Systems biology
The Royal Society journals Interface Focus, Interface and Royal Society Open Science publish research articles, reviews and theme issues in all areas of systems biology.
Seminars
Our systems biology seminar series features research published in Royal Society journals. Each talk is associated with a recent paper or theme issue, selected by the journal's editors as being particularly innovative or having had significant recent impact. Subscribe to the series for updates.
Latest research
Looking for exciting work in systems biology? Discover top research published by us in recent years.
Interface Focus theme issues
- Making and breaking symmetries in mind and life
- Electrifying insights into cardiac arrhythmias: from molecular mechanisms to therapeutic translations
- Time-keeping and decision-making in living cells; Oscillations and Synchronization
- Interdisciplinary approaches to dynamics in biology
Browse all systems biology articles published across the Royal Society journals.
Journals to know about
Interface Focus publishes themed issues covering inter-disciplinary research transcending the life sciences and physical sciences divide. Each issue of is devoted to a specific topic. This topic will define a research frontier that is advancing rapidly and will, by its very nature, bridge traditional disciplines.
Journal of the Royal Society Interface publishes research articles and reviews providing a dedicated forum for publication and interaction across scientific boundaries. Articles apply chemistry, engineering, materials science, mathematics and physics to the biological and medical sciences and highlight discoveries in the life sciences of relevance to the physical sciences.
Royal Society Open Science is an open access journal publishing high-quality original research on the basis of objective peer-review. The journal covers the entire range of science and mathematics and allows the Society to publish all the high-quality work it receives without the usual restrictions on scope, length or impact. It welcomes the submission of all high-quality science including articles which may usually be difficult to publish elsewhere, for example, replications or those that include negative findings.