ASHA Journals publishes a wide variety of manuscript types
Research Article
A research article is a full-length article presenting important new research results. Research articles include an abstract, introduction, methods and results sections, discussion, and relevant citations.
Suggested Maximum Length:
40 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Research Note
A research note is a brief manuscript presenting pilot, preliminary, and/or exploratory findings or a new method for the collection or analysis of data. Includes a short abstract and introductory paragraph. The scientific findings should be explained and documented concisely.
Suggested Maximum Length:
20 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Review Article
“Review Article” is an umbrella term covering systematic reviews (with or without meta-analyses), historical reviews of a body of research, description of an author’s programmatic research, and possibly other types of reviews. Reviews can be a comprehensive overview, or they can be focused on a narrow body of research. Reviews should be accessible to knowledgeable readers not expert in the subject area. They should be prepared with the same rigor as a research article reporting specific results.
Suggested Maximum Length:
40 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Clinical Focus
A clinical focus is an article that may be of primary clinical interest but may not have a traditional research format. Case studies, descriptions of clinical programs, and innovative clinical services and activities are among the possibilities
Suggested Maximum Length:
40 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Tutorial
A tutorial is an educational exposition covering recent literature on topics of interest to clinicians and other scholars
Suggested Maximum Length:
40 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Technical Report
A technical report is a brief article describing a pretrial feasibility or pilot efficacy study that addresses important clinical questions (i.e., whom to treat with a given technology, when to treat, and for how long).
Suggested Maximum Length:
30 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Registered Report (JSLHR Only)
A registered report is an article type that is reviewed in two stages, with the first manuscript stage focusing on the research question and the quality of methodology. The stage 1 manuscript must be reviewed and accepted prior to data collection. The second stage includes a review of the completed manuscript with collected data.
Suggested Maximum Length:
40 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures for the completed stage 2 manuscript (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Viewpoint
A viewpoint includes scholarly based opinion(s) on an issue of clinical relevance that currently may be neglected, controversial, or related to future legislation, or could serve to update the readership on current thinking in an area.
Suggested Maximum Length:
10 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Commentary
A commentary is a short, timely article that spotlights current issues of direct interest to the communication sciences and disorders community. Commentary articles are often extensions or reactions to positions put forward in viewpoint articles.
Suggested Maximum Length:
10 manuscript pages including citations, tables, and figures (supplemental materials not included in length guidelines).
Letter to the Editor
A letter to the editor communicates opinions about material previously published in the journal or views on topics of current relevance.
Note:
A letter relating to work published in the journal will be referred to the author(s) of the original item for a response, which may be published along with the letter.
Introduction
An introduction is generally a short article presented at the beginning of a forum, special issue, or special topic collection (please note that special issues require prior approval). It may be written by, as applicable, the journal’s editor-in-chief, an editor, or the guest editor involved and is intended to provide background information on the topic covered, brief explanations of the articles, and the aims or goals of the forum or special issue.
Suggested Maximum Length:
10 manuscript pages, including citations, tables, and figures.
Epilogue
An epilogue is a short article at the end of a forum, special issue, or special topic collection that is written by, as applicable, the journal’s editor-in-chief, an editor, or the guest editor involved (please note that special issues require prior approval). An epilogue should include a summation of the preceding articles’ findings and may draw broader conclusions than the individual articles. An epilogue is typically limited to 10 manuscript pages, including citations, tables, and figures.
Suggested Maximum Length:
10 manuscript pages, including citations, tables, and figures.
Erratum
An erratum is a correction of any sort to an already published article.
Note:
An erratum should include the full citation reference for the original article (including the digital object identifier [DOI]), a summary of the error, and what the text should have said.
Note
Prior to 2017, Supplements were published within issues. As the journals have grown in size, that practice has ended. Instead, the journals now publish Special Issues when a group of articles is likely to be 10 or more in size or if there is a range of topics in a particular subject needing to be addressed. Please note that Perspectives of the ASHA Special Interest Groups does not publish special issues. Consult our Guide to Special Issues and Forums for full details on these types of submissions