Journal of Vestibular Research

Equilibrium & Orientation, An International Journal of Experimental and Clinical Vestibular Science, Official Journal of the Bárány Society

Impact Factor
2023
2.3
CiteScore
2023
3.9

Volume

33, 6 issues

Latest issue

34:1 online 23 February 2024

Next issue

34:2 scheduled for April 2024

Back volumes

From volume 1, 1990

ISSN print

0957-4271

ISSN online

1878-6464

Aims & Scope

The Journal of Vestibular Research is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes experimental and observational studies, review papers, theoretical papers based on current knowledge of the vestibular system, and letters to the Editor. The subjects of the studies can include experimental animals, normal humans, and humans with vestibular or other related disorders.

Study topics can include the following:
- Neurophysiology of balance, including the vestibular, ocular motor, autonomic, and postural control systems
- Anatomy of vestibular, vestibulo-ocular, vestibulo-spinal, and vestibulo-autonomic pathways
- Vestibular-related human performance in various environments
- Psychophysics of spatial orientation
- Space and motion sickness
- Balance disorders
- Vestibular rehabilitation

Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief

Joseph M. Furman, MD, PhD
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA
USA
Email: jvr@pitt.edu

Associate Editor

Susan Whitney, PhD
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, PA
USA

Editorial Office

Eye & Ear Institute
Journal of Vestibular Research
Eye & Ear Institute, 
Suite 500
203 Lothrop Street
Pittsburgh, PA 15213
USA
Email: jvr@pitt.edu

Editorial Board

Raymond van de Berg, MD, PhD
Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht
the Netherlands

Adolfo Bronstein, MD
Imperial College, London
United Kingdom

Helen Cohen, EdD
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX
USA

Ji-Soo Kim, MD, PhD
Seoul National University, Seoul
South Korea

Måns Magnusson, MD, PhD
Lund University, Lund
Sweden

Michael Schubert, PhD
Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, MD
USA

Jeffrey P. Staab, MD, MS
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN
USA

David J. Szmulewicz, PhD
The University of Melbourne, Melbourne
Australia

Michael von Brevern, MD, PhD
Charité and Park-Klinik Weissensee, Berlin
Germany

Bryan Ward, MD
Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD
USA

Dario Andres Yacovino, MD, PhD
Cesar Milstein Hospital & Memory and Balance Clinic, Buenos Aires
Argentina

Social Media Editor

Bryan Ward, MD
Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, MD
USA

Author Guidelines

SUBMISSION OF MANUSCRIPT

By submitting my article to this journal, I agree to the Author Copyright Agreement, the IOS Press Ethics Policy, and the IOS Press Privacy Policy.

Authors are requested to submit their manuscript electronically to the journal’s editorial management system. Please see author guidelines for complete instructions.

The Journal of Vestibular Research (JVR) does not charge a publication fee.

COPYRIGHT

Copyright of your article
Authors submitting a manuscript do so on the understanding that they have read and agreed to the terms of the IOS Press Author Copyright Agreement.

Article sharing
Authors of journal articles are permitted to self-archive and share their work through institutional repositories, personal websites, and preprint servers. Authors have the right to use excerpts of their article in other works written by the authors themselves, provided that the original work is properly cited. The consent for sharing an article, in whole or in part, depends on the version of the article that is shared, where it is shared, and the copyright license under which the article is published. Please refer to the IOS Press Article Sharing Policy for further information.

Quoting from other publications
Authors, when quoting from someone else's work or when considering reproducing figures or tables from a book or journal article, should make sure that they are not infringing a copyright. Although in general authors may quote from other published works, permission should be obtained from the holder of the copyright if there will be substantial extracts or reproduction of tables, plates, or other figures. If the copyright holder is not the author of the quoted or reproduced material, it is recommended that the permission of the author should also be sought. Material in unpublished letters and manuscripts is also protected and must not be published unless permission has been obtained. Submission of a paper will be interpreted as a statement that the author has obtained all the necessary permission. A suitable acknowledgement of any borrowed material must always be made.

PROOFS AND PRE-PRESS

The corresponding author will receive a PDF proof and is asked to check this proof carefully (the publisher will execute a cursory check only). Corrections other than printer's errors, however, should be avoided. Costs arising from such corrections will be charged to the authors.

The corrected proof is published online in the journal’s pre-press module. This is not the final version. When the article is published in an issue, the final published version replaces the pre-press file. Pre-press articles are fully citable by using their DOI number.

KUDOS

Authors of published articles (non-prepress, final articles) will be contacted by Kudos. Kudos is a service that helps researchers maximize the impact and visibility of their research. It allows authors to enrich their articles with lay metadata, add links to related materials and promote their articles through the Kudos system to a wider public. Authors will receive no more than three emails: one invitation and a maximum of two reminders to register for the service and link the published article to their profile. Using and registering for Kudos remains entirely optional. For more information, please see here.

HOW TO PROMOTE YOUR WORK

Would you like some pointers on how to help your research achieve a wider reach and greater impact? Please consult our Promotional Toolkit for Authors for tips.

Please visit the IOS Press Authors page for further information.

Abstracted/Indexed in

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Web of Science: Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition
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Open Access

By default, articles published in the Journal of Vestibular Research are available only to institutions and individuals with access rights. However, the journal offers all authors the option to purchase open access publication for their article as part of the IOS Press Open Library. This means that the final published version will be freely available to anyone worldwide, indefinitely, under a Creative Commons license and without the need to purchase access to the article. This is also referred to as “gold” open access.

Gold open access pricing
Authors who choose gold open access publication will be subject to an article publication charge of € 1500 / US$ 1500 for publication under the CC BY-NC 4.0 license or € 2150 / US$ 2150 for publication under the CC BY 4.0 license. Pricing is exclusive of possible taxes. After an article is accepted for publication, the corresponding author will be informed regarding the open access option during the production stages, and will have the opportunity to purchase open access for their article. It could be that the open access fee of an article is waived completely due an institutional agreement IOS Press has with the corresponding authors' institution. Please check the institutional agreements page for details.

Green open access
Authors who do not make use of the gold open access option may still make their article freely available using self-archiving, also referred to as green open access. Authors may make their final accepted manuscript available for free download from their personal or institutional website or institutional archive. This model is free for the author.

PubMedCentral deposits
This journal deposits all open access articles in PubMedCentral (PMC) as part of the IOS Press Open Library. If an author chooses to publish their paper with open access then the publisher will deposit the article in PMC upon publication.

Peer Review Policy

The Journal of Vestibular Research is a peer-reviewed journal. Articles submitted to the journal undergo a double blind peer review process. This means that the identity of the authors is not known to the reviewers and the identity of the reviewers is not communicated to the authors. Please visit our reviewer guidelines for further information about how to conduct a review.

After automatic plagiarism screening through iThenticate, all submitted manuscripts are subjected to initial appraisal by the Editor-in-Chief and, if found suitable for further consideration, to rigorous peer review by independent, anonymous expert referees. Reasons to reject a paper in the pre-screening process could for example be that the work does not fall within the aims and scope, the writing is of poor quality, the instructions to authors were not followed or the presented work is not novel.

Papers deemed suitable to be reviewed will be assigned to the Managing Editor. The Managing Editor will then select reviewers to comment on the work and might consider including the reviewers suggested by the author(s). Editors and reviewers are asked to excuse themselves from reviewing a submission if a conflict of interest makes them unable to make an impartial scientific judgment, or evaluation. Conflicts of interest include but are not limited to: collaboration with the authors in the past three years; any professional or financial affiliations that may be perceived as a conflict of interest; a history of personal differences with the author(s).

As a standard policy, decisions are based on one to two reviews, including a statistical review when relevant. The Editor-in-Chief strives to ensure a typical turnaround time of 3 months. Reviewers are asked to judge a paper on at least:

  • Significance to the field
  • Relevance to the journal
  • Methodology
  • Data analysis
  • Literature review
  • Writing style/clarity

Based on the received reviews the handling editor will propose to the Editor-in-Chief a recommendation:

  1. Accept
  2. Minor revisions required
  3. Major revisions required
  4. Revise and resubmit
  5. Reject

They mean the following:

  1. The manuscript is suitable for publication and only requires minor polishing; thus, no further reviews are requested.
  2. The authors are required to make minor to moderate changes to their manuscript. The manuscript becomes acceptable for publication if the changes proposed by the reviewers and editors are successfully addressed. The revised manuscript will be examined by the Editor-in-Chief and possibly sent back to all (or a selection of) reviewers for a second round of reviews. Authors are requested to provide a letter to the reviewers detailing the improvements made for the resubmission.
  3. The manuscript cannot be accepted for publication in its current form. However, a major revision addressing all issues raised by the reviewers may be acceptable for publication. The revised manuscript will undergo a second round of review. Authors are requested to provide a letter to the reviewers detailing the improvements made for the resubmission.
  4. In its current form, the manuscript is not suitable for publication. A resubmission would require substantial revisions and is only encouraged in special cases. The resubmitted manuscript will be considered as a new submission.
  5. The manuscript is rejected as it is deemed to be out of scope, not relevant, or not meeting the journal's quality standards in terms of significance, novelty, and/or presentation.

Authors are notified by the Managing Editor, whose decision is final.

Social Media & Sign Ups: JVR is on Twitter, with social media editor David Ward, MD at the helm. Be sure to follow us and be part of the conversation! If you do not already receive the journal newsletter, we invite you to sign up to receive notification of new JVR issues, plus other related news. Sign up via this link tiny.cc/JVRsignup & you can read the latest newsletter here.

Full JVR Archive Online: By October 2021, the digitization project to make as much journal content available as possible in the IOS Press Content Library was completed. This brought online those pre-internet-era articles that previously only existed in a paper format, with all JVR articles now available back to Vol.1, Iss.1.

ICVD Translations Available: Since early 2021, the International Classification of Vestibular Disorders (ICVD) consensus documents that have been translated from English into other languages have been available online, currently covering: Chinese, French, German, Japanese, Portuguese, and Spanish. View translations.

Partnership with VeDA: As of April 2020, a partnership was announced between JVR and the Vestibular Disorders Association (VeDA), an organization that promotes awareness of vestibular disorders, that sees both teams working together to give a platform to the latest developments in vestibular research here.

YouTube Channel: JVR is a partner of the Bárány Society and the journal seeks to develop features and social media options to enhance the services provided to the vestibular research community, and increase awareness of the excellent research published in the journal. At the end of 2017, the JVR YouTube channel was launched and it can be viewed at: tiny.cc/JVR-youtube.

Partnership with the Bárány Society: JVR is the official journal of the Bárány Society. Through this partnership, the journal is proud to publish the Bárány Society's International Classification of Vestibular Disorders (ICVD) consensus documents, which formally define key vestibular disorders and represent consensus around these formalized definitions. View this important open access series either here or here; and view ICVD translations here. Discover more on the Bárány Society's website and Facebook page.

Latest Articles

Discover the contents of the latest journal issue:

Editorial: Journal of Vestibular Research vol. 34 issue 1
Joseph M. Furman

Is vestibular function related to human hippocampal volume?
Hanne Gommeren, Joyce Bosmans, Peter zu Eulenburg, Annick Gilles, Griet Mertens, Angelique Van Ombergen, Patrick Cras, Sebastiaan Engelborghs, Vincent Van Rompaey

Normalization of the Suppression Head Impulse Test (SHIMP) and its correlation with the Head Impulse Test (HIMP) in healthy adults
Gulce Kirazli, Suheda Baran, Pelin Pistav Akmese, Nese Celebisoy, Tayfun Kirazli

The vertical computerized rotational head impulse test
Ian Shirey, Joseph M. Furman, Jillyn Roxberg, Alexander Kiderman

Vestibular evoked myogenic potential (VEMP) test-retest reliability in adults
Alia A. Alghwiri, Faten S. Obeidat, Steven L. Bell

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