Data Deposition Policy
Long-term Preservation of Published Articles
The Applied Biology & Chemistry Journal is dedicated to the long-term preservation of all published content. As our journal is hosted on the Open Journal Systems (OJS) platform, we benefit from the automatic inclusion in the PKP Preservation Network (PKP PN), which ensures the preservation of our articles.
The PKP PN leverages the LOCKSS (Lots of Copies Keep Stuff Safe) program, a decentralized and distributed system, that guarantees the integrity and perpetual access of authentic, original versions of all published materials. This system preserves our content across multiple locations globally, ensuring that the scientific contributions made by our authors remain accessible for future generations, even if the journal or its platform experiences any technical difficulties.
Through this preservation network, The Applied Biology & Chemistry Journal maintains its commitment to safeguarding scholarly research and knowledge for the long term, without any additional actions required from our authors or readers.
The Applied Biology & Chemistry Journal (TABCJ) also collaborates with services like ROAD and Keepers registry to facilitate data sharing and ensure that the TABCJ data policy is followed. The article and its underlying data are paired, published together, and linked through TABCJ's integration with partner repositories.
In addition, TABCJ uploads all supporting information files for each article to the partners' repository.
Authors can submit their manuscripts with placeholder text in their Data Availability Statements stating that accession numbers and/or DOIs will be provided after acceptance. Prior to publication, the journal office will contact authors and request this information, and the manuscript will be held until it is obtained.
It is allowed to give reviewers and editors access to confidential data during the peer review process. Many repositories allow for private review access and have protocols in place for public release after publication.
Authors receive a tentative data set DOI as well as a private reviewer URL link when they submit data in the integrated repository. Authors should include the data set DOI in the Data Availability Statement when submitting to TABCJ. They should also include the reviewer URL, which will allow for restricted data access during peer review. If a manuscript is accepted by TABCJ, the article's publication and the public release of the data set will be synchronized automatically.
If any author cannot afford the cost of depositing a large amount of data, in that case, TABCJ advises authors to look into all of their alternatives and to contact their institutions if they are having trouble getting access to the data that underpins their research. TABCJ recommends various repositories that specialize in processing massive data sets. The policies should not go beyond the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license in terms of restrictions.