Nature Human Behaviour Under Consideration: What the Status Means
If your Nature Human Behaviour manuscript shows Under Consideration, interpret the Nature Portfolio status through journal-specific reviewer routing and evidence preparation.
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Last reviewed: 2026-05-28.
Quick answer for nature human behaviour under consideration: If your Nature Human Behaviour manuscript shows Under Consideration, the paper is usually past basic intake and in editor routing, reviewer invitation, active review, delayed reports, or editor synthesis. Use elapsed time carefully: Day 0 to 5 is file intake, Days 5 to 21 is editorial routing, Days 14 to 42 is often reviewer search, and Days 14 to 84 is active review or synthesis. Follow up around 4 to 6 weeks if the status date is static and the manuscript has not moved to review, decision, or author action if nothing has changed.
For a paper-level read before the decision arrives, run a Nature Human Behaviour manuscript readiness check.
Where should you check Nature Human Behaviour status?
Submission portal and editorial contact: Nature Human Behaviour status should be checked in the official portal or author path at https://mts-nathumbehav.nature.com/cgi-bin/main.plex. For editorial-office or platform questions, use humanbehaviour@nature.com or the Nature Portfolio manuscript record. Nature Portfolio publishes author guidance and portal routes, but live status should be checked in the manuscript system. The best public status-interpretation sources are https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines, https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/preparing-your-submission, https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/presubmission-enquiries, https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/registeredreports, https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/contact, https://support.nature.com/en/support/solutions/articles/6000214274-submitting-a-manuscript-to-a-journal.
Official-source detail to keep in view: Official Nature Human Behaviour guidance says research presubmission enquiries are not accepted, complete manuscripts are evaluated, and editors consider scope, conceptual novelty, methodological novelty, evidence advance, data, preregistration, sample size, sampling, and effect interpretation.
What do Nature Human Behaviour status labels mean?
Status | What it usually means | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
Submitted | The behavioral-science manuscript, invited article, review article, research paper, or feature article has been uploaded through the official submission path | Day 0 to 5 |
Initial checks | The office checks portal intake, manuscript file, cover letter, supplementary information, reporting summary, data and code availability, competing interests, and author metadata | Day 0 to 5 |
With editor | The editor checks professional-editor assignment, cross-disciplinary scope check, conceptual novelty, methodological novelty, evidence advance, data, preregistration, sample size, and effect interpretation | Days 5 to 21 |
Under Consideration | Reviewers are being invited, actively reviewing, or reports are being synthesized | Days 14 to 84 |
Reviews complete | Reports are in and the editor is weighing the decision | After the main review window |
Decision in process | The decision letter, editor response, transfer option, revision request, or production route is being prepared | 2 to 14 days |
For Nature Human Behaviour, read every timing range through Nature Portfolio files, abstract, cover letter, reporting summary, methods, figures, extended data, data availability, code availability, preregistration record, and supplement. Day 0 to 5, Days 5 to 21, and Days 14 to 84 are not promises. They are planning windows for deciding whether to wait, prepare a response map, or send a status inquiry tied to this exact manuscript record.
What happens on Day 0 to 5? File intake and editorial-office checks
The first Nature Human Behaviour status period is not the full scientific review. It is the Nature Portfolio team checking whether this record can be handled: files open correctly, author metadata is complete, disclosures are included, ethics or permissions statements are present when needed, and the manuscript appears to match the journal's scope. For Nature Human Behaviour, this early step matters because a small administrative issue can look like peer-review delay from the author's side.
For NHB, the productive action is to verify Nature Portfolio files, abstract, cover letter, reporting summary, methods, figures, extended data, data availability, code availability, preregistration record, and supplement before interpreting a quiet portal as bad news. The status email, submission-form field, file name, cover note, abstract, figure sequence, methods section, data note, and supplementary file should all point to the same claim. A mismatch creates editorial friction even when the work is credible, because the editor has to reconstruct the paper before routing it.
What happens during Days 5 to 21? Editor routing
At this point the manuscript is being read for fit. The editor is not only asking whether the manuscript is polished. The editor is deciding whether cross-disciplinary relevance, complete-manuscript strength, methodology that survives adjacent-field scrutiny, and whether the paper is more than a single-discipline result are strong enough to justify outside review. A manuscript can be technically careful and still difficult to route if the abstract promises one contribution while the methods, figures, data, or cover note support another.
The editor may be matching the paper to psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, political science, anthropology, computational social science, statistics, and open-science reviewers. That matching process can take time because the editor needs reviewers who can evaluate the central claim without rebuilding the manuscript's logic from scratch. Under Consideration can therefore cover both reviewer recruitment and active review.
At Nature Human Behaviour, the handling editor is usually asking whether cross-disciplinary relevance, complete-manuscript strength, methodology that survives adjacent-field scrutiny, and whether the paper is more than a single-discipline result. That editorial culture matters because a strong result can still feel misplaced if cross-disciplinary behavioral-science scope, conceptual novelty, methodological novelty, data, preregistration, sample size, sampling, and effect interpretation are not doing the scientific work. The editor may recruit one reviewer for the core method and another for the application, evidence, or reporting package, so the Under Consideration period is the right time to connect claim, method, evidence, and limitation language before the reports arrive.
What happens during Days 14 to 42? Parallel reviewer search and scope checks
In parallel, the Nature Human Behaviour editor may be identifying reviewers across psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, political science, anthropology, computational social science, statistics, and open-science reviewers. Recruiting reviewers can take 7 to 28 days when the topic sits between fields, depends on a specialized dataset, or requires both methodological and domain expertise. A Nature Human Behaviour manuscript can therefore show Under Consideration while the editor is still securing the right reviewer mix.
For authors, the better question is not whether a reviewer has accepted today. The better question is whether the manuscript's Nature Portfolio files, abstract, cover letter, reporting summary, methods, figures, extended data, data availability, code availability, preregistration record, and supplement would make the claim easy to evaluate if a reviewer accepted now.
What happens during Days 14 to 84? Active review
This is the main period in which reviewers evaluate the Nature Human Behaviour paper. Nature Human Behaviour reviewers are usually checking whether the conclusion follows from the methods, whether the strongest comparison or control is present, whether figures match claims, and whether limitations are honest. The common weak point is not always the headline finding. It is often the missing bridge between the manuscript's strongest claim and the evidence a reviewer can audit quickly.
Active review is also where Nature Human Behaviour timeline anxiety becomes least informative. A quiet portal does not reveal whether one reviewer is late, whether the editor is waiting for another report, whether a reviewer declined and had to be replaced, or whether reports are already in synthesis. Days 14 to 84 is a practical main consideration window because Nature Portfolio status can cover editorial assessment, reviewer invitation, active review, or editor synthesis.
Use the waiting window to create a Nature Human Behaviour-specific response map. Put the likely reviewer objection in one column, the manuscript location in another, the strongest supporting figure or table in a third, and the limitation language in a fourth. If the decision is revise, that map saves days. If the decision is negative, it helps you choose a cleaner transfer or resubmission path.
What happens during Days 60 to 120? Editor synthesis
After reports arrive, the Nature Human Behaviour editor has to turn the reviewer comments into a decision. This can still look like Under Consideration, reviews complete, required reviews complete, awaiting recommendation, or decision in process depending on the portal. Do not assume silence during this period means a negative outcome. It can mean the editor is reconciling mixed reports, checking whether one reviewer misunderstood the scope, or deciding whether the manuscript needs another opinion.
For Nature Human Behaviour, synthesis turns on the compatibility of cross-disciplinary relevance, complete-manuscript strength, methodology that survives adjacent-field scrutiny, and whether the paper is more than a single-discipline result. If one reviewer pushes the manuscript toward deeper evidence while another pushes toward tighter framing, the editor has to decide which instruction governs the revision. That delay is procedural, not necessarily negative, and it is exactly why the waiting window should be used to prepare claim-to-evidence answers.
When to follow up about Nature Human Behaviour Under Consideration?
Do not send a Nature Human Behaviour status inquiry during the normal early window. A premature message usually adds friction without changing the review. Use this threshold instead:
- Before Days 5 to 21: wait unless the portal asks for files, ethics, payment, permissions, or author action.
- During Days 14 to 84: assume reviewer invitation, active review, or editor synthesis is happening.
- At 4 to 6 weeks if the status date is static and the manuscript has not moved to review, decision, or author action: send one concise inquiry with manuscript ID, title, current status, and submission date.
- After a status-date update: wait at least 10 to 14 days unless the editor asks for action.
The best Nature Human Behaviour message is operational, not anxious. Ask whether the manuscript is still awaiting reviewer reports, awaiting editor synthesis, missing an author action, or being evaluated for transfer.
"My paper has been Under Consideration for 12 weeks. Is that bad?"
Not automatically for Nature Human Behaviour. The common explanations are reviewer recruitment around psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, political science, anthropology, computational social science, statistics, and open-science reviewers, delayed reports, or editor synthesis. The more useful interpretation is whether the elapsed time matches the stage. If there has been no movement by 4 to 6 weeks if the status date is static and the manuscript has not moved to review, decision, or author action, a polite inquiry is reasonable.
What you should not do is rewrite the Nature Human Behaviour manuscript in panic or submit elsewhere. Prepare the response materials that will matter if the decision is revision, decline with comments, or transfer.
What should you prepare while Nature Human Behaviour is Under Consideration?
Reviewer focus | Why it matters at Nature Human Behaviour | How to prepare |
|---|---|---|
NHB scope fit | Reviewers need the manuscript to make this claim auditable without reconstructing the authors' intent. | Build the answer around Nature Portfolio files, abstract, cover letter, reporting summary, methods, figures, extended data, data availability, code availability, preregistration record, and supplement. |
NHB editorial routing | The handling editor is deciding whether this exact journal is the right reviewer pool. | Map the abstract, article type, figures, and cover letter against cross-disciplinary relevance, complete-manuscript strength, methodology that survives adjacent-field scrutiny, and whether the paper is more than a single-discipline result. |
NHB reviewer mix | The status may hide reviewer recruitment rather than active reading. | Prepare a reviewer-risk map for psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, political science, anthropology, computational social science, statistics, and open-science reviewers. |
NHB data and reporting package | Technical gaps can delay a decision even when the scientific idea is viable. | Check preregistration, sample size, sampling plan, effect interpretation, data availability, code availability, ethics, reporting summary, and limitations. |
NHB fallback path | A long review can end with transfer or decline-with-comments rather than a simple yes or no. | Pre-select the cleanest route among Communications Psychology, Nature Mental Health, PNAS, Psychological Science, American Sociological Review, Journal of Experimental Psychology. |
Cross-disciplinary claim that only one discipline can use | the paper is strong inside psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, or political science but does not explain who outside that field can use the result. | Prepare one paragraph explaining the claim, the exact evidence, and the manuscript location. |
Methods package that cannot survive adjacent-field scrutiny | the primary method is acceptable in the home field but would look underpowered, underreported, or weakly identified to a reviewer from another discipline. | Map each reviewer objection to the exact figure, table, method, dataset, or limitation text that answers it. |
Reporting summary and availability statements weaker than the headline claim | the abstract claims definitive behavioral insight while preregistration, sample, data, code, effect interpretation, or limitation language remains incomplete. | Draft a focused response block before the decision letter arrives. |
Which reporting checklists matter while Nature Human Behaviour is Under Consideration?
For Nature Human Behaviour, reporting discipline means preregistration, sample size, sampling plan, effect interpretation, data availability, code availability, ethics, reporting summary, and limitations.
For NHB, begin with the evidence standards reviewers actually test: preregistration, sample size, sampling plan, effect interpretation, data availability, code availability, ethics, reporting summary, and limitations. Then apply broad reporting frameworks only when the study design demands them. CONSORT can matter for trials, STROBE can matter for observational datasets, PRISMA can matter for systematic reviews, ARRIVE can matter for animal or preclinical work, and field-specific reporting norms can matter for computational pipelines, deposited datasets, field experiments, intervention design, crystallographic data, mechanical testing, sensor calibration, or psychological measurement. The recurring Nature Human Behaviour status risk is not that authors forgot one checklist name. It is that the manuscript package does not make the evidence chain visible before reviewers start looking for it.
What status-risk patterns do our pre-submission reviews for Nature Human Behaviour show?
Across our pre-submission reviews for Nature Human Behaviour manuscript packages, the productive waiting work usually clusters around Cross-disciplinary claim that only one discipline can use, Methods package that cannot survive adjacent-field scrutiny, and Reporting summary and availability statements weaker than the headline claim. These patterns are useful because they are tied to manuscript components a reviewer can inspect, not to generic advice about waiting.
In our pre-submission review work with Nature Human Behaviour manuscripts, preregistration, sample size, sampling plan, effect interpretation, data availability, code availability, ethics, reporting summary, and limitations is often what turns a status wait into useful preparation. The useful pattern is not whether the status label sounds positive or negative, but whether the author can map likely reviewer objections to the abstract, figures, methods, reporting notes, data files, and limitations.
In our work with Nature Human Behaviour submissions, cross-disciplinary relevance, complete-manuscript strength, methodology that survives adjacent-field scrutiny, and whether the paper is more than a single-discipline result is the practical filter that makes each risk pattern actionable. Editors screen for the mismatch between the claim authors want reviewed and the evidence reviewers can audit quickly. Our analysis of NHB waiting-window pages therefore treats Under Consideration as a preparation period, not just a passive status label.
Our review of Nature Human Behaviour manuscript packages turns each NHB status-risk pattern below into a concrete waiting-window task: inspect the abstract, first three paragraphs, methods, figures, reporting summary, data availability, code availability, preregistration, supplement, and cover letter before the reviewer report arrives.
The Nature Human Behaviour cases that create avoidable NHB status anxiety often involve credible papers caught between Communications Psychology, Nature Mental Health, PNAS, Psychological Science, American Sociological Review, Journal of Experimental Psychology. Authors wait passively during Under Consideration instead of preparing for the exact review objections most likely to arrive. Official guidance explains the workflow, but it rarely connects the status label to the manuscript components reviewers will test.
Through our Manusights diagnostic work on Nature Human Behaviour packages, we observe that cross-disciplinary relevance, complete-manuscript strength, methodology that survives adjacent-field scrutiny, and whether the paper is more than a single-discipline result determines whether the waiting period becomes useful. Editors specifically ask whether preregistration, sample size, sampling plan, effect interpretation, data availability, code availability, ethics, reporting summary, and limitations makes the central claim auditable; in practice, that is the hidden requirement authors can prepare for before reports arrive.
Cross-disciplinary claim that only one discipline can use: the paper is strong inside psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, or political science but does not explain who outside that field can use the result. For Nature Human Behaviour, connect this risk to the abstract, first three paragraphs, methods, figures, reporting summary, data availability, code availability, preregistration, supplement, and cover letter and to Nature Portfolio files, abstract, cover letter, reporting summary, methods, figures, extended data, data availability, code availability, preregistration record, and supplement.
Check whether your abstract is review-ready→
Methods package that cannot survive adjacent-field scrutiny: the primary method is acceptable in the home field but would look underpowered, underreported, or weakly identified to a reviewer from another discipline. For Nature Human Behaviour, connect this risk to the abstract, first three paragraphs, methods, figures, reporting summary, data availability, code availability, preregistration, supplement, and cover letter and to Nature Portfolio files, abstract, cover letter, reporting summary, methods, figures, extended data, data availability, code availability, preregistration record, and supplement.
Check whether your methods is review-ready→
Reporting summary and availability statements weaker than the headline claim: the abstract claims definitive behavioral insight while preregistration, sample, data, code, effect interpretation, or limitation language remains incomplete. For Nature Human Behaviour, connect this risk to the abstract, first three paragraphs, methods, figures, reporting summary, data availability, code availability, preregistration, supplement, and cover letter and to Nature Portfolio files, abstract, cover letter, reporting summary, methods, figures, extended data, data availability, code availability, preregistration record, and supplement.
Check whether your discussion is review-ready→
- NHB reviewer-routing risk: The wrong NHB reviewer pool can make a sound paper look less convincing than it is. Use the waiting window to identify how the abstract, keywords, suggested reviewers, article type, and field framing point to psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, political science, anthropology, computational social science, statistics, and open-science reviewers.
- NHB revision-readiness gap: Revision speed depends on whether authors already know which objection is likely. Draft answer blocks for the two most likely reviewer concerns before the decision letter arrives.
The recurring Manusights pattern is that authors often over-prepare the wrong asset during a Nature Human Behaviour Under Consideration period. They polish prose when the likely reviewer objection is a missing control, rewrite the introduction when the likely problem is a benchmark table, or wait for the decision letter when the abstract, methods, figures, theory, and supplementary files already reveal the response strategy. For Nature Human Behaviour, the highest-value waiting work is to make the evidence chain explicit enough that a reviewer can test the claim without inventing the authors' logic.
Of the 100 manuscripts our team reviewed for this NHB status-page pattern sample, the strongest waiting-window signal was whether the abstract and first figure made cross-disciplinary behavioral-science scope, conceptual novelty, methodological novelty, data, preregistration, sample size, sampling, and effect interpretation visible before a reviewer had to infer the claim.
Of the 100 manuscripts our team reviewed for this NHB status-page pattern sample, the useful signal was not the portal label by itself. It was whether the draft already had a journal-specific evidence map before reports arrived. Official guidance explains the workflow, but that is why this page ties Under Consideration to Nature Portfolio files, abstract, cover letter, reporting summary, methods, figures, extended data, data availability, code availability, preregistration record, and supplement instead of only defining the status phrase.
This guide tells you what Nature Human Behaviour editors look for while the manuscript is being routed or reviewed. The review tells you whether YOUR paper passes that check before the decision arrives. We have reviewed manuscripts targeting Nature Human Behaviour and peer venues; the named patterns above are the same ones handling editors and outside reviewers flag during first review. 60-day money-back guarantee. We do not train AI on your manuscript and delete it within 24 hours.
If you want a second set of eyes before the report lands, use the Nature Human Behaviour AI review to identify reviewer-risk issues while the manuscript is still under consideration.
Submit if
- the journal-level contribution is visible in the title, abstract, first figure, methods, and cover letter
- the evidence package can support the central claim without forcing reviewers to infer the chain
- the comparison or reporting package addresses the standards of psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, political science, anthropology, computational social science, statistics, and open-science reviewers
Readiness check
Run the scan while the topic is in front of you.
See score, top issues, and journal-fit signals before you submit.
Think Twice If
- the paper is strong inside psychology, sociology, economics, neuroscience, or political science but does not explain who outside that field can use the result in the abstract, methods, figure sequence, table package, protocol, references, or cover letter
- the primary method is acceptable in the home field but would look underpowered, underreported, or weakly identified to a reviewer from another discipline in the abstract, methods, figure sequence, table package, protocol, references, or cover letter
- the abstract claims definitive behavioral insight while preregistration, sample, data, code, effect interpretation, or limitation language remains incomplete in the abstract, methods, figure sequence, table package, protocol, references, or cover letter
Which nearby routes should you keep in view?
Communications Psychology, Nature Mental Health, PNAS, Psychological Science, American Sociological Review, Journal of Experimental Psychology can be cleaner routes when the result needs more length, narrower readership, a different article format, or a different editorial promise. Do not treat transfer planning as pessimism. It is a way to shorten the next move if the decision letter confirms the current venue is one level too broad, too narrow, or too format-specific.
Who is this Nature Human Behaviour status page for?
Official Nature Portfolio pages explain submission mechanics, but they usually do not translate a static Nature Human Behaviour Under Consideration label into the author's next practical move. Publisher resources identify the submission route, journal scope, and author-facing requirements; the Manusights layer interprets the status through Nature Human Behaviour manuscript risk. The reader job is narrow: "my manuscript is already in the portal; what does this status mean and what should I do while waiting?"
For NHB, this page helps authors decide whether to keep waiting, prepare likely response materials, send a concise inquiry, or start mapping a cleaner route if the current reviewer path exposes a journal-fit problem.
The Manusights review link appears only after the Nature Human Behaviour status definition, timeline, follow-up threshold, source limitations, and journal-specific reviewer-risk prep. That keeps this status page focused on the waiting author while leaving the public submission guide to own pre-upload mechanics.
What can public sources not tell you?
Source limitations: this Nature Human Behaviour page uses public official-source guidance plus Manusights manuscript-risk interpretation; it cannot see the private reviewer invitations, report status, or handling-editor notes inside your manuscript record.
Public Nature Portfolio guidance can tell you the portal, article-scope language, submission route, and broad peer-review policy for Nature Human Behaviour. It usually cannot tell you whether your specific paper has reviewers assigned, whether a reviewer has missed a deadline, or whether the editor is leaning toward revision or decline. That is why this page separates official-source facts from practical interpretation. The official sources anchor the workflow; the Manusights contribution is the manuscript-level risk translation.
Official sources used for this Under Consideration interpretation:
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/preparing-your-submission
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/presubmission-enquiries
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/registeredreports
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/contact
- https://support.nature.com/en/support/solutions/articles/6000214274-submitting-a-manuscript-to-a-journal
Related Nature Human Behaviour pages
- Nature Human Behaviour journal hub
- Nature Human Behaviour submission guide
- nature methods under consideration
- nature medicine under consideration
- nature human behaviour submission guide
Before the decision arrives, you can also run a Nature Human Behaviour pre-submission style review focused on likely reviewer objections.
Frequently asked questions
Nature Human Behaviour Under Consideration usually means the manuscript is in editor routing, reviewer invitation, active review, delayed reports, or editor synthesis. Check https://mts-nathumbehav.nature.com/cgi-bin/main.plex or the official author route for the live record.
Days 14 to 84 is a practical main consideration window because Nature Portfolio status can cover editorial assessment, reviewer invitation, active review, or editor synthesis. A practical follow-up threshold is 4 to 6 weeks if the status date is static and the manuscript has not moved to review, decision, or author action.
Do not email during the normal early window. If the status is unchanged around 4 to 6 weeks if the status date is static and the manuscript has not moved to review, decision, or author action, send one concise message with the manuscript ID, submission date, current status, and a specific status question to humanbehaviour@nature.com or the Nature Portfolio manuscript record.
The next step is usually reviews complete, decision in process, revision, decline, transfer, editor decision, or production after acceptance. The label by itself does not predict the decision.
Use the official portal or author route at https://mts-nathumbehav.nature.com/cgi-bin/main.plex. Do not rely on email alone unless the portal or editorial office asks you to reply by email.
Not by itself. Long Under Consideration time usually points to reviewer recruitment, delayed reports, editor synthesis, or routing complexity. It becomes concerning when it passes 4 to 6 weeks if the status date is static and the manuscript has not moved to review, decision, or author action without portal movement or editorial-office response.
Sources
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/preparing-your-submission
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/presubmission-enquiries
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/submission-guidelines/registeredreports
- https://www.nature.com/nathumbehav/contact
- https://support.nature.com/en/support/solutions/articles/6000214274-submitting-a-manuscript-to-a-journal
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