Frontiers in Respiratory Physiology is a Specialty Section of Frontiers in Physiology.
Frontiers in Respiratory Physiology, a Specialty Section of Frontiers in Physiology, provides a medium to disseminate information on the physiological mechanisms of the respiratory system. Our goal is to publish original works that contribute to our overall understanding of the cellular, multicellular, organ, system and integrated physiology of the respiratory system.
Frontiers in Respiratory Physiology publishes respiratory research in:
- Behavioral control of breathing
- Neural control of breathing
- Afferents and sensory processes
- Airway defense mechanisms
- Respiratory muscles
- Respiratory mechanics
- Lung and airway biology
- Gas exchange and transport
- Developmental respiratory physiology
- Modeling of the respiratory system
- Techniques
- Pharmacology
- Environmental physiology
- Structure and ultrastructure
- Respiratory pathophysiology
We encourage papers that use biological, biochemical, biophysical, engineering, mathematical, behavioral and clinical approaches to expand our understanding of respiratory physiology. Our goal is to provide the scientific community with comprehensive current research in respiratory physiology.
Frontiers in Respiratory Physiology welcomes the following
tier 1 article types: Book Review, Editorial, General Commentary, Hypothesis & Theory, Methods, Opinion, Original Research, Perspective, Review and Specialty Grand Challenge.
All articles must be submitted directly to Frontiers in Respiratory Physiology, where they are processed by the associate and review editors of the Specialty Section.
All articles published in Frontiers in Respiratory Physiology will be subjected to the
Frontiers Evaluation System after online publication. Authors of the
original research articles with the highest impact, as judged by many expert readers, will be invited by the Field Chief Editor of Frontiers in Physiology to write a prestigious Frontiers
Focused Review - a tier 2 article. This is referred to as "
democratic tiering". The selection is based on the reader impact over a 4-month period from the date of publication. The selected high impact articles are re-written in a review style centered on the original discovery, and aim to address the wider audience across all of Physiology.