Default: Development (Cambridge)

ISSN: 0950-1991

Journal Home

Journal Guideline

Development (Cambridge) Q1 Unclaimed

Company of Biologists Ltd United Kingdom
Unfortunately this journal has not been claimed yet. For this reason, some information may be unavailable.

Development (Cambridge) is a journal indexed in SJR in Molecular Biology and Developmental Biology with an H index of 359. It has a price of 2500 €. It has an SJR impact factor of 1,852 and it has a best quartile of Q1. It is published in English. It has an SJR impact factor of 1,852.

Development (Cambridge) focuses its scope in these topics and keywords: development, regulates, regulate, formation, expression, cell, genes, required, signaling, human, ...

Type: Journal

Type of Copyright:

Languages: English

Open Access Policy:

Type of publications:

Publication frecuency: -

Price

2500 €

Inmediate OA

NPD

Embargoed OA

0 €

Non OA

Metrics

Development (Cambridge)

1,852

SJR Impact factor

359

H Index

443

Total Docs (Last Year)

1386

Total Docs (3 years)

25346

Total Refs

4601

Total Cites (3 years)

1289

Citable Docs (3 years)

2.92

Cites/Doc (2 years)

57.21

Ref/Doc

Comments

No comments ... Be the first to comment!

Aims and Scope


development, regulates, regulate, formation, expression, cell, genes, required, signaling, human, elongation, complex, cdx, stem, axial, growth, crest, leafy, control, cortical, gene, hedgehog, neural, pharyngeal, progenitors, protein,



Best articles by citations

Watering down vertebrate development

View more

Arginine methyltransferase Capsuleen is essential for methylation of spliceosomal Sm proteins and germ cell formation in Drosophila

View more

Building a better brain

View more

XSEB4R, a novel RNA-binding protein involved in retinal cell differentiation downstream of bHLH proneural genes

View more

The nuage mediates retrotransposon silencing in mouse primordial ovarian follicles

View more

The globby1-1 (glo1-1) mutation disrupts nuclear and cell division in the developing maize seed causing alterations in endosperm cell fate and tissue differentiation

View more

Endoderm convergence controls subduction of the myocardial precursors during heart-tube formation

View more

Caenorhabditis elegans TRPV ion channel regulates 5HT biosynthesis in chemosensory neurons

View more

Misrouting of mitral cell progenitors in the Pax6/small eyerat telencephalon

View more

The C. elegans heterochronic gene lin-46 affects developmental timing at two larval stages and encodes a relative of the scaffolding protein gephyrin

View more

The neural tube patterns vessels developmentally using the VEGF signaling pathway

View more

Complexcis-regulatory landscape of the insulin receptor gene underlies the broad expression of a central signaling regulator

View more
SHOW MORE ARTICLES

Conversion of cell movement responses to Semaphorin-1 and Plexin-1 from attraction to repulsion by lowered levels of specific RAC GTPases in C. elegans

View more

Species-specific contribution of volumetric growth and tissue convergence to posterior body elongation in vertebrates

View more

Echinoid facilitates Notch pathway signalling during Drosophila neurogenesis through functional interaction with Delta

View more

Bapx1 regulates patterning in the middle ear: altered regulatory role in the transition from the proximal jaw during vertebrate evolution

View more

What you didn't know about evo-devo

View more

Accelerated dendritic development of rat cortical pyramidal cells and interneurons after biolistic transfection with BDNF and NT4/5

View more

Tissue-specific G1-phase cell-cycle arrest prior to terminal differentiation in Dictyostelium

View more

Spineless culture

View more

All at the tip of a needle

View more

Negative regulation of Hedgehog signaling by the cholesterogenic enzyme7-dehydrocholesterol reductase

View more

Roles for GFR 1 receptors in zebrafish enteric nervous system development

View more

The Caenorhabditis elegans schnurri homolog sma-9 mediates stage- and cell type-specific responses to DBL-1 BMP-related signaling

View more

FAQS