Reviewer Benefits
Professional value and recognition for JAA reviewers.
Journal at a Glance
ISSN: 2471-2140
DOI Prefix: 10.14302/issn.2471-2140
License: CC BY 4.0
Peer reviewed open access journal
Scope Alignment
Antioxidant mechanisms, oxidative stress biology, redox signaling, nutraceuticals, and clinical translation. We prioritize validated assays and reproducible methods.
Publishing Model
Open access, single blind peer review, and rapid publication after acceptance and production checks. Metadata validation and DOI registration are included.
Reviewers contribute directly to the quality and credibility of antioxidant research. Service as a reviewer demonstrates expertise and strengthens professional standing.
- Recognition certificates for reviewer service
- Early access to emerging antioxidant research
- Opportunities to build editorial connections
- Eligibility for reviewer acknowledgments
Reviewing sharpens critical evaluation skills and provides insight into evolving antioxidant methods, validation strategies, and reporting standards.
JAA provides clear review guidelines and responds promptly to reviewer questions. We respect reviewer time and aim for efficient review cycles.
JAA is committed to rigorous, transparent publishing in antioxidant science. We emphasize reproducible methods, complete data statements, and ethical compliance across all article types.
The editorial office supports authors, editors, and reviewers with clear guidance and responsive communication. For questions about scope or workflow, contact [email protected].
We encourage continuous improvement in reporting practices and share updates that help the community maintain high standards in antioxidant research.
Become a JAA Reviewer
Register to contribute to high quality antioxidant research.
Clearly report antioxidant assay standards, controls, and calibration methods for transparency.
Provide validation evidence or benchmark comparisons to show assay performance and reliability.
Describe data sources and preprocessing steps so other researchers can reproduce results.
Clarify how oxidative stress markers were selected and interpreted in the study context.
Use consistent notation and define acronyms at first use to improve clarity for interdisciplinary audiences.
If code or data sharing is restricted, describe access limitations and provide detailed methods.
Summarize how results support clinical or nutritional relevance without overstating conclusions.
Describe assay controls and reference standards to support reproducibility.
Explain how sample variability and batch effects were managed in analysis.
If antioxidants are compared, describe the criteria used to rank or prioritize compounds.
Highlight any bioavailability or metabolism considerations that affect interpretation.
Report whether results are based on in vitro, animal, or human evidence to prevent overgeneralization.
Note any limitations related to sample size or study duration that could influence conclusions.
Include a brief statement on data access or supplementary materials provided.
Report the main antioxidant assay or outcome measure used in your study to clarify the evidence base.
If multiple endpoints are reported, summarize which outcomes are primary versus exploratory.
Describe any relevant quality control checks applied during data collection or analysis.
Clarify whether negative or null results were observed and how they were interpreted.