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Journal of Applied Physiology (JAP)

Publisher :

American Physiological Society

Scopus Profile
Peer reviewed only
Scopus Profile
Open Access
  • Physiology
e-ISSN :

1522-1601

Issue Frequency :

Monthly

Impact Factor :

3.5

p-ISSN :

8750-7587

Est. Year :

2024

Mobile :

18445261700

Country :

United States

Language :

English

APC :

YES

Impact Factor Assignee :

Google Scholar

Email :

jappleic@physiology.org

Journal Descriptions

The Journal of Applied Physiology publishes the highest quality original research and reviews that examine novel adaptive and integrative physiological mechanisms in humans and animals that advance the field. The journal encourages the submission of manuscripts that examine the acute and adaptive responses of various organs, tissues, cells and/or molecular pathways to environmental, physiological and/or pathophysiological stressors. As an applied physiology journal, topics of interest are not limited to a particular organ system. The journal, therefore, considers a wide array of integrative and translational research topics examining the mechanisms involved in disease processes and mitigation strategies, as well as the promotion of health and well-being throughout the lifespan. Priority is given to manuscripts that provide mechanistic insight deemed to exert an impact on the field.


Journal of Applied Physiology (JAP) is :

International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Physiology , Online or Print, Monthly Journal

UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN - 8750-7587, E-ISSN - 1522-1601, Established in - 2024, Impact Factor - 3.5

Not Provide Crossref DOI

Indexed in Scopus

Not indexed in WoS, DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE

Publications of JAP

Research Article
  • dott image June, 1996

Mitochondrial enzymes increase in muscle in response to 7-10 days of cycle exercise

Endurance exercise training induces a significant increase in the respiratory capacity of skeletal muscle. This is reflected by a training-induced increase in mitochondrial enzyme activity. ...

Research Article
  • dott image September, 1985

Effects of detraining on responses to submaximal exercise

Seven endurance-trained subjects were studied 12, 21, 56, and 84 days after cessation of training. Heart rate, ventilation, respiratory exchange ratio, and blood lactate concentration during...

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