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from Wikipedia

Science
Title page of the first volume of the first series (discontinued 1882)
DisciplineMultidisciplinary
LanguageEnglish
Edited byHolden Thorp
Publication details
History1880–present
Publisher
FrequencyWeekly
Delayed[A 1]
45.8 (2024)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Science
Indexing
CODENSCIEAS
ISSN0036-8075 (print)
1095-9203 (web)
LCCN17024346
JSTOR00368075
OCLC no.1644869
Links

Science is the peer-reviewed academic journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science[A 2][1] (AAAS) and one of the world's top academic journals.[2] It was first published in 1880, is currently circulated weekly and has a subscriber base of around 130,000. Because institutional subscriptions and online access serve a larger audience, its estimated readership is over 400,000 people.[3]

Science is based in Washington, D.C., United States, with a second office in Cambridge, UK.

Contents

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The major focus of the journal is publishing important original scientific research and research reviews, but Science also publishes science-related news, opinions on science policy and other matters of interest to scientists and others who are concerned with the wide implications of science and technology. Unlike most scientific journals, which focus on a specific field, Science and its rival Nature cover the full range of scientific disciplines. According to the Journal Citation Reports, Science's 2024 impact factor was 45.8.[4]

Studies of methodological quality and reliability have found that some high-prestige journals including Science "publish significantly substandard structures", and overall "reliability of published research works in several fields may be decreasing with increasing journal rank".[5]

Although it is the journal of the AAAS, membership in the AAAS is not required to publish in Science. Papers are accepted from authors around the world. Competition to publish in Science is very intense, as an article published in such a highly cited journal can lead to attention and career advancement for the authors. Fewer than 7% of articles submitted are accepted for publication.[6]

History

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Title page of the first volume of the resurrected journal (February–June 1883)
Title page of the first volume of the resurrected journal (February–June 1883)

Science was founded by New York journalist John Michels in 1880 with financial support from Thomas Edison and later from Alexander Graham Bell.[7][8] (Edison received favorable editorial treatment in return, without disclosure of the financial relationship, at a time when his reputation was suffering due to delays producing the promised commercially viable light bulb.)[9] However, the journal never gained enough subscribers to succeed and ended publication in March 1882. Alexander Graham Bell and Gardiner Greene Hubbard bought the magazine rights and hired young entomologist Samuel H. Scudder to resurrect the journal one year later. They had some success while covering the meetings of prominent American scientific societies, including the AAAS.[A 3] However, by 1894, Science was again in financial difficulty and was sold to psychologist James McKeen Cattell for $500 (equivalent to $18,170 in 2024).[citation needed]

In an agreement worked out by Cattell and AAAS secretary Leland O. Howard, Science became the journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1900.[A 4] During the early part of the 20th century, important articles published in Science included papers on fruit fly genetics by Thomas Hunt Morgan, gravitational lensing by Albert Einstein, and spiral nebulae by Edwin Hubble.[A 4] After Cattell died in 1944, the ownership of the journal was transferred to the AAAS.[A 5]

After Cattell's death in 1944, the journal lacked a consistent editorial presence until Graham DuShane became editor in 1956. In 1958, under DuShane's leadership, Science absorbed The Scientific Monthly, thus increasing the journal's circulation by over 62% from 38,000 to more than 61,000.[A 6] Physicist Philip Abelson, a co-discoverer of neptunium, served as editor from 1962 to 1984. Under Abelson the efficiency of the review process was improved and the publication practices were brought up to date.[A 6] During this time, papers on the Apollo program missions and some of the earliest reports on AIDS were published.[A 7]

Biochemist Daniel E. Koshland Jr. served as editor from 1985 until 1995. From 1995 until 2000, neuroscientist Floyd E. Bloom held that position.[A 7] Biologist Donald Kennedy became the editor of Science in 2000. Biochemist Bruce Alberts took his place in March 2008.[10] Geophysicist Marcia McNutt became editor-in-chief in June 2013.[11] During her tenure the family of journals expanded to include Science Robotics and Science Immunology,[12] and open access publishing with Science Advances.[13] Jeremy M. Berg became editor-in-chief on July 1, 2016.[14] Former Washington University in St. Louis Provost Holden Thorp was named editor-in-chief on Monday, August 19, 2019.[15][16]

In February 2001, draft results of the human genome were simultaneously published by Nature and Science with Science publishing the Celera Genomics paper and Nature publishing the publicly funded Human Genome Project. In 2007, Science (together with Nature) received the Prince of Asturias Award for Communications and Humanity.[17] In 2015, Rush D. Holt Jr., chief executive officer of the AAAS and executive publisher of Science, stated that the journal was becoming increasingly international: "[I]nternationally co-authored papers are now the norm—they represent almost 60 percent of the papers. In 1992, it was slightly less than 20 percent."[18]

Availability

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The latest editions of the journal are available online, through the main journal website, only to subscribers, AAAS members, and for delivery to IP addresses at institutions that subscribe; students, K–12 teachers, and some others can subscribe at a reduced fee. However, research articles published after 1997 are available free (with online registration) one year after they are published i.e. delayed open access.[A 1] Significant public-health related articles are also available free, sometimes immediately after publication. AAAS members may also access the pre-1997 Science archives at the Science website, where it is called "Science Classic".

The journal also participates in initiatives that provide free or low-cost access to readers in developing countries, including HINARI, OARE, AGORA, and Scidev.net.

Other features of the Science website include the free "ScienceNow" section with "up to the minute news from science",[19] and "ScienceCareers", which provides free career resources for scientists and engineers. Science Express (Sciencexpress) provides advance electronic publication of selected Science papers.[20]

Affiliations

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Science received funding for COVID-19-related coverage from the Pulitzer Center and the Heising-Simons Foundation.[21]

See also

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References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Science is a peer-reviewed, multidisciplinary academic journal founded in 1880 and published weekly by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) since 1900. It disseminates original research findings, reviews, policy analyses, and news across the physical, life, earth, and social sciences, emphasizing breakthroughs with broad implications for scientific understanding and societal progress. With a subscriber base exceeding 130,000 and one of the highest impact factors among general science journals, Science ranks among the most cited and influential publications in the global research community.
Originally established by journalist John Michaels with financial backing from Thomas Edison and Alexander Graham Bell, the journal faced early financial difficulties and briefly ceased publication before being revived and stabilized under AAAS stewardship, which transformed it into a cornerstone of scientific communication. Notable for featuring landmark papers on topics such as CRISPR gene editing and climate science, Science has played a pivotal role in shaping scientific discourse, though it has encountered controversies including historical endorsements of eugenics in the early 20th century and recent retractions of high-profile studies like the 2010 "arsenic life" paper. These incidents underscore ongoing challenges in peer review and institutional biases within academia, yet the journal maintains rigorous standards that contribute to its enduring prestige.

Overview

Founding and Initial Scope

Science was established on July 3, 1880, by New York journalist John Michels, with initial financial backing from inventor Thomas A. Edison. The journal aimed to serve as a premier weekly publication dedicated to the advancement of , providing a platform for rapidly disseminating original research findings and documenting ongoing developments across scientific disciplines. Michels, serving as editor, envisioned it as a means to foster communication among American scientists, filling a gap for a broad-spectrum periodical that encompassed news, investigations, and progress in fields ranging from physics to . The initial scope emphasized accessibility and timeliness over specialized depth, targeting a general scientific audience rather than niche experts, with content including short reports, correspondence, and summaries of international advancements. Despite Edison's support, which covered startup costs estimated at around $5,000, the journal struggled to attract sufficient subscribers, publishing only sporadically after its launch. By March 1882, financial difficulties forced cessation of publication after roughly 18 months. In February 1883, the journal was revived as a second series, with and his father-in-law acquiring the title and providing renewed funding to sustain operations. This restart maintained the original broad mandate but sought greater stability through enhanced promotion among scientific societies, though it remained independent of formal institutional affiliation until later acquisition by the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1900. The early volumes, such as the 1883 title page edition covering February to June, reflected continuity in format as a modest quarto-sized weekly.

Publisher and Organizational Role

The Science journal is published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization established in 1848 as the first permanent national body dedicated to advancing science and engineering in the United States. With over 120,000 members worldwide, AAAS operates as the largest general scientific society, encompassing diverse disciplines from biological and physical sciences to social sciences and policy. In its publishing capacity, AAAS oversees the production, distribution, and editorial integrity of Science as its flagship weekly, alongside five other peer-reviewed journals such as Science Advances and Science Immunology. This portfolio supports AAAS's core mission of facilitating scientific discovery, communication, and application to societal challenges through rigorous, multidisciplinary dissemination. AAAS's organizational role in Science extends beyond mere publication to strategic stewardship, including management of peer review, content acquisition, rights licensing, and digital infrastructure via platforms like its content tracking system. The association maintains Science's status as a premier outlet for original research, policy analysis, and breakthroughs by integrating it with broader initiatives, such as open-access expansions (e.g., launching Science Advances in 2014 to broaden accessibility) and collaborations for enhanced global reach. As a membership-driven entity, AAAS leverages Science to foster community engagement, offering subscribers priority access while generating revenue through subscriptions, advertising, and partnerships to fund non-profit operations without direct government control. This structure ensures editorial independence, with AAAS appointing key personnel like the publisher responsible for content strategy and operational sustainability.

Historical Evolution

Inception and Early Challenges (1880–1900)

The journal Science was established on July 3, 1880, as a weekly publication aimed at recording scientific progress, initiated through the collaboration of New York journalist and editor John Michels and inventor Thomas A. Edison, who provided initial financial backing. Published from offices at 229 Broadway in New York, the first volume covered July to December 1880 and featured articles on diverse topics including astronomy, biology, and inventions, reflecting the era's growing interest in applied science. Edison's support stemmed from his vision for a periodical promoting science and invention, though his involvement was limited to funding rather than editorial control. Despite this, the journal struggled with securing sufficient subscriptions and advertising revenue from the outset, as the American scientific community was small and fragmented, with limited demand for a general science weekly. Edison formally withdrew his sponsorship in December 1881, transferring all rights to Michels, after which publication halted due to mounting financial losses and inadequate readership. Michels revived the journal in February 1883 as a new series, securing backing from Alexander Graham Bell, who purchased the title and goodwill for $5,000 and collaborated with figures like Gardiner G. Hubbard to fund operations. The revived edition, published in Cambridge, Massachusetts, by the Science Company under Moses King, attempted to broaden appeal through reports on scientific meetings and discoveries but continued to face irregular issuance and dependency on personal patronage. Circulation remained low, hovering below 1,000 subscribers, exacerbating deficits amid competition from specialized journals and broader periodicals like Popular Science Monthly. Throughout the 1880s and 1890s, Science endured persistent challenges including chronic underfunding, editorial instability under Michels' sole control, and difficulties in attracting high-quality contributions from a nascent professional scientific class. Efforts to reorganize, such as seeking institutional support or expanding content to policy discussions, yielded limited success, with the journal nearly folding multiple times before Michels sold it in 1894 to psychologist James McKeen Cattell for $500. Under Cattell, publication stabilized somewhat by 1895 with a "new series," emphasizing rigorous reporting and psychological sciences, yet financial viability depended on Cattell's personal resources until the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) formalized its role as official organ in 1900, marking the end of the early precarious phase. This period underscored the causal hurdles of launching a general science journal in an era of underdeveloped scientific infrastructure and market, where individual philanthropy proved insufficient against structural economic constraints.

Growth and Institutionalization (1900–1950)

In 1900, Science formally became the official journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), marking a pivotal institutional alliance that enhanced the publication's stability, revenues, and distribution through AAAS membership channels. This partnership followed AAAS's acquisition of publishing rights earlier in the decade, building on the journal's prior irregular issuance to establish weekly regularity and broader reach amid the professionalization of American science. Under editor James McKeen Cattell, who had assumed control in 1894, Science evolved from a modest outlet into a central venue for disseminating research across disciplines, publishing works by figures such as Thomas Hunt Morgan and emphasizing science's societal applications. Cattell's influence persisted into the 1920s despite his 1906 ouster from primary editorial duties by AAAS leadership over financial disputes and criticisms of association management, after which AAAS centralized oversight through its council and permanent secretary. This shift institutionalized Science more firmly within AAAS governance, aligning editorial decisions with the organization's role as an umbrella body amid the proliferation of specialized disciplinary societies. AAAS secured a permanent suite in the Smithsonian Institution for operations, fostering administrative continuity, while Science expanded to include policy discussions and annual meeting proceedings, reinforcing its function as a unifying platform for interdisciplinary exchange. The interwar decades saw Science navigate challenges including the Great Depression's funding strains and debates over scientists' social responsibilities, yet it hosted seminal contributions from luminaries like and , underscoring its growing prestige. By the 1940s, amid mobilization, AAAS leveraged Science to advocate for coordinated federal science support, contributing to institutional momentum without specific wartime disruptions to continuity. This era cemented Science's maturation as AAAS's flagship, with enhanced emphasis on peer oversight and broad accessibility, paralleling the expansion of U.S. scientific infrastructure.

Post-War Expansion and Modernization (1950–2000)

Following World War II, the Science journal, published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), experienced substantial growth amid the expansion of federally funded research and the professionalization of American science. The establishment of the National Science Foundation in 1950 facilitated increased scientific output, leading to higher submission rates and broader readership for general science journals like Science. Circulation rose steadily, reflecting AAAS membership growth from approximately 25,000 in the early 1950s to over 100,000 by the 1970s, as the journal served as a key member benefit. Under editor Graham DuShane (1948–1962), Science emphasized timely reporting on policy issues and interdisciplinary advances, adapting to Cold War-era priorities such as scientific freedom and education amid McCarthyist pressures. The tenure of Philip H. Abelson as editor-in-chief from 1962 to 1984 marked a pivotal modernization phase, with reforms to peer review processes enabling faster turnaround times—often reducing delays from months to weeks—while maintaining rigorous evaluation. Abelson prioritized articles of broad scientific and societal interest, expanding coverage to include geophysics, policy analysis, and emerging fields like molecular biology, which boosted the journal's influence. Circulation doubled from 75,000 in 1962 to 155,000 by 1984, driven by efficient operations and AAAS's growing international reach. These changes positioned Science as a competitive outlet against specialized journals, emphasizing causal mechanisms in research reporting over descriptive summaries. From the mid-1970s to 2000, further diversified with the introduction of dedicated sections for news and perspectives, enhancing accessibility for non-specialists while sustaining peer-reviewed original articles. Under subsequent editors like Daniel E. Koshland Jr. (1985–1995), the journal navigated controversies over funding cuts and ethical standards in science, maintaining a focus on empirical validation. By 2000, annual issues exceeded 100, with page counts reflecting the surge in high-impact submissions, though circulation stabilized around 150,000 amid rising competition from digital preprints. AAAS's Arden reorganization indirectly supported these evolutions by streamlining and amplifying the journal's role in science communication.

Digital Transition and Recent Developments (2000–Present)

In the 2000s, Science expanded its digital infrastructure to support online access and rapid dissemination, including the introduction of Science Express (later rebranded as First Release) for selected papers published electronically ahead of print, enabling citable online availability within two weeks of acceptance. This initiative complemented the journal's established website, which provided full-text access to subscribers and members, facilitating broader global reach amid rising usage in scientific communities. The journal's impact factor trended upward during this period, reflecting sustained influence; it stood at 16.1 in 2000 and climbed to 44.7 by 2023, driven by high citation rates in multidisciplinary research. In 2013, Science transitioned its digital edition from the Zinio platform to GTxcel, enhancing interactivity and user experience for online readers. Recent developments include the expansion of the Science family with online-only journals, such as Science Advances launched in 2015 as a fully open-access outlet to broaden dissemination of high-quality research without subscription barriers. In response to evolving access demands, AAAS implemented a no-fee public-access policy in 2023, allowing authors to share accepted manuscripts publicly upon acceptance while preserving subscription models for peer-reviewed versions. These changes align with broader shifts toward hybrid open access, maintaining rigorous peer review amid debates over equitable scientific communication.

Content Structure and Publication Types

Research Articles and Formats

Research Articles in Science constitute the journal's primary vehicle for disseminating original, peer-reviewed scientific discoveries across disciplines, emphasizing concise presentation of significant advances with broad implications. These articles report novel results from empirical investigations, prioritizing clarity, reproducibility, and accessibility to a multidisciplinary audience. Manuscripts must demonstrate rigorous methodology and sufficient evidence to support conclusions, with data and code deposition in public repositories mandated for verification. Standard Research Articles are limited to approximately 3000 words in the main text (excluding abstract, references, and acknowledgments), accompanied by an unstructured abstract of up to 250 words, 3 to 5 display items (figures or tables with legends), and about 50 references. The required structure includes: a title (short version ≤40 characters, long ≤125 characters), author list with affiliations, abstract (single paragraph without citations), Introduction, Results (with subheadings and all primary data), Discussion (addressing limitations and broader context), Materials and Methods (detailed for replication, often in supplementary materials), References (numbered sequentially with full citations), and Acknowledgments. Figures and tables are numbered in order of citation, with legends provided separately; up to 8 display items are permitted, though print constraints favor fewer for inclusion in the physical edition. Articles exceeding print format limits—such as those with more than 4 figures or requiring extended length—are published in full online, with a one-page print summary (∼500 words) and a key figure to highlight findings for readers. Extended formats allow up to 6000 words, 6 display items (including like videos), and 100 references, suitable for complex studies like meta-analyses (which may exceed reference limits with editorial approval). Initial submissions prefer a single .docx file incorporating text, figures, and tables, convertible to PDF for review; templates are available for precise formatting. References follow a complete style, listing all authors, full titles, journal abbreviations, volumes, and pages for articles. Supplementary materials, including detailed methods, additional data, and extended references, are posted online without word limits to support comprehensive reporting while maintaining main-text brevity. This format ensures focus on core advances, with editors reserving discretion to reclassify shorter submissions as print-eligible. Randomized controlled trials must adhere to CONSORT guidelines, and all claims require statistical rigor to avoid overinterpretation.

News, Policy, and Commentary Sections

The section of Science provides timely reporting and in-depth features on scientific advances, developments, institutional changes, and matters, often drawing from award-winning to contextualize breakthroughs and societal impacts. This section emphasizes alongside analytical pieces, such as coverage of national budgets or regulatory shifts affecting , with contributions from staff writers and external experts to inform the and policymakers. Policy content in Science appears primarily through Policy Forums and Policy Articles, which analyze the implications of recent scientific findings for or explore intersections between and using established . Policy Forums, typically commissioned and limited to 2000–3000 words with 1–2 figures and no more than 15 references, focus on policy-relevant themes derived from published studies, undergoing at editorial discretion. Policy Articles, which may incorporate unpublished , follow similar length and format guidelines but are considered on an unsolicited basis, aiming to bridge with actionable recommendations on issues like environmental regulation or . The Commentary section encompasses signed opinions, analyses, and expert evaluations on topics ranging from emerging trends to broader societal s, including formats such as Perspectives (1000–1800 words), Editorials (up to 720 words), Expert Voices (1200 words, often online-only), and Letters (up to 300 words). These pieces, mostly commissioned but accepting unsolicited submissions via the journal's portal, offer individual viewpoints without representing official AAAS positions, with selective to ensure rigor while prioritizing accessibility for Science's readership. Examples include discussions of methodological challenges in fields like climate modeling or critiques of priorities, fostering grounded in rather than advocacy.

Editorial and Peer Review Processes

Selection and Review Criteria

Science employs a multi-stage to select manuscripts for publication, beginning with an initial screening by in-house editors to assess suitability. Only a fraction of submissions—typically those demonstrating potential for broad scientific impact—advance to external , as the journal prioritizes work that advances understanding across multiple fields rather than narrow technical contributions. Editors evaluate factors such as novelty, conceptual significance, and interdisciplinary during this preliminary phase, rejecting the majority of papers without external review to maintain efficiency and focus on high-impact research. For papers proceeding to review, at least two independent external referees are consulted, selected based on expertise in the relevant domain. Reviewers provide anonymous, objective assessments within two weeks, focusing on scientific validity, methodological rigor, , and the work's potential to influence future research. They are instructed to offer constructive feedback while avoiding personal biases or conflicts of interest, such as professional rivalries or financial ties, which must be disclosed to the editor. The process emphasizes , with all data and materials required to be accessible for verification, ensuring claims rest on empirical foundations rather than unsubstantiated assertions. Ultimate hinges on the paper's alignment with Science's core criteria: presenting , syntheses, or concepts of substantial importance that appeal to a wide scientific audience, supported by robust and clear . Revisions may be requested based on reviewer input, but the editor holds final , balancing expert opinions against the journal's standards for transformative contributions. This selective approach results in a low acceptance rate, reflecting the journal's commitment to publishing only the most rigorous and influential work, though it can introduce subjectivity in judging "broad importance."

Editorial Board and Decision-Making

The editorial board of Science is led by Editor-in-Chief Holden Thorp, who has held the position since October 28, 2019. Thorp oversees the journal's overall direction, including final decisions on publication, and reports to the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the journal's publisher. Supporting Thorp are two deputy editors—Stella M. Hurtley (based in the UK) and Phillip D. Szuromi—who handle research and commentary content, coordinating with senior and associate editors. Senior editors, numbering approximately 18 as of recent listings, manage specific subject areas and conduct initial assessments of submissions for scientific merit, novelty, and broad interest. Examples include Caroline Ash (UK), Michael A. Funk, and Jelena Stajic, with expertise spanning biology, chemistry, physics, and interdisciplinary fields. Associate editors, around seven in total, assist in handling manuscripts and liaising with authors. A key component is the Board of Reviewing Editors, comprising over 150 academic experts from institutions worldwide, who evaluate submissions for technical soundness and recommend whether to proceed to external peer review. This board includes specialists like Erin Adams (University of Chicago) and Takuzo Aida (University of Tokyo), ensuring diverse disciplinary coverage. Manuscript decision-making begins with submission via the online system, followed by an initial editorial screen by senior or associate editors to assess fit with the journal's criteria of exceptional significance and broad appeal—rejecting most without further review. Promising papers are assigned to a member of the Board of Reviewing Editors, who may solicit external referees (at least two) for detailed critiques, typically due within two weeks. Reviewers provide confidential, constructive feedback on validity, originality, and impact, while maintaining anonymity unless waived. The reviewing editor synthesizes inputs and advises senior editors or the , who retain authority for revisions, re-review, or rejection—even if reviewers recommend acceptance. Authors receive decisions via , with tracking available ; acceptance rates hover below 8%, reflecting stringent selectivity. This editor-centric model prioritizes rapid, expert judgment over consensus, aiming to publish transformative work while minimizing delays.

Impact and Scientific Influence

Citation Metrics and Rankings

The journal Science holds prominent positions in citation-based rankings due to its extensive influence across scientific disciplines. According to Clarivate's (JCR), its 2023 Journal Impact Factor (JIF), calculated as the average citations per citable item published in 2021–2022, stands at 45.8. The 5-year JIF, incorporating citations to articles from 2018–2022, is 49.7, underscoring sustained long-term impact. In the Multidisciplinary Sciences category of JCR, Science achieves a of 97.8%, placing it among the elite tier of general science periodicals. Additional metrics from Scopus and related indices reinforce this standing. The CiteScore, which measures average citations per document over a four-year window (2019–2022), is 48.4. The (SJR) for 2023, an indicator of weighted citations accounting for journal prestige, is 10.416, positioning Science in the Q1 quartile for multidisciplinary journals. Its overall h-index, representing the largest number of articles (1382) each cited at least that many times, reflects decades of accumulated scholarly resonance. Other JCR-derived scores highlight efficiency and influence breadth. The Immediacy Index of 9.9 gauges citations to articles in the year of publication (2023), indicating rapid uptake. The Score of 0.61093 accounts for the journal's share of total citations, adjusted for self-citations and emphasizing network effects in the scholarly . Complementing this, the Article Influence Score of 20.329 measures average influence per article relative to all indexed journals, normalized to a mean of 1.0. These metrics, derived from comprehensive databases like and , affirm Science's role as a benchmark for high-impact publishing, though they are subject to critiques regarding citation practices and field-specific biases in aggregation.

Landmark Publications and Contributions

The journal has hosted several seminal articles that have profoundly shaped biomedical and genomic sciences. In May 1984, Robert C. Gallo and colleagues published four papers demonstrating the isolation and characterization of human T-lymphotropic virus type III (HTLV-III, subsequently identified as HIV-1), establishing it as the etiological agent of acquired immunodeficiency (AIDS) through of its presence in affected patients, cytopathic effects on T cells, and serological correlations. These findings, building on earlier French isolation efforts, resolved debates over the viral cause of AIDS and catalyzed global antiviral and responses. A foundational contribution to appeared in 1985 with Kary B. Mullis and colleagues' description of the (PCR), a technique enabling exponential amplification of specific DNA sequences using thermostable , which revolutionized genetic analysis, diagnostics, and forensics by allowing precise replication from minute samples without prior . PCR's development earned Mullis the 1993 and underpins subsequent technologies like and pathogen detection. In February 2001, J. Craig Venter and the Celera Genomics team reported a 2.91-billion draft sequence of the euchromatic via whole-genome assembly, complementing the public Project's parallel efforts and revealing approximately 26,000 protein-coding genes, far fewer than prior estimates, while highlighting regulatory elements and evolutionary insights. This publication accelerated by providing a high-quality reference for variant mapping and functional studies, influencing and research. The 2012 article by Martin Jinek, Jennifer Doudna, and colleagues elucidated the CRISPR-Cas9 system's mechanism as a dual-RNA-guided DNA endonuclease in bacterial adaptive immunity, demonstrating programmable cleavage of target DNA sequences in vitro and proposing its adaptation for site-specific genome engineering. This work transformed gene editing, enabling precise modifications in model organisms and therapeutic applications, though it sparked patent disputes resolved in favor of broader accessibility. Beyond technical advances, Garrett Hardin's 1968 essay "The Tragedy of the Commons" in Science analyzed how shared resources lead to overexploitation under individual incentives, advocating mutual coercion like privatization or regulation to sustain commons such as fisheries and atmosphere, influencing environmental policy and economics despite critiques of oversimplifying cooperative solutions.

Access and Dissemination

Subscription and Open Access Models


Science operates under a subscription-based access model managed by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), requiring payment for full access to current articles. Individual access is provided through AAAS membership, which includes digital subscriptions to the journal, while institutional subscriptions offer site-wide licenses for organizations such as universities, with pricing outlined in annual rate cards (e.g., the 2026 institutional rate card). News content employs a metered paywall, allowing limited free reads before subscription prompts.
Certain archival content becomes freely available after a one-year embargo; for instance, articles published from 1997 onward are accessible without subscription following this period, upon free registration. Public-interest collections and select articles are also provided immediately. Publication in Science adheres to a traditional reader-pays model, with no article processing charges (APCs) levied on authors for standard subscription articles; revenue from subscriptions funds operations and . Authors incur optional fees for color figures, at $650 for the first and $450 for each additional. Unlike hybrid journals that charge APCs for immediate open access, Science does not offer a gold option within its pages. AAAS supports green open access through a no-fee policy effective January 1, 2023, permitting authors to publicly share accepted manuscripts immediately upon acceptance, without embargo or additional costs. This zero-embargo sharing complies with funder requirements, such as those from Plan S agencies, by allowing deposition in repositories while preserving subscription revenue. For fully open access publishing, AAAS directs authors to the companion journal Science Advances, which is APC-funded at approximately $4,950–$5,450 per article, depending on discounts and agreements.

Archival and Digital Availability

The journal Science provides digital access to its content through the official website science.org, where full-text articles from 1997 to the present are available to subscribers, AAAS members, or via institutional access. Archives of issues from 1880 through 1996 are accessible via Science Classic, a digitized collection offering scanned pages and searchable text of over a century of publications, integrated into the Science online platform for qualifying institutional subscribers. Back issues, including early volumes from the journal's founding, are also preserved digitally on , enabling access to high-resolution scans from volume 1 () onward for users affiliated with participating libraries or consortia. This platform supports scholarly research by providing metadata, citations, and full-text retrieval, with coverage extending to the journal's historical series, such as the initial run and the "new series" starting in 1895. AAAS membership at the Silver level or higher includes digital access to the complete archive dating back to 1880, alongside current issues, facilitating long-term preservation and dissemination of the journal's record. While abstracts and select previews are openly available on science.org, comprehensive archival content remains restricted to paid or affiliated users to sustain the publication's operations, with no centralized public-domain digital repository hosting all historical volumes freely. Physical archives of the journal are maintained by AAAS and accessible to researchers upon request, complementing digital efforts.

Controversies and Criticisms

Notable Retractions and Corrections

In 2025, Science retracted a highly publicized 2010 paper claiming that the bacterium GFAJ-1 from Mono Lake could incorporate arsenic into its DNA in place of phosphorus, challenging fundamental assumptions about life's biochemistry. The study, led by Felisa Wolfe-Simon and supported by NASA astrobiology interests, was criticized shortly after publication for lacking robust evidence and potential contamination, but formal retraction occurred 15 years later due to experimental flaws and irreproducibility under the journal's expanded criteria for retractions beyond misconduct. The authors contested the decision, arguing the data remained defensible, though independent analyses confirmed inconsistencies in arsenic substitution claims. Another significant case involved two 2001 neuroscience papers by Marc Tessier-Lavigne and colleagues on guidance receptors in axon pathfinding, retracted in 2023 following a Stanford University investigation into data manipulation. These works, cited over 600 times collectively, showed duplicated images and selective reporting; the retractions stemmed from confirmed irregularities in figures, prompting broader scrutiny of Tessier-Lavigne's research record during his tenure as Stanford president. In , a 2014 paper titled "When Contact Changes Minds: An Experiment on Transmission of Support for Equality," reporting interpersonal contact's role in shifting attitudes toward , was retracted in 2015 after evidence of fabricated data emerged from inconsistencies flagged by co-author peers. The study had influenced policy discussions before withdrawal, highlighting vulnerabilities in experimental design validation. More recently, a 2014 cell biology paper on mitosis inhibiting DNA repair, from Daniel Durocher's lab, was retracted in 2025 over anomalies in figure data suggestive of integrity issues, with all authors agreeing to the action. Separately, a 2023 ecology paper on drought vulnerability in mesic forests faced retraction in 2024 due to miscalculations in vulnerability metrics, despite high download counts (over 4,600). These cases reflect Science's retraction rate of approximately 0.34% of published papers, often involving errors or misconduct identified post-publication. Corrections in Science are less frequently highlighted as "notable" compared to retractions, but prominent examples include amendments to high-impact papers for methodological clarifications or minor data adjustments, such as those in replication-challenged fields like , without altering core conclusions. The journal's policies emphasize transparency, with corrections issued promptly upon verified errors to maintain scientific .

Alleged Biases and Editorial Practices

Critics have alleged that Science exhibits ideological biases in its editorial practices, particularly through topic selection, framing of controversial issues, and occasional politicized editorials that align with progressive viewpoints prevalent in academia. For example, a June 2021 article in Science reported findings from a study claiming conservatives demonstrate lower sensitivity than liberals in distinguishing political truths from falsehoods, a conclusion attributed to differences in media consumption and cognitive processing; detractors, including conservative commentators, argued the research reinforced partisan narratives while overlooking symmetric biases on the left and methodological limitations in survey-based assessments. In October 2020, Science's then-editor-in-chief H. Holden Thorp published an editorial asserting that President had "deliberately lied about " in ways that exacerbated deaths, framing the administration's messaging as a direct causal threat to lives. Such interventions have drawn rebukes for blurring the line between scientific reporting and political advocacy, potentially undermining the journal's impartiality and inviting accusations of selective outrage absent similar critiques of opposing policies. On the origins of SARS-CoV-2, published pieces early in the that emphasized zoonotic spillover while deeming leak scenarios improbable, as in a September 2021 feature quoting experts who viewed at the as unlikely to yield the virus's specific cleavage site. Subsequent criticisms, particularly from those skeptical of initial dismissals, posited that this stance reflected institutional pressures to protect U.S. funding ties to Chinese virology labs and NIH-backed research, though later covered evolving evidence more evenhandedly, including U.S. congressional inquiries favoring lab origins by December 2024. More generally, Science has been faulted for underrepresenting or critiquing research challenging environmentalist or social justice orthodoxies, such as nuclear energy advocacy or innate sex differences in cognitive traits, patterns some attribute to the left-leaning demographics of scientific communities where surveys indicate liberals outnumber conservatives by ratios exceeding 10:1 in certain fields. These practices occur amid single-anonymized peer review, which, while standard, can perpetuate biases via reviewer affiliations or institutional prestige, as evidenced by broader studies on implicit biases in high-impact journals. Despite such claims, Science upholds rigorous double-checking of data and methods, and independent evaluators classify it as pro-science with minimal editorializing and high factual accuracy.

References

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