Neuron Pre Submission Checklist: 12 Items Editors Verify Before Peer Review
Before submitting to Neuron (Cell Press), verify these 12 items covering scope-fit, methods completeness, data availability, ethics, and reference cleanliness. Each is something Neuron editors check at desk-screen.
Readiness scan
Before you submit to Neuron, pressure-test the manuscript.
Run the Free Readiness Scan to catch the issues most likely to stop the paper before peer review.
Neuron at a glance
Key metrics to place the journal before deciding whether it fits your manuscript and career goals.
What makes this journal worth targeting
- IF 15.0 puts Neuron in a visible tier — citations from papers here carry real weight.
- Scope specificity matters more than impact factor for most manuscript decisions.
- Acceptance rate of ~~8% means fit determines most outcomes.
When to look elsewhere
- When your paper sits at the edge of the journal's stated scope — borderline fit rarely improves after submission.
- If timeline matters: Neuron takes ~4 days. A faster-turnaround journal may suit a grant or job deadline better.
- If OA is required: gold OA costs $10,400 USD. Check institutional agreements before submitting.
Quick answer: The Neuron pre submission checklist below verifies 12 items Neuron editors check at desk-screen, before any reviewer ever sees your manuscript. Each is grounded in pre-submission reviews on Neuron-targeted manuscripts and Neuron's public author guidelines. Median 2.0 months to first decision; desk-screen typically completes within 7 days.
Run the Neuron pre-submission readiness check to score your manuscript against this checklist automatically, or work through the items manually below. Need broader cluster context? See the Neuron journal overview.
The Manusights Neuron readiness scan. This guide tells you what Neuron (Cell Press)'s editors look for in the first 1-2 weeks of triage. The scan tells you whether YOUR paper passes that check before you submit. We have reviewed manuscripts targeting Neuron (Cell Press) and peer venues; the named patterns below are the same ones Mariela Zirlinger and outside reviewers flag at desk-screen. 60-day money-back guarantee. We do not train AI on your manuscript and delete it within 24 hours.
Editorial detail (for desk-screen calibration). Editor-in-Chief: Mariela Zirlinger (Cell Press) leads Neuron editorial decisions. Editorial-board listings change; verify the current incumbent at the journal's editorial-team page before quoting the name in a submission cover letter. Submission portal: https://www.editorialmanager.com/neuron/. Manuscript constraints: 150-word abstract limit and 50,000-character (~7,500-word) main-text cap (Neuron enforces during desk-screen). We reviewed each of these constraints against current journal author guidelines (accessed 2026-05-08); evidence basis for the checklist below includes both publicly documented author guidelines and our internal anonymized submission corpus. The named editorial-culture quirk: Neuron in-house editors emphasize cross-neural-system mechanistic depth; single-circuit mechanistic claims extend revision rounds.
What does the Neuron (Cell Press) pre submission checklist look like?
For Neuron-targeted manuscripts, the 12 items below organize into 5 verification groups tuned to Neuron's specific desk-screen patterns. Three items address scope and significance, calibrated to the neuroscience research with mechanistic depth and broad-significance implications across neural systems signal that Neuron editors look for in the abstract and cover letter. Three items cover methods and data with Neuron's reviewer-pool expectations on protocol detail, repository deposits, and code availability. Two cover ethics and compliance against Neuron's declarations regime. Two items address citation cleanliness with retracted-DOI auditing tuned to recent retractions in the Neuron corpus including 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.05.018. Two items cover submission-package framing, including reviewer-suggestion list quality and adherence to Neuron's figure and word-count constraints. Each item is verifiable against the manuscript before you click submit at https://www.editorialmanager.com/neuron/.
Scope and significance
- [ ] Scope-fit named in abstract. The abstract names neuroscience research with mechanistic depth and broad-significance implications across neural systems within the first 100 words. Neuron editors triage on scope-fit at the abstract level; manuscripts that defer the contribution to the discussion section get desk-screened.
- [ ] Cover letter explicit on contribution. The cover letter explicitly addresses why this paper fits Neuron's editorial scope, not generic "we believe this work would be of interest." Editors at Neuron look for that fit signal in the first paragraph.
- [ ] Significance visible in title. The title makes the contribution visible without requiring specialist translation. Two-line titles with subordinate clauses signal scope-bounded papers, which Neuron editors triage out faster.
Methods and data
- [ ] Methods section reviewer-complete. Neuron reviewers expect protocol and reproducibility detail in the main text rather than supplementary materials. Single-circuit mechanistic claims without cross-neural-system validation extend revision rounds.
- [ ] Data-availability statement names a repository. "Available on request" is not accepted at most Neuron-tier journals. Use a repository with a DOI: Zenodo, Dryad, or a domain-specific equivalent, with the DOI active at submission time.
- [ ] Code-availability statement (where applicable). If the analysis depends on custom code, the statement must point to a versioned repository, a GitHub release tag or Zenodo deposit, not a generic "code available on request."
Ethics and compliance
- [ ] Ethics declarations complete for Neuron. IRB approval ID with institution name for human-subjects research at Neuron, animal-care protocol number for animal research, or explicit statement that the work does not require ethics approval. Neuron's editorial team returns manuscripts with generic "ethics approval was obtained" wording that lacks identifiers, particularly when the methods involve sensitive materials, biological samples, or any context that warrants explicit ethical oversight.
- [ ] Conflict-of-interest disclosure follows ICMJE. All authors complete the ICMJE COI form. Funder statements include grant numbers.
Citation cleanliness
- [ ] Reference list audited against Crossref + Retraction Watch. Recent retractions in the Neuron corpus that should NOT appear in any submitted reference list include 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.05.018, 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.10.014, and 10.1016/j.neuron.2023.07.011. Citing a retracted paper without a retraction-notice acknowledgment is an automatic desk-screen flag.
- [ ] References reflect current state of the field. Reference list contains citations from the last 18 months covering the headline finding's most recent counter-evidence. Neuron reviewers frequently flag manuscripts that ignore work published after the project started.
Submission-package framing
- [ ] Reviewer-suggestion list contains 5 names from at least 3 institutions. All suggested reviewers are active in the Neuron reviewer pool; none is a co-author or close collaborator within the last 5 years.
- [ ] Figures and tables follow Neuron's constraints. 150-word abstract limit and 50,000-character (~7,500-word) main-text cap (Neuron enforces during desk-screen). Supplementary figures supplement, not replace, main-text content.
Readiness check
Run the scan while Neuron's requirements are in front of you.
See how this manuscript scores against Neuron's requirements before you submit.
What manuscript requirements does Neuron enforce?
Requirement | Neuron expectation | What desk-screen flags |
|---|---|---|
Abstract length | 150-word abstract limit and 50,000-character (~7,500-word) main-text cap (Neuron enforces during desk-screen) | Abstracts beyond limit get returned at intake |
Methods placement | Reviewer-complete in main text | Methods deferred to supplementary materials extends review rounds |
Data availability | Repository DOI named | "Available on request" gets returned |
Reference list | Clean of retracted DOIs | Cited retractions get desk-screen flag |
Reviewer suggestions | 5 names, 3+ institutions | Single-institution lists extend reviewer assignment |
Cover letter | Explicit scope-fit framing | Generic framing extends editorial-board consultation |
Source: Neuron author guidelines (https://www.editorialmanager.com/neuron/), accessed 2026-05-08.
What do pre-submission reviews reveal about Neuron (Cell Press) desk-screen failures?
In our pre-submission review work on Neuron-targeted manuscripts, three patterns most consistently predict desk-screen failure at Neuron (Cell Press). Of the manuscripts we screened in 2025 targeting Neuron and peer venues, the patterns below are the same ones our reviewers flag in real time.
Scope-fit ambiguity in the abstract. Neuron editors move fastest on manuscripts whose contribution is obviously aligned with the journal's editorial scope (neuroscience research with mechanistic depth and broad-significance implications across neural systems). The named failure pattern: single-circuit mechanistic claims without cross-neural-system validation extend revision rounds. Check whether your abstract reads to Neuron's scope
Methods package incomplete for the journal's reviewer pool. Neuron reviewers expect specific methodological detail. Preliminary lineage-tracing or circuit-mapping claims extend reviewer consultation. Check if your methods package is reviewer-complete
Reference-list and clean-citation failure. Editorial team at Neuron (Cell Press) screens reference lists for retracted-paper inclusion. Recent retractions in the Neuron corpus we audit include 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.05.018 and 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.10.014. Check whether your reference list is clean against Crossref + Retraction Watch
What is the Neuron pre submission timeline?
The pre-submission checklist itself takes 60-90 minutes of focused work for a complete manuscript. The full sequence from manuscript-finished to submission-clicked at Neuron typically runs 1-2 weeks for thorough authors:
Stage | Duration | What happens |
|---|---|---|
Manuscript finalization | 2-3 days | Final author read-through, figure polish |
Cover letter drafting | 2-3 hours | Scope-fit framing, contribution statement |
Reference audit (Crossref + Retraction Watch) | 1-2 hours | Retracted-DOI check, recency audit |
Reviewer-suggestion list research | 1-2 hours | 5 names, 3+ institutions, no recent collaborators |
Ethics + COI form completion | 1-2 hours | IRB ID, ICMJE COI for all authors |
Pre-submission checklist run-through | 60-90 minutes | The 12 items above |
Final submission package upload | 1 hour | Upload at https://www.editorialmanager.com/neuron/ |
Source: Manusights internal review of Neuron-targeted submissions, 2025 cohort.
The bottleneck is usually the reference audit, especially for manuscripts with 80+ citations. Authors who skip this step often see retracted DOIs flagged in the desk-screen response 7-14 days after submission, which forces a full rework before resubmission.
Submit If
- The headline finding fits Neuron (Cell Press)'s editorial scope (neuroscience research with mechanistic depth and broad-significance implications across neural systems) and the abstract names that fit within the first 100 words.
- The methods section is detailed enough for Neuron reviewers to evaluate without follow-up; protocol and reproducibility detail are in the main text.
- All cited DOIs verified clean against Crossref + Retraction Watch (recent Neuron-corpus retractions checked: 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.05.018).
- Reviewer-suggestion list contains 5 names from at least 3 different institutions, all active in the Neuron reviewer pool.
Think Twice If
- The methods section relies on a single subgroup analysis or post-hoc figure to carry the headline claim that Neuron reviewers will probe.
- The cover letter spends a paragraph on background before the new finding appears in the abstract; Neuron's editorial culture treats this as a scope-fit warning.
- The reference list cites a paper that has since been retracted (recent Neuron retractions include 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.05.018 and 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.10.014) without acknowledging the retraction notice.
- The protocol section relies on more than 3 figures of supplementary methodology that should be in the main text for Neuron's reviewer pool.
Manusights submission-corpus signal for Neuron (Cell Press). Of the manuscripts our team screened before submission to Neuron and peer venues in 2025, the editorial-culture mismatch most consistent across the cohort is Neuron in-house editors emphasize cross-neural-system mechanistic depth; single-circuit mechanistic claims extend revision rounds. In our analysis of anonymized Neuron-targeted submissions, the documented review timeline shows a bimodal distribution between manuscripts that clear Neuron's scope-fit threshold within the first week and those that get extended editorial-board consultation. Recent retractions in the Neuron corpus that should not appear in any submitted reference list: 10.1016/j.neuron.2022.05.018, 10.1016/j.neuron.2021.10.014.
- Manusights internal preview corpus (2025 cohort)
- SciRev community review-time data for Neuron
Frequently asked questions
The 12 items below cover scope-fit, methods completeness, data and code availability, ethics declarations, reference cleanliness against retraction registries, cover letter framing, and reviewer-suggestion list quality. Each maps to a specific Neuron desk-screen check.
For most Neuron-targeted manuscripts, the full checklist takes 60-90 minutes if the underlying work is solid. Pages where authors uncover real issues during the checklist often take longer because fixes are needed before submission. The time saved on revision rounds outweighs the upfront verification.
Neuron's author guidelines list submission requirements but do not provide a checklist authors can verify item-by-item against editorial expectations. This guide fills that gap, grounded in pre-submission reviews on Neuron-targeted manuscripts plus public author guidelines.
Fix it before you submit. Each item is a known desk-screen failure mode at Neuron. Submitting with a known gap means the gap will be flagged in 1-2 weeks and you will lose the time to peer review.
Sources
- Neuron author guidelines (accessed 2026-05-08)
- Crossref retraction registry (retracted-DOI checks against the Neuron corpus, accessed 2026-05-08)
- Retraction Watch database (cross-checked Neuron retractions, accessed 2026-05-08)
- ICMJE recommendations (ethics + COI requirements, accessed 2026-05-08)
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