Trends in Food Science & Technology (trends-in-food-science-and-technology)
Journal positioning
Trends in Food Science & Technology is the Elsevier review and synthesis journal for food
science and technology — critical reviews, trend analyses, and opinion that frame the
state and direction of a field. Its defining expectation is critical synthesis, not new
primary data: a comprehensive, evaluative account that integrates the existing literature,
identifies what is settled and what is contested, and points to research gaps and emerging
directions. A manuscript whose core contribution is original experimental results is the
single largest desk-reject risk here, regardless of quality. This skill is a fit /
venue-selection / re-framing tool. It does not replace the journal's current author
guidelines. Before submitting, re-check the live Trends in Food Science & Technology guidance.
When to trigger
- The author names Trends in Food Science & Technology and wants a fit check for a review or
trend article in food science.
- A body of primary work needs to be re-framed as a critical, gap-identifying synthesis
rather than submitted as a primary-research paper.
- The author is choosing between a review venue and a primary-research food journal, or is
unsure whether their topic is "review-ready."
- The author needs this journal's comprehensiveness/critical-synthesis bar and desk-reject heuristics.
Scope & topic fit
- Critical reviews across food chemistry, processing, engineering, microbiology, nutrition,
safety, packaging, and sustainability that evaluate rather than merely catalog the literature.
- Trend and forward-looking articles on emerging technologies, ingredients, or paradigms
(e.g., novel processing, alternative proteins, clean-label, digital/food-tech).
- Methodological or conceptual syntheses that reconcile conflicting findings and propose a
framework or research agenda.
- Systematic or scoping reviews and meta-analyses with a transparent, reproducible search
and selection protocol.
- Cross-cutting topics connecting food technology to health, sustainability, or regulation
when treated as a synthesis for a broad food-science readership.
- Authoritative tutorials on a maturing technique only when they add critical evaluation, not
a how-to manual.
Method & evidence bar
- The contribution is the synthesis: coverage must be comprehensive and current, with
balanced treatment of competing evidence rather than a one-sided narrative.
- For systematic reviews/meta-analyses, the search strategy, databases, inclusion/exclusion
criteria, and (where relevant) risk-of-bias assessment must be explicit and reproducible.
- Claims about "trends" need evidence — citation patterns, technological trajectories, or
documented adoption — not assertion.
- The review must add analytical value: critical comparison, a new organizing framework,
reconciliation of contradictions, and clearly stated research gaps.
- Original experimental data are not the contribution; small confirmatory data, if present,
must be subordinate to the synthesis and never the central claim.
- Citations should be primary and current; over-reliance on prior reviews or stale literature
undermines the comprehensiveness bar.
Structure & house style
- Review/trend-article format with a clear conceptual architecture; re-check current article
types and length expectations on the live guide.
- The introduction must define the scope, justify why a review is needed now, and state the
organizing question — not open with a primary-study rationale.
- Use synthesis devices: comparison tables, framework figures, and timelines that integrate
sources, rather than figures reporting the authors' own raw measurements.
- A dedicated "future directions / research gaps" treatment is expected, with specific,
actionable open questions.
- Graphical abstract and highlights are expected; re-check current specifications on the live guide.
Official-submission checklist
- Before giving submission-ready advice, read
../../resources/source-basis.md and
../../resources/official-source-map.md; start from the Elsevier anchors, then cite the
current Trends in Food Science & Technology page you checked.
- Search the live site for "Trends in Food Science & Technology guide for authors" and follow the current Elsevier version.
- Confirm that the manuscript type is a review/trend article and re-check accepted article types and length.
- For systematic reviews, re-check whether a reporting standard (e.g., a PRISMA-style protocol) is expected.
- Re-check graphical-abstract/highlights specifications and any pre-submission proposal/abstract step.
- Re-check competing-interests, funding, author-contribution, and AI-use disclosure, and open-access terms.
- If the live official instructions conflict with this skill, the official instructions win.
Pre-submission self-check
Common desk-reject triggers
- A primary-research manuscript (the experimental results are the contribution) submitted as a review.
- A "review" that merely lists and paraphrases studies without critical evaluation or a framework.
- Narrow or outdated coverage, or heavy reliance on previous reviews instead of primary sources.
- Systematic-review claims with an opaque or unreproducible search and selection process.
- A vague "future trends" narrative unsupported by evidence of the trajectory.
- Scope mismatch: a topic too niche or too settled to warrant a broad-audience critical review.
Re-routing decision
- Original food-chemistry data is the contribution →
food-chemistry.
- Food-systems-significance synthesis for the Nature audience →
nature-food.
- Sustainability/cleaner-production review framing →
journal-of-cleaner-production.
- Invited, authoritative environment-and-resources synthesis →
annual-review-of-environment-and-resources.
- Contaminant/pollution-impact review →
environmental-pollution.
Output format
[Fit] High / Medium / Low (one-line reason)
[Target] Trends in Food Science & Technology
[Topic tags] <2–3 closest food-science review topics>
[Synthesis contribution] <the framework / reconciliation / gap-mapping the review delivers>
[Review rigor] <coverage, balance, and (if systematic) search transparency>
[Top risk] <the single most likely reason for rejection — usually "this is primary research">
[Official items to re-check] <article type / review reporting standard / highlights / disclosures>
[Re-route suggestion] <if not a fit, a better-matched venue>