may be declined at triage to preserve review efficiency.
Submission Planning

Execution Notes for Higher Acceptance Readiness

Use these practical notes to improve clarity, policy alignment, and review efficiency before final upload.

Editorial planning insight: Strong papers explain how findings improve assay design, analytical confidence, or implementation decision pathways. This approach helps editors and reviewers evaluate the manuscript faster without sacrificing rigor.

Author workflow guidance: Endpoint hierarchy and experimental rationale should be explicit to support reviewer assessment quality. Teams that apply this step early usually reduce revision friction and protect publication timelines.

Quality acceleration note: Submissions that address reproducibility, scale-up feasibility, or delivery challenges are encouraged. The same practice also improves metadata quality and downstream indexing discoverability.

Submission strategy point: Method transparency reduces avoidable revision cycles and improves editorial efficiency. It supports stronger decision transparency and more efficient peer-review communications.

Publication readiness reminder: Collaborative multi-lab studies should describe harmonization strategy for protocols and assays. This improves consistency between core manuscript sections and supporting files.

Operational recommendation: For call for papers planning, document reviewer-response changes against exact manuscript locations; state practical limitations and boundary conditions explicitly. This supports cleaner editorial decisions and faster acceptance readiness.

Reviewer-facing clarity note: For call for papers planning, confirm metadata fields and author identifiers before production lock; ensure data and code availability statements match policy language. This improves downstream indexing quality and retrieval relevance.

Production planning guidance: For call for papers planning, tighten conclusion language so claims remain proportional to data strength; ensure data and code availability statements match policy language. This improves downstream indexing quality and retrieval relevance.

Editorial planning insight: For call for papers planning, align title, abstract, and keyword language with the primary evidence claim; verify that tables, figures, and narrative statements remain consistent. This protects release schedules by reducing production-stage rework.

Author workflow guidance: For call for papers planning, map each major result to a clear methods description and reproducibility note; verify that tables, figures, and narrative statements remain consistent. This protects release schedules by reducing production-stage rework.

Quality acceleration note: For call for papers planning, separate prespecified analyses from exploratory findings in a traceable way; capture versioning notes where datasets or scripts may change over time. This increases trust for translational and evidence-synthesis readers.

Submission strategy point: For call for papers planning, synchronize figure legends, unit definitions, and supplementary references; capture versioning notes where datasets or scripts may change over time. This increases trust for translational and evidence-synthesis readers.

Publication readiness reminder: For call for papers planning, validate disclosure, funding, and ethics text before final upload; keep terminology stable across all manuscript files. This typically improves triage confidence and reviewer assignment precision.

Operational recommendation: For call for papers planning, document reviewer-response changes against exact manuscript locations; keep terminology stable across all manuscript files. This typically improves triage confidence and reviewer assignment precision.

Reviewer-facing clarity note: For call for papers planning, confirm metadata fields and author identifiers before production lock; define operational thresholds used in interpretation decisions. This reduces avoidable clarification loops during revision cycles.

Submit to the Current JDMS Call

Use Manuscriptzone or the simple form and move your manuscript into expert peer review.

Editorial office: [email protected]