Copyright & License

1. Published under an Open Access Creative Commons Licence

Manuscripts submitted from 1 June 2022 and accepted after peer review will be published in Journal of Biological Regulators and Homeostatic Agents (JBRHA) with open access under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY ) license, and copyright on any open access article in published is retained by the author(s).

Authors grant JBRHA a license (Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0) to publish the article and identify itself as the original publisher.

Authors also grant any third party the right to use the article freely as long as its integrity is maintained and its original authors, citation details and publisher are identified.

CC BY 4.0: The CC BY license permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.


2. Published under the Subscription Model and Open Access Options

Permissions Request

Most of papers published in Volume 20 Issue 1–Volume36 Issue 2(S2) (from 2006 to 31 May 2022) are copyright JBRHA, and the author(s) retains copyright to individual articles. Manuscripts which submitted before 1 June 2022 and accepted after peer review will be published in JBRHA and also are copyright JBRHA.

JBRHA grants any third party the right to use most articles freely, as long as its integrity is maintained and its original author, citation details and journal are identified. In general, reusing or reproducing substantial portions of JBRHA’ content does not requires permission. This includes use of text, figures, tables, multimedia content, and any other material published by JBRHA. In some instances, however, some material may require permission for reuse. To seek permission, please review the information below.


Process for Requesting Permission

Requests made to info@biolifesas.org can be processed immediately.


Tips for a Successful Permissions Request

Ensure the content you wish to reuse is not credited to another source. JBRHA can only grant permission for own, original content, and any third-party material included within our publications is not included in any permission granted by JBRHA. Include as much identifying information as possible for the JBRHA content you wish to reuse including the ISSN, title, authors, volume, issue and page numbers. Describe the way you wish to reuse the content and what rights you require, including languages, formats, territories and the expected number of readers.


Requesting a quotation

When requesting a quotation, please include the full reference of the material (journal name, volume, issue, page numbers, name of author and title of article), the quantity of hard copy or electronic reprints required and a brief description of the intended use of the reprint. For further information, or to request a quote, please contact us (info@biolifesas.org).


3. Reproducing Published Material from Other Publishers

It is absolutely essential that authors obtain permission to reproduce any published material (figures, schemes, tables, or any extract of a text) which does not fall into the public domain, or for which they do not hold the copyright.

If your article makes use of any previously published material (including figures/diagrams, or short extracts, or content taken from websites), then written permission should be requested by the authors from the copyright holder who is usually the publisher (for material taken from journal or proceedings articles), website owner/company (for material taken from websites) or the author or their employer (if the work is unpublished). Some publishers will also require that you seek the permission of the original author (you will need to check the terms of the publisher’s permission).


Permission is required when:

Your own works published by other Publishers and for which you did not retain copyright.

Substantial extracts from anyone's works or a series of works.

Use of Tables, Graphs, Charts, Schemes and Artworks if they are unaltered or slightly modified. 

Photographs for which you do not hold copyright.


Permission is not required when:

Reconstruction of your own table with data already published elsewhere. Please notice that in this case you must cite the source of the data in the form of either "Data from..." or "Adapted from...".

Reasonably short quotes are considered fair use and therefore do not require permission but need referencing.

Graphs, Charts, Schemes and Artworks that are completely redrawn by the authors and significantly changed beyond recognition do not require permission.

The material is available under one of the Creative Commons licences which allow commercial reuse and suits the purpose for which you want to reuse the content.


When the permission is required, then you should submit the written evidence.

That all necessary permissions have been obtained by providing the actual written permission granted by the copyright owner.


Obtaining Permission

In order to avoid unnecessary delays in the publication process, you should start obtaining permissions as early as possible. If in any doubt about the copyright, apply for permission. JBRHA cannot publish material from other publications without permission.

The copyright holder may give you instructions on the form of acknowledgment to be followed; otherwise follow the style: "Reproduced with permission from [author], [book/journal title]; published by [publisher], [year]." at the end of the caption of the Table, Figure or Scheme.


4. Preprints

Authors may share their work ahead of submission to a peer-reviewed journal, as well as during the JBRHA review process, on repositories or preprint servers (such as arXiv, PeerJ Preprints, OSF, and others), provided that the server imposes no restrictions upon the author's full copyright and re-use rights.


5. Conferences, Proceedings, and Abstracts

Manuscripts that first appeared as conference papers must be expanded with at least 25% new contents if they are to be considered as original work. Authors are required to add a substantial amount of original content in the form of new raw material (experiments, data) or new treatment of old data sets which lead to original discussion and/or conclusions, providing value that significantly exceeds the original conference version.

• Seek permission for reuse of the published conference paper if the author does not hold the copyright (proof of permission should be submitted as supplementary material or sent to editorial office).
• Cite the conference in the references section if applicable.



Updated on 21 July 2022