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Experimental Results will be ceasing publication at the end of 2023, and new submissions to the journal are no longer being accepted. 

All currently submitted articles will be reviewed as normal and in-press articles will be published. All published materials will remain available through the Cambridge University Press platform in perpetuity.

Experimental Results
    • You have access: full
    • Open access
  • Ceased publication
  • ISSN: 2516-712X (Online)
Editorial Board
Experimental Results  is an open access journal providing a forum for experimental findings that usually remain hidden: the incremental steps that are so important to experimental research. These results often go unpublished due to the traditional scholarly communication process in which only a select group of experiments are chosen to make up the narrative of a single paper.

Articles for consideration in Experimental Results include positive results, negative/null results, reproducibility studies and supplementary findings.

Experimental Results  will publish short research papers from experimental disciplines across Science, Technology and Medicine, providing authors with an outlet for rapid publication of incremental research findings with maximum visibility. Where applicable (for example, with reproducibility studies), work published in Experimental Results  will clearly link back to the related paper. Articles will be accepted for publication if they are technically and methodologically sound and if the research reported answers a valid research question.

Subject areas we cover: Chemistry; Computer Science; Earth and Environmental Sciences; Engineering; Life Science and Biomedicine; Mathematics, Statistics and Probability; Physics and Astronomy; Psychology and Psychiatry.

Latest articles




Experimental Results blogs

  • Novel research makes international news headlines
  • 07 February 2022, Kin Maclachlan
  • “Our paper published in Experimental Results has one of the highest altimetric scores in the journal. In fact, is has the highest altimetric score of any paper...