Jon Girard II, et al. Make the case to assign the spontaneous squiggle tail (squig) mutation in mice to a defect in the gene Meox1. They also suggest this genetic variant could serve as a model for Klippel-Feil syndrome 2 (KFS2) in humans.
Data-driven approaches to assessing the impact of social media on mental health
Guest Edited by I-Hua Chen and Amir Pakpour
Data sets for rare diseases
Guest Edited by Josef Schepers and Shuyang Zhang
Data sets to advance genomic surveillance
Guest Edited by Vagner Fonseca and Daniel J. Park
Research integrity: where next?
Guest Edited by Lida Anestidou, Rosemarie de la Cruz Bernabe and Panagiotis Kavouras
Advancing methods in ecology
Edited by Prakash C. Mardaraj, Bhagwan Narayan Rekadwad and Cindy Jane Smith
Advancing open science
Guest Edited by Alexandre López-Borrull, Maria Candela Ollé Castellà , Samuel Westwood and Sabine Wildevuur
Featured Research Note
Articles
-
-
A single presumptive deworming may not suffice to reduce the burden of intestinal parasitic infections during pregnancy in rural Amhara, Ethiopia
-
A psychometric evaluation of the parent version of the children’s revised impact of event scale (CRIES): screening for post-traumatic stress disorder in Dutch children aged 3 to 7 years
-
Assessing CometChip technology for DNA damage studies in non-model species: distinct UV-induced responses in turtles and mammals
-
The association of rs7041 polymorphism with infertility and recurrent pregnancy loss in Iranian women with polycystic ovary syndrome
-
Meta-analyses and Forest plots using a microsoft excel spreadsheet: step-by-step guide focusing on descriptive data analysis
-
The introduction, methods, results and discussion (IMRAD) structure: a Survey of its use in different authoring partnerships in a students' journal
-
Hand Grip Strength: age and gender stratified normative data in a population-based study
-
In vitro antioxidant and free radical scavenging activity of different parts of Tabebuia pallida growing in Bangladesh
-
The effectiveness of M-health technologies for improving health and health services: a systematic review protocol
Aims and scope
BMC Research Notes is an open access journal publishing peer-reviewed contributions from across all scientific and clinical disciplines, including intriguing initial observations, updates to previous work and established methods, valid negative results, and scientific data sets and descriptions. We are committed to making it easier to find, cite and share your short reports by providing an inclusive forum for valuable data and research observations.
Join the Editorial Board
BMC Research Notes is recruiting new, international Editorial Board Members. To read more and submit your application please click on the button below.
Read MoreFeatured Data Note
Historical records of plant-insect interactions in subarctic Finland
Leana Zoller and Tiffany M. Knight present a curated dataset of interactions between plants and insects in subarctic Finland, generated from digitizing a historical document from the late 19th century and updating the taxonomy using currently accepted nomenclature.
Latest Tweets
Your browser needs to have JavaScript enabled to view this timeline
Annual Journal Metrics
-
Citation Impact
Journal Impact Factor: 1.6 (2023)
5-year Journal Impact Factor: N/A (2023)
Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP): 0.541 (2024)
SCImago Journal Rank (SJR): 0.435 (2024)Speed
Submission to first editorial decision (median days): 8
Submission to acceptance (median days): 161Usage 2024
Downloads: 4,548,399
Altmetric mentions: 1,175