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Open access conference material supplements are peer-reviewed, permanent, and citable. They record the full measure of research around a common thread, as presented at a workshop, congress, or conference, for the scientific record. Conference material supplements can include the following article types:
Poster extracts
Conference abstracts
Presentation extracts
Many of our medical journals accept conference material supplements. Submissions are subject to peer review for acceptance. You can read published conference material supplements in the Expert Review of Clinical Immunology from Almirall and Takeda.
Pricing and publication routes
The price of a supplement is based on the number of articles included. We offer three publishing timelines for conference material supplements. The cost for each article consists of an open access Article Publishing Charge (APC) and, if selected, an Accelerated Publication charge.
Standard Track
Articles accepted after peer review
Publish in 14-16 weeks from submission
Per Article (GBP)
Standard Publication: £0
APC: £4,000
Total per article: £4,000
Per Article (EUR)
Standard Publication: €0
APC: €4,800
Total per article: €4,800
Per Article (USD)
Standard Publication: $0
APC: $5,000
Total per article: $5,000
Per Article (AUD)
Standard Publication: $0
APC: $6,960
Total per article: $6,960
Rapid Track
Articles accepted after peer review
Accelerated Publication: 7-9 weeks from submission
Per Article (GBP)
Accelerated Publication: £3,000
APC: £3,925
Total per article: £6,925
Per Article (EUR)
Accelerated Publication: €3,400
APC: €4,555
Total per article: €7,955
Per Article (USD)
Accelerated Publication: $3,900
APC: $4,995
Total per article: $8,895
Fast Track
Articles accepted after peer review
Accelerated Publication: 3-5 weeks from submission
Per Article (GBP)
Accelerated Publication: £5,500
APC: £3,925
Total per article: £9,425
Per Article (EUR)
Accelerated Publication: €6,200
APC: €4,555
Total per article: €10,755
Per Article (USD)
Accelerated Publication: $7,000
APC: $4,995
Total per article: $11,995
About the article charges
The Accelerated Publication charge covers the publisher resources required to expedite peer review and production, without sacrificing quality or rigor. The shorter timeline give you greater flexibility to coordinate your publishing schedule with conferences and other relevant events. Find more detailed information here.
The APC supports a range of services which help ensure the trust, quality, and impact of your open access publication. Your content benefits from the following:
Robust peer review: Experts in your field provide an objective and constructive evaluation of your work ahead of publication.
Online discoverability: Our journals are indexed in internationally-recognized citation and abstract databases, including PubMed, the Journal Citation Reports (JCR), Scopus, and Google Scholar.
Visibility and impact: No barriers to access means anyone can read, cite, and use your research, whoever or wherever they are. From policymakers to journalists, your research can inspire and inform.
Rapid online publication: Your supplement will be made available on Taylor & Francis Online soon after acceptance, freely and permanently accessible to anyone who needs it.
Freedom: Your choice of Creative Commons license allows you to comply with any funder mandates and control how others use your work.
Questions before you get in touch? Review our FAQs.
Exploring your publishing options?F1000Research is an open research platform offering rapid publication of diverse outputs, including conference materials.Learn more.
Ensuring quality
As a publisher, Taylor & Francis upholds the highest standards of ethical publishing and complies with ICMJE, COPE, and GPP-3 guidelines.
All research published in Taylor & Francis journals must have been conducted according to international and local guidelines ensuring ethically conducted research. Acceptance of articles is driven entirely by editorial considerations and independent peer review, ensuring the highest standards.
All authors are expected to follow Taylor & Francis’ editorial policies on authorship, research, and publication ethics, consent to publish identifiable information, and declaration of competing interests. Authors are encouraged to read these prior to submission to ensure they have adhered to these policies, obtained any required consent to publish and copyright permissions, and declared any competing interests for all listed authors of each specific poster/presentation/study.
Commit your conference materials to the scientific record — discoverable by any researcher, anywhere.
Contact us for a personalized quote or pre-submission guidance
Find the right home for your research
The following Taylor & Francis journals accept conference material supplement submissions. Explore the journal homepages to determine the best fit for your content.
Will publication of preliminary data in a supplement preclude future publications based on the same data set?
No. Because these articles take a proceedings-type format, a full research article that offers sufficiently new information is viewed as a new article eligible for publication. For more information, please refer to the ICMJE guidelines on overlapping publications.
Are submissions subject to peer review before online publication?
Yes. All open access conference materials are subject to the same robust peer review practices that are in place for all of our journal articles. Acceptance is driven entirely by editorial considerations and independent peer review, ensuring the highest standards are maintained.
Do I need to obtain permission from the conference if I wish to publish any conference materials in a journal?
Yes, as stated in our guidelines, we advise that authors should check the conditions for reuse of own work with the conference organizers and obtain permission for reuse if necessary. Most conferences allow authors to reuse their own work, but permission should always be sought where copyright lies with another party, such as the conference organizer.
What can I expect my published supplement to look like?