---
name: trends-in-cognitive-sciences
description: Use when targeting Trends in Cognitive Sciences (TiCS) or deciding whether a cognitive science synthesis, opinion, or review fits this venue. Encodes the journal's invited-review culture, fit, framing, method-and-evidence bar, house style, official-submission re-check, and desk-reject heuristics.
---

# Trends in Cognitive Sciences (trends-in-cognitive-sciences)

## Journal positioning

Trends in Cognitive Sciences (TiCS), published by Cell Press, is one of the leading review and opinion journals in cognitive science, occupying a niche at the intersection of cognitive psychology, cognitive neuroscience, linguistics, computational modelling, and philosophy of mind. Critically, TiCS is a **largely invited venue**: most content is commissioned by editors from established researchers who are recognized authorities on the topic being synthesized. Unsolicited submissions are possible but face a substantially higher bar — editors must be convinced the author has a uniquely authoritative perspective and that the synthesis fills a genuine gap not covered by recent TiCS publications. TiCS does not publish primary experimental data as its core product; it publishes synthesis, opinion, and conceptual frameworks. This skill is a **fit / venue-selection / re-framing** tool. It does not replace the journal's current official submission guidelines. Before submitting, re-check the live author instructions on cell.com/trends/cognitive-sciences.

## When to trigger

- The author has been invited by a TiCS editor to submit a review, opinion, or perspective.
- A researcher is considering proposing an unsolicited submission to TiCS and needs to understand what editors are looking for before making contact.
- An author has a synthesis or theoretical framework spanning cognitive psychology, neuroscience, and/or computation that could serve a broad cognitive-science readership.
- The author needs TiCS's editorial structure (article types, framing conventions) and a credible alternative for review/opinion content that does not fit TiCS.

## Scope & topic fit

- Integrative reviews of cognitive phenomena: attention, memory, language, decision-making, development, executive function, social cognition — with mechanistic or computational synthesis.
- Opinion and forum pieces that make a specific, contentious, or paradigm-challenging theoretical argument; not summaries of what is known but claims about what it means.
- Cross-disciplinary synthesis connecting cognitive psychology, cognitive neuroscience, computational modelling, and/or linguistics around a common theoretical question.
- Emerging-field perspectives: timely synthesis of fast-moving areas (predictive processing, large language models and cognition, cognitive neuroscience of consciousness) where authoritative synthesis adds value.
- Controversy-style pieces that articulate genuine scientific debate and lay out competing positions for the field.

## Method & evidence bar

- TiCS does not require new empirical data — this is a review and opinion venue. The "evidence bar" is about the quality of the synthesis: comprehensiveness, critical engagement with counterevidence, and the coherence of the conceptual framework.
- Reviews must engage critically with primary literature, not merely summarize; a TiCS review takes a stance and defends it.
- Theoretical arguments must be logically rigorous and falsifiable; vague or unfalsifiable frameworks are a rejection risk.
- Computational models cited or proposed must be referenced with sufficient precision that readers can evaluate their predictions.
- For opinion pieces: the position must be genuinely debatable and important; "we propose a new framework" is only compelling if existing frameworks are shown to be inadequate for specific empirical phenomena.

## Structure & house style

- TiCS article types include: Review, Opinion, Forum (response to a published Opinion), and Correspondence — article type must be declared at submission.
- Reviews and Opinions have a structured format: Box panels are a TiCS house feature, used for defining key terms, presenting a model or framework, or summarizing a competing view.
- The abstract should convey the thesis or synthetic conclusion, not just announce the topic: "we argue that X explains Y because Z" rather than "we review recent work on X."
- Outstanding Questions box at the end of articles is a TiCS convention — a short list of genuinely unresolved empirical or theoretical questions opened up by the synthesis.
- Figure panels are usually conceptual diagrams, model schematics, or data-synthesis figures (meta-analytic plots, representative paradigm illustrations) — not raw experimental data.

## Official-submission checklist

- Before giving submission-ready advice, read `../../resources/source-basis.md` and `../../resources/official-source-map.md`; start from the official source anchors for this journal family, then cite the current journal-specific page you checked.
- Search the live site for "Trends in Cognitive Sciences author information" and follow the current Cell Press version.
- Confirm whether submission is invited or unsolicited; for unsolicited work, contact the editorial office with a pre-submission inquiry before preparing a full manuscript.
- Re-check article-type definitions and associated length/figure limits (these change — verify current constraints on the live site).
- Confirm the required Box structure (key terms, Outstanding Questions) and figure-type expectations for TiCS.
- Check competing-interests, funding disclosure, AI-use policy, and any preprint/posting policy applicable to review articles under Cell Press rules.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.

## Pre-submission self-check

- [ ] The submission is either invited or a pre-submission inquiry has been sent and an invitation to submit has been received — do not cold-submit a full manuscript without checking editorial interest.
- [ ] The thesis of the review/opinion is stated as a defensible claim, not as a topic description: "we argue X" rather than "we review X."
- [ ] The Outstanding Questions box surfaces genuinely open problems, not settled questions or soft calls for more data.
- [ ] Box panels are used appropriately: key terms defined, conceptual model illustrated, or competing view summarized.
- [ ] The article takes a clear stance and engages with counterevidence; it is not a neutral catalogue of findings.

## Common desk-reject triggers

- Unsolicited full manuscripts submitted without prior editorial contact — TiCS editorial offices typically return these; a pre-submission inquiry is the correct first step.
- Primary-data papers submitted as if TiCS were an experimental journal — no new experimental data are appropriate as the central contribution.
- Reviews that summarize findings without a synthetic argument or theoretical claim — TiCS is not a literature review journal.
- Overly narrow scope: a review of a specific paradigm or a single laboratory's work without broader cognitive-science relevance.
- Theoretical frameworks that are not falsifiable, or opinion pieces that do not engage with the strongest counterarguments.

## Re-routing decision

- Broad neuroscience or cognitive neuroscience mechanism (primary data) → `nature-neuroscience` or `neuron`.
- Human behavioural science (primary data, large-N, cross-disciplinary) → `nature-human-behaviour`.
- Psychiatry-oriented synthesis → `molecular-psychiatry` or Psychological Medicine.
- Cognitive science primary research → Cognition, Psychological Science, or Journal of Experimental Psychology: General.

## Output format

```text
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Trends in Cognitive Sciences
[Topic tags] <2–3 closest topics>
[Method/evidence] <does the synthesis have a defensible thesis and critical engagement with counterevidence?>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection or non-invitation>
[Official items to re-check] <invited vs. unsolicited status / article type / Box structure / Outstanding Questions / length limits>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>
```
