The mission of Communications in Mathematical Physics is to offer a high forum for works which are motivated by the vision and the challenges of modern physics and which at the same time meet the highest mathematical standards.
A leading applied mathematics journal, Communications in Mathematical Sciences features high-quality, original research articles, review and expository papers, and fast communications. This journal covers modern applied mathematics in modeling, applied and stochastic analyses and numerical computations on problems that arise in physical, biological, engineering and financial applications.International Press of Boston, Inc. is an academic publishing company founded in 1992. After eighteen years of growth, International Press now publishes fifteen journals in various fields of academic mathematics research, including a prestigious journal of statistics. International Press also publishes high-level mathematics and mathematical physics book titles, including monographs, textbooks, and more.International Press enjoys a productive partnership with the American Mathematical Society, with whom we have co-published the AMS/IP Studies in Advanced Mathematics book series since 1997.Having close ties to the Chinese mathematics community, International Press has also developed a close partnership with Higher Education Press of Beijing—the leading Chinese curriculum planner, and publisher and distributor of academic books—as well as with the Chinese publishers Tsinghua University Press, Hunan Science and Technology Press, and others. .
Communications in Mobile Computing - The Journal of Mobile User Experience (mUX) is a peer-reviewed open access journal published under the brand SpringerOpen.Mobile user experience (mUX) encompasses a broad sweep of technology, social and business research - from new interaction techniques for mobile devices, through location-based applications, to mobile services in entertainment, advertising, retail and gaming. This is a field where studies are rapidly executed and lean prototypes are quickly built and explored with users to evaluate the potential for new services. We want to create a journal that brings research to the community quickly - enabling new ideas to get traction allowing researchers to share first-view thinking with their peers - but with the academic rigour of a peer-reviewed journal.ComC will accept short articles of 2-4 pages. These may be extended conference articles, or contain studies that build towards full journal articles.ComC operates an open peer review system. The identities of reviewers will be available to each other, to authors, and to readers of the journal.In keeping with the rapid publication nature of ComC., we aim to review all papers within 30 days.Topics Context aware devices and services. NFC communication. 3D interaction and AR. Social characteristics of mobile use and adoption. Social mobile gaming. Multimodal interaction. Accessibility. Location sharing. Voice and sound user interfaces. Navigation. Mobile search experience. Sensor-based experiences. Enterprise mobile services. Mobile imaging experiences. Information visualisation.We expect that articles will address a range of, vertical and horizontal markets: Social gaming. Retail. Location-sharing services. Information discovery. Learning. Photography. Healthcare. Music. News. Automotive. Energy.The format: short articles, rapid publication.
Aims:The journal publishes original research findings on experimental observation, mathematical modeling, theoretical analysis and numerical simulation, for more accurate description, better prediction or novel application, of nonlinear phenomena in science and engineering. It offers a venue for researchers to make rapid exchange of ideas and techniques in nonlinear science and complexity.The submission of manuscripts with cross-disciplinary approaches in nonlinear science and complexity is particularly encouraged.Topics of interest:Nonlinear differential or delay equations, Lie group analysis and asymptotic methods, Discontinuous systems, Fractals, Chaos and encryption, Fractional calculus and dynamics, Nonlinear effects in quantum mechanics, Nonlinear stochastic processes, Experimental nonlinear science, Time-series and signal analysis, Computational methods and simulations in nonlinear science and engineering, Control of dynamical systems, Synchronization, Lyapunov analysis, High-dimensional chaos and turbulence, Chaos in Hamiltonian systems, Integrable systems and solitons, Collective behavior in many-body systems, Biological physics and networks, Nonlinear mechanical systems, Complex systems and complexity.No length limitation for contributions is set, but only concisely written manuscripts are published. Brief papers are published on the basis of Rapid Communications. Discussions of previously published papers are welcome.Benefits to authorsWe also provide many author benefits, such as free PDFs, a liberal copyright policy, special discounts on Elsevier publications and much more. Please click here for more information on our author services.Please see our Guide for Authors for information on article submission. If you require any further information or help, please visit our support pages: http://support.elsevier.com
Communications in Number Theory and Physics is an international journal focused on applications of Number Theory in the broadest sense to Theoretical Physics. The journal offers a forum for communication among researchers in Number Theory and Theoretical Physics by publishing primarily research, review, and expository articles regarding the relationship and dynamics between the two fields.
This journal aims to publish high quality papers concerning any theoretical aspect of partial differential equations, as well as its applications to other areas of mathematics. Suitability of any paper is at the disgression of the editors. We seek to present the most significant advances in this central field to a wide readership which includes researchers and graduate students in mathematics and the more mathematical aspects of physics and engineering. Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
The Simulation and Computation series intends to publish papers that make theoretical and methodological advances relating to computational aspects of Probability and Statistics. Simulational assessment and comparison of the performance of statistical and probabilistic methods will also be considered for publication. Papers stressing graphical methods, resampling and other computationally intensive methods will be particularly relevant. In addition, special issues dedicated to a specific topic of current interest will also be published in this series periodically, providing an exhaustive and up-to-date review of that topic to the readership. Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
The Theory and Methods series intends to publish papers that make theoretical and methodological advances in Probability and Statistics. New applications of statistical and probabilistic methods will also be considered for publication. In addition, special issues dedicated to a specific topic of current interest will also be published in this series periodically, providing an exhaustive and up-to-date review of that topic to the readership. Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800, Philadelphia, PA 19106.
Communications in Theoretical Physics covers the latest developments and important achievements in all branches of theoretical physics. Articles, including papers, research notes, letters, and rapid communications must make significant, original and correct contributions to their own fields. The subject coverage includes: A tomic and molecular physics, Condensed matter and theory of statistical physics, Nuclear theory, Fluid theory and plasmas, Elementary particle physics and quantum field theory, Quantum mechanics and quantum optics, Quantum information and computation, Theoretical astrophysics, cosmology and relativity, Theoretical biophysics, Mathematical physics and computational physics (Mathematical papers should be clearly motivated by actual or potential application to physical phenomena). .
The composer still composes but also gets to take a programming-enabled journey of musical discovery.