Reviewer Guidelines
Peer review is conducted to improve the quality, clarity, and scientific validity of manuscripts submitted to Analytical and Quantitative Cytopathology and Histopathology. Although peer review is a time-consuming process, it is essential for maintaining the quality and integrity of scholarly publishing.
The journal sincerely acknowledges and appreciates the valuable time, effort, and expertise contributed by reviewers in the peer review process.
Role of Reviewers
Reviewers are responsible for critically reading and evaluating assigned manuscripts. They are expected to provide respectful, constructive, and honest feedback to authors, with the aim of improving the scientific quality and strength of the work.
Comments should be professional and supportive, encouraging authors to enhance their manuscript where needed.
Reviewer Selection
The journal identifies potential reviewers through multiple sources, including:
- Editorial Board members
- Academic and professional networks
- Published scientific literature and bibliographic databases
- Public research profiles and scholarly contributions
- Author-suggested reviewers (when applicable)
- Reviewer assessments and comments play a key role in editorial decision-making regarding acceptance, revision, or rejection of manuscripts.
Reviewer Responsibilities
When accepting and reviewing a manuscript, reviewers must ensure the following:
- Reviews are fair, objective, and unbiased
- Personal criticism of authors is strictly avoided
- Feedback remains constructive, with suggestions for improvement
- Reviewer identity is kept confidential (single/double-blind policy as applicable)
- Any conflict of interest is disclosed and the review invitation is declined if necessary
- Manuscript content is treated as strictly confidential
- Review forms must be completed as required by the journal
- Reviewers may also communicate directly with the editor if needed
Evaluation Criteria
Reviewers are requested to assess manuscripts based on the following points:
- Is the topic relevant and suitable for the journal scope?
- Does the manuscript comply with author instructions?
- Do the title, abstract, keywords, introduction, and conclusions reflect the core study?
- Is the manuscript clearly written and scientifically structured?
- Is the research aim clearly defined and methodologically sound?
- Are ethical approvals and informed consents properly addressed (where applicable)?
- Are statistical methods appropriate and correctly applied?
- Are results and conclusions logically supported by data?
- Is there any indication of data manipulation, bias, or unethical practice?
- Are tables and figures clear, properly labeled, and necessary for understanding?
- Are references appropriate, up to date, and correctly formatted?
- Are important or landmark studies missing from the citations?
Ethical Considerations
Reviewers must remain alert to potential ethical issues, including:
- Plagiarism or duplicate publication
- Data fabrication or falsification
- Image manipulation
- Ethical non-compliance in human or animal studies
Any concerns must be reported confidentially to the editor.
Confidentiality
All manuscripts under review must be treated as confidential documents and must not be shared, discussed, or used for personal advantage.
General Principles
- Reviews must be objective, constructive, and professional
- Criticism should always be evidence-based
- Suggestions for improvement should be clearly provided
- Reviewers should aim to enhance manuscript quality
Reference for Review Ethics
Reviewers are encouraged to follow internationally accepted peer review standards, including COPE Guidelines for Peer Reviewers.