Indexing and Abstracting
Neural Prosody, LLC · H0 Journal
Neural Prosody is committed to maximizing the discoverability of all published research.
We pursue registration with major indexing services and open access directories as our publication record develops. Current and planned indexing status is listed below.
Current Indexing
| Service / Database | Status and Notes |
|---|---|
| CrossRef | Active — all articles assigned CrossRef DOIs upon publication. Metadata supplied to CrossRef is publicly available through the CrossRef metadata API and is harvested by major discovery platforms. |
| DataCite | Active for research datasets — authors register datasets with DataCite through OSF, Zenodo, Figshare, or equivalent repositories. Dataset DOIs are linked in article metadata. |
| Google Scholar | Active — articles indexed automatically by Google Scholar via OJS metadata export. No application required. |
| OAI-PMH | Active via OJS — Neural Prosody's OJS platform provides OAI-PMH endpoints for automated metadata harvesting by library discovery systems and aggregators. |
Planned Indexing
The following indexing services require a minimum publication history, active ISSN assignment, or other eligibility criteria before an application can be submitted. Neural Prosody will apply to each service when eligibility criteria are met and will update this page as applications are submitted and decisions received.
| Service / Database | Status and Notes |
|---|---|
| DOAJ (Directory of Open Access Journals) | Application planned upon meeting eligibility criteria, which require a minimum of five published articles and an active ISSN. DOAJ listing is a prerequisite for many library discovery systems and funder OA compliance checks. |
| PubMed Central (PMC) | Application planned following ISSN assignment and establishment of a publication record. PMC indexing requires demonstrated peer review standards and a minimum number of published issues. |
| PsycINFO / APA PsycArticles | Application to APA’s databases planned following ISSN assignment. PsycINFO is the primary abstracting database for psychology and behavioral science and is a key discoverability target for H0 Journal. |
| Scopus | Application planned following establishment of a publication record. Scopus eligibility review considers citation patterns, peer review quality, and editorial standards. |
| Web of Science | Application planned following establishment of a citation record. Web of Science eligibility requires demonstrated citation impact and editorial integrity. |
| ERIC (Education Resources Information Center) | Under consideration for methodological and applied psychology content with educational relevance. |
Metadata and Discoverability
Neural Prosody supplies structured article metadata to CrossRef, DataCite, and OAI-PMH harvesters. Metadata includes author names and ORCIDs (where provided), title, abstract, keywords, publication date, DOI, license, funding information, and links to associated datasets. Authors are encouraged to provide their ORCID identifier at submission to ensure accurate attribution across discovery platforms.
Authors who publish in H0 Journal and wish to report their article for institutional or funder purposes prior to formal indexing may use the article DOI, which is assigned upon publication and provides a permanent, citable link to the published record regardless of indexing status.
ISSN
H0 Journal’s ISSN application is pending. The ISSN will be displayed on the journal’s website, in article metadata, and on all published articles upon assignment. Authors requiring the ISSN for institutional or funder reporting prior to its assignment are encouraged to contact the editorial office.
Metadata and Discoverability
Neural Prosody supplies structured article metadata to CrossRef, DataCite, and OAI-PMH harvesters. Metadata includes author names and ORCIDs (where provided), title, abstract, keywords, publication date, DOI, license, funding information, and links to associated datasets. Authors are encouraged to provide their ORCID identifier at submission to ensure accurate attribution across discovery platforms.
Authors who publish in H0 Journal and wish to report their article for institutional or funder purposes prior to formal indexing may use the article DOI, which is assigned upon publication and provides a permanent, citable link to the published record regardless of indexing status.