====== 🧠 eLife ====== ===== 📘 General Overview ===== * **Name**: eLife * **Publisher**: eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd. * **Founded**: 2012 * **Focus**: Life and biomedical sciences — includes neuroscience, computational biology, and translational research * **Official site**: https://elifesciences.org/ **Impact Metrics**: * **CiteScore (2023)**: 10.3 * **SCImago Rank (SJR)**: Q1 in Neuroscience and Neurology * **Google Scholar h5-index**: 152 (Neuroscience section) ---- ===== 🔍 Scope and Relevance to Neurosurgery ===== eLife **does not publish clinical neurosurgery per se**, but is **highly relevant** for: * Systems and cognitive neuroscience * Brain networks and consciousness * Neuro-oncology mechanisms * Computational neurosurgery * AI/neuroimaging innovations * Deep brain stimulation, epilepsy, neuroplasticity It’s a **top choice for neurosurgeons engaged in translational research** or surgical neurophysiology. ---- ===== ✅ Peer Review Model: Transparent and Collaborative ===== * **Open review**: Reviewer names are published. * **Review histories**: Published with accepted articles. * **Author-reviewer dialogue**: Encouraged during the decision process. * **eLife “Review Commons”**: Pre-peer review transferable to other journals. **🧾 Verdict**: A **gold standard** of peer review transparency and rigor. Minimal bias, constructive tone, rapid feedback. ---- ===== 💡 Advantages for Neurosurgeons ===== * Ideal for interdisciplinary work linking surgery with neuroscience. * High editorial prestige and indexation (PubMed, Web of Science, Scopus). * Emphasizes **mechanisms** and **functional outcomes** rather than just surgical techniques. * Very **citationally impactful** in high-level science. ---- ===== ⚠️ Limitations ===== * No acceptance of purely clinical neurosurgical case series or technical notes. * Not intended for typical operative neurosurgery studies. * Article processing charge (APC): ~$3,000 USD (waivers available for LMICs or justified requests). ---- ===== 🏁 Final Verdict ===== **eLife** is an outstanding venue for neurosurgeons doing **neuroscience-oriented**, **mechanism-driven**, or **technologically novel** research. It is **not a fit** for standard surgical case reports, but an excellent outlet for work in: * Network science in epilepsy or consciousness * DBS, connectomics, or intraoperative monitoring * Computational models of tumors or vascular risk * Neural interfaces or brain–computer interactions > 🎯 If your neurosurgical research *asks a neuroscientific question* or *tests a mechanistic hypothesis* — eLife is among the best. ---- **🧠 Tip**: Pair eLife submissions with a preprint on **bioRxiv** and reference your open peer review profile on **Sciety.org** to maximize transparency and reach.