Nature is a prominent British
scientific journal, first published on 4
November 1869. Most scientific journals are now highly specialized,
and
Nature is among the few journals (the other weekly
journals
Science and
Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences are also prominent
examples) that still publish
original
research articles across a wide range of
scientific fields. There are many fields of
scientific research in which some
important new advances and original research are published as
either
article or letters in
Nature.
Research
scientists are the primary
audience for the journal, but summaries and accompanying articles
make many of the most important papers understandable for the
general public and to scientists in other fields. Toward the front
of each issue are
editorials, news and
feature articles on issues of general interest to scientists,
including current affairs, science funding, business, scientific
ethics and research breakthroughs. There are
also sections on books and arts. The remainder of the journal
consists mostly of research articles, which are often dense and
highly technical. Because of strict limits on the length of
articles, in many cases the printed text is actually a summary of
the work in question with many details relegated to accompanying
supplementary material on the journal's website.
In 2007
Nature (together with
Science) received the
Prince of Asturias Award for
Communications and Humanity.
History
Scientific magazines and journals preceding
Nature
Nineteenth-century Britain was home to a great deal of scientific
progress; particularly in the latter half of the 19th century,
Britain underwent enormous technological and industrial changes and
advances. The most respected scientific journals of this time were
the refereed journals of the
Royal
Society, which had published many of the great works from
Isaac Newton,
Michael Faraday through to early works from
Charles Darwin. In addition, during
this period, the number of popular science periodicals doubled from
the
1850s to the
1860s.
According to the editors of these popular science magazines, the
publications were designed to serve as “organs of science,” in
essence, a means of connecting the public to the scientific
world.
Nature, first created in
1869, was not
the first magazine of its kind. One journal to precede
Nature was titled
Recreative Science: A Record and Remembrancer of Intellectual
Observation, which, created in
1859,
began as a
natural history magazine
and progressed to include more physical observational science and
technical subjects and less natural history. The journal’s name
changed from its original title to
Intellectual Observer: A
Review of Natural History, Microscopic Research, and Recreative
Science and then later to the
Student and Intellectual
Observer of Science, Literature, and Art. While
Recreative
Science had attempted to include more physical sciences such
as
astronomy and
archaeology, the
Intellectual Observer
broadened itself further to include literature and art as well.
Similar to
Recreative Science was the scientific journal
titled
Popular Science
Review, created in
1862, which covered
different fields of science by creating subsections titled
‘Scientific Summary’ or ‘Quarterly Retrospect,’ with book reviews
and commentary on the latest scientific works and publications. Two
other journals produced in England prior to the development of
Nature were titled the
Quarterly Journal of
Science and
Scientific
Opinion, founded in
1864 and
1868, respectively. The journal most closely related to
Nature in its editorship and format was titled
The
Reader, created in 1864; the publication mixed science with
literature and art in an attempt to reach an audience outside of
the scientific community, similar to
Popular Science
Review.
These similar journals all ultimately failed. The
Popular
Science Review was the longest to survive, lasting 20 years
and ending its publication in
1881;
Recreative Science ceased publication as the
Student
and Intellectual Observer in
1871. The
Quarterly Journal, after undergoing a number of editorial
changes, ceased publication in
1885.
The
Reader terminated in
1867, and finally,
Scientific Opinion lasted a mere 2 years, until June
1870.
The creation of Nature
Not long after the conclusion of
The Reader, a former
editor,
Norman Lockyer, decided to
create a new scientific journal titled
Nature, taking its
name from a line by
William
Wordsworth: "To the solid ground of nature trusts the Mind that
builds for aye". First owned and published by Alexander MacMillan,
Nature was similar to its predecessors in its attempt to
“provide cultivated readers with an accessible forum for reading
about advances in scientific knowledge.” Janet Browne has proposed
that “far more than any other science journal of the period,
Nature was conceived, born, and raised to serve polemic
purpose.” Many of the early editions of
Nature consisted
of articles written by members of a group that called itself the
X Club, a group of scientists known for
having liberal, progressive, and somewhat controversial scientific
beliefs relative to the time period. Initiated by
Thomas Henry Huxley, the group consisted
of such important scientists as
Joseph
Hooker,
Herbert Spencer, and
John Tyndall, along with another five
scientists and mathematicians; these scientists were all avid
supporters of Darwin’s theory of evolution, a theory which, during
the latter-half of the 19th century, received a great deal of
criticism among more conservative groups of scientists. Perhaps it
was in part its scientific liberality that made
Nature a
longer-lasting success than its predecessors.
John Maddox, editor of
Nature from 1966
to 1973 as well as from 1980 to 1995, suggested at a celebratory
dinner for the journal’s centennial edition that perhaps it was the
journalistic qualities of Nature that drew readers in; “journalism”
Maddox states, “is a way of creating a sense of community among
people who would otherwise be isolated from each other. This is
what Lockyer’s journal did from the start.” In addition, Maddox
mentions that the financial backing of the journal in its first
years by the Macmillan family also allowed the journal to flourish
and develop more freely than scientific journals before it.
Nature in the 20th and early 21st centuries
Nature underwent a great deal of development and expansion during
the 20th century, particularly during the latter half of the
90s.
Editors
In 1919, Sir Richard Gregory followed Sir
Norman Lockyer to become the second editor of
the journal. Gregory helped to establish
Nature in the
international scientific community.
His obituary by the Royal Society stated:
“Gregory was always very interested in the international contacts
of science, and in the columns of Nature he always gave
generous space to accounts of the activities of the International
Scientific Unions.” Norman Lockyer, was also the founder of Nature
and was a professor at Imperial College
. During the years 1945 to 1973, editorship
of
Nature changed three times, first to A.J.V. Gale and
L.J.F. Brimble in 1945 (who in 1958 became the sole editor), then
to Sir
John Maddox in 1965, and finally
to David Davies in 1973. In 1980, Sir
John
Maddox returned as editor and retained his position until 1995.
Dr.
Philip Campbell has
since become Editor-in-chief of all
Nature
publications.
Nature’s expansion and development
In 1970,
Nature first opened its Washington office; other
branches opened in New York in 1985, Tokyo and Munich in 1987,
Paris in 1989, San Francisco in 2001, Boston in 2004, and Hong Kong
in 2005. Starting in the 1980’s, the journal underwent a great deal
of expansion, launching over ten new journals. These new journals
comprise the Nature Publishing Group, which was created in 1999 and
includes
Nature, Nature Research Journals, Stockton Press
Specialist Journals and Macmillan Reference (renamed NPG
Reference).
In 1997,
Nature created its own website, www.nature.com,
and in 1999 Nature Publishing Group began its series of
Nature
Reviews. Some articles and papers are available for free on
the Nature Web site. Others require the purchase of premium access
to the site.
Nature claims a readership of over 300,000 senior scientists and
executives and over 600,000 total readers. The journal has a
circulation of around 65,000 but studies have concluded that on
average a single copy is shared by as many as 10 people.
On October
30, 2008, Nature endorsed an American
presidential candidate for
the the first time when it supported Barack
Obama during his campaign in America's 2008
presidential election.
Publishing in Nature
Having an article published in
Nature is very prestigious,
and the articles are often highly cited, which can lead to
promotions, grant funding, and attention from the mainstream media.
Because of these
positive feedback
effects, competition among scientists to publish in high-level
journals like
Nature and its closest competitor,
Science, can be very
fierce.
Nature's
impact
factor, a measure of how many citations a journal generates in
other works, was 29.273 in 2005 (as measured by
Thomson ISI), among the
highest of any science journal.
As with most other professional scientific journals, articles
undergo an initial screening by the editor, followed by
peer review (in which other scientists, chosen
by the editor for expertise with the subject matter but who have no
connection to the research under review, will read and critique
articles), before publication. In the case of
Nature, they
are only sent for review if it is decided that they deal with a
topical subject and are sufficiently ground-breaking in that
particular field. As a consequence, the majority of submitted
articles are rejected without review.
According to
Nature's original
mission statement:
This was revised in 2000 to:
Landmark papers
Many of the most significant scientific breakthroughs in modern
history have been first published in
Nature. The following
is a selection of scientific breakthroughs published in
Nature, all of which had far-reaching consequences, and
the citation for the article in which they were published.
Peer review anomalies
A series of five fraudulent papers by
Jan Hendrik Schön were published in
Nature in the 2000–2001 period. The papers, about
superconductivity, were revealed to
contain falsified data and other scientific fraud. In 2003 the
papers were retracted by
Nature. The Schön Scandal was not
limited to
Nature. Other prominent journals such as
Science and
Physical Review also retracted Schön's
papers.
Before publishing one of its most famous discoveries,
Watson and Crick's 1953 paper on the
structure of DNA,
Nature did not send the paper out for
peer review at all.
John Maddox,
Nature's editor, stated that "the Watson and Crick paper
was not peer-reviewed by
Nature... the paper could not
have been refereed: its correctness is self-evident. No referee
working in the field ... could have kept his mouth shut once he saw
the structure".
An earlier error occurred when
Enrico
Fermi submitted his breakthrough paper on the weak interaction
theory of
beta decay.
Nature
turned down the paper because it was considered too remote from
reality. Fermi's paper was published by
Zeitschrift für Physik in
1934, and finally published by
Nature 5 years later, after
Fermi's work had been widely accepted.
When
Paul Lauterbur and
Peter Mansfield won a
Nobel Prize in Physiology
or Medicine for research initially rejected by
Nature
and published only after Lauterbur appealed the rejection,
Nature acknowledged more of its own missteps in rejecting
papers in an editorial titled "Coping with Peer Rejection":
Publication of Nature and related journals
Nature is edited and published in the United Kingdom by
Nature Publishing Group, a
subsidiary of
Macmillan
Publishers which in turn is owned by the
Georg von Holtzbrinck
Publishing Group.
Nature has offices in London
, New York City
, San Francisco
, Washington,
D.C.
, Boston
, Tokyo
, Hong Kong
, Paris
, Munich
, and
Basingstoke
. Nature Publishing Group also publishes
other specialized journals including
Nature Neuroscience,
Nature
Biotechnology, Nature Methods, the
Nature
Clinical Practice series of journals,
Nature Structural
& Molecular Biology and the
Nature Reviews series
of journals.
Presently, each issue of
Nature is accompanied by the
Nature Podcast featuring highlights from the issue and
interviews with the articles' authors and the journalists covering
the research. It is presented by Adam Rutherford and Kerri Smith,
and features interviews with scientists on the latest research, as
well as news reports from Nature's editors and journalists. It also
incorporates regular slots called the 'PODium', a weekly 60-second
opinion slot, and the 'Sound of Science', a regular slot featuring
science-related music or other scientific audio recordings.
It was
formerly presented by Chris Smith of Cambridge
University
and the Naked
Scientists.
In 2007, Nature Publishing Group began publishing
Clinical
Pharmacology & Therapeutics, “the official journal of the
American Society of Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics” and
Molecular Therapy, the American Society of Gene Therapy’s
official journal, as well as the
International Society for
Microbial Ecology (ISME) Journal. Nature Publishing Group
launched
Nature Photonics in 2007 and
Nature
Geoscience in 2008.
Nature Chemistry published its
first issue
http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/v1/n1/index.html
in April 2009.
Nature Publishing Group actively supports the self-archiving
process and in 2002 was one of the first publishers to allow
authors to post their contributions on their personal websites, by
requesting an exclusive licence to publish, rather than requiring
authors to transfer copyright. In December 2007, Nature Publishing
Group introduced the Creative Commons attribution-non
commercial-share alike unported licence for those articles in
Nature journals that are publishing the primary sequence of an
organism's genome for the first time.
Nature family of journals
In addition to
Nature itself, there are three families of
Nature-branded journals published by the
Nature Publishing Group:
- Research journals:
- *Nature
Biotechnology
- *Nature Cell
Biology
- *Nature Chemical
Biology
- *Nature Chemistry
- *Nature Genetics
- *Nature Geoscience
(launched in January 2008)
- *Nature
Immunology
- *Nature Materials
- *Nature Medicine
- *Nature Methods
- *Nature
Nanotechnology (Launched in October 2006)
- *Nature
Neuroscience
- *Nature Photonics
(Launched in January 2007 ; ISSN 1749-4885 ; EISSN 1749-4893 ;
website)
- *Nature Physics
- *Nature
Structural and Molecular Biology
- Protocol:
- *Nature Protocols
(Launched in June 2006, journal
homepage)
- Reviews journals:
- *Nature Reviews
Cancer
- *Nature Reviews
Drug Discovery
- *Nature Reviews
Genetics
- *Nature Reviews
Immunology
- *Nature Reviews
Microbiology
- *Nature
Reviews Molecular Cell Biology
- *Nature Reviews
Neuroscience
- Nature Clinical
Practice journals:
- *Nature Clinical
Practice Cardiovascular Medicine
- *Nature
Clinical Practice Endocrinology and Metabolism
- *Nature
Clinical Practice Gastroenterology and Hepatology
- *Nature
Clinical Practice Neurology
- *Nature
Clinical Practice Nephrology
- *Nature
Clinical Practice Oncology
- *Nature
Clinical Practice Rheumatology
- *Nature
Clinical Practice Urology
- Nature Online Publications:
- *Nature China (Launched in
January 2007)
- *Nature India (Launched in
February 2008)
Notes
- Journal Nature
- Siegel, "A Cooperative Publishing Model for Sustainable
Scholarship," p. 88
- Barton, "Just Before Nature," p. 3
- Barton, "Just Before Nature," p. 7
- Barton, "Just Before Nature," p. 6
- Barton, "Just Before Nature," p. 13
- Browne, Charles Darwin: The Power of Place, p.
248
- Poem: "A VOLANT Tribe of Bards on earth are
found"
- Browne, Charles Darwin: The Power of Place, p.
247
- "The Nature Centenary Dinner," p. 13
- "Nature Publishing Group: History", retrieved November 15,
2006
- "Richard Arman Gregory, 1864–1952," p. 413
- Demographics: Nature, a profile of Nature's
readership.
- Nature: America's choice
- Weekly science journal Nature endorses a
presidential candidate: Barack Obama
- Richard Rhodes, The Making of the Atomic Bomb,
Touchstone, New York, 1986. ISBN 0-671-44133-7
- Fermi, E (1934).' Versuch einer Theorie der beta–strahlen',
Zeitschrift für Physik, vol. 88, p. 161.
- family of journals
References
- (1953). "Richard Arman Gregory, 1864–1952." Obituary
Notices of Fellows of the Royal Society 8(22).
- (1970). "The 'Nature' Centenary Dinner." Notes and Records
of the Royal Society of London 25(1).
- (2006). "Nature Publishing Group: History." Retrieved November
15, 2006, from
http://npg.nature.com/npg/servlet/Content?data=xml/02_history.xml&style=xml/02_history.xsl
- (2006). "About the journal: Nature." Retrieved November 20,
2006, from http://www.nature.com/nature/about/index.html
- Barton, R. (1996). "Just Before Nature: The Purposes of Science
and the Purposes of Popularization in Some English Popular Science
Journals of the 1860s." Annals of Science 55: 33.
- Browne, J. (2002). Charles Darwin: The Power of Place.
New York, Alfred A. Knopf, Inc.
- Siegel, R. S. a. G. E. (2006). "A Cooperative Publishing Model
for Sustainable Scholarship " Journal of Scholarly
Publishing 37(2): 13.
External links