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Journal of Biomedical informatics
基本信息
期刊名称 Journal of Biomedical informatics
J BIOMED INFORM
期刊ISSN 1532-0464
期刊官方网站 https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/journal-of-biomedical-informatics
是否OA No
出版商 Academic Press Inc.
出版周期 Bimonthly
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始发年份 2001
年文章数 231
最新影响因子 4.0(2023)  scijournal影响因子  greensci影响因子
中科院SCI期刊分区
大类学科 小类学科 Top 综述
医学3区 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS 计算机:跨学科应用3区
MEDICAL INFORMATICS 医学:信息3区
CiteScore
CiteScore排名 CiteScore SJR SNIP
学科 排名 百分位 8.9 1.160 1.622
Computer Science
Computer Science Applications
135/817 83%
Medicine
Health Informatics
25/138 82%
补充信息
自引率 5%
H-index 83
SCI收录状况 Science Citation Index Expanded
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PubMed Central (PMC) http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nlmcatalog?term=1532-0464%5BISSN%5D
投稿指南
期刊投稿网址 https://www.editorialmanager.com/jbi/default.aspx
收稿范围
The Journal of Biomedical Informatics (JBI) is the premier methodology journal in the field of biomedical informatics. JBI publishes research on new methodologies and techniques that have general applicability and form the basis for the evolving science of biomedical informatics. Papers should focus on a real-world biomedical or clinical problem, develop a novel approach to address the problem, and evaluate its appropriateness in comparison to the current state-of-the-art (SoA) methods. Involvement of healthcare professionals in motivating the work and evaluation of results is expected.

Focus Areas and Topics of Interest

JBI seeks to publish papers that make a conceptual contribution to the field, typically by describing an innovation in methodology or technique or by discussing substantive generalizable lessons that have been learned in the context of an informatics project. When a methodological contribution has a theoretical basis, that theory is an appropriate emphasis for papers as well. Research papers may also present a novel "method of methods" explaining how to apply the existing methods to a space of biomedical problems that share unique characteristics influencing the choice of methods.

JBI publishes papers on a wide range of informatics topics. However, across these topics, papers must build on deep understanding and utilization of medical domain knowledge and should consider pragmatic translation for clinical care or applications. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to) clinical decision support, patient safety, natural language processing, artificial intelligence and machine learning, knowledge representation for healthcare, translational bioinformatics, clinical research informatics, and clinical informatics. Additional considerations for papers in the areas of translational bioinformatics, machine learning, security and privacy are provided below. Irrespective of the topic, papers must focus on novel informatics methods and its comparison to the current approaches.

Manuscripts can be submitted in the following categories: original research, methodological review, commentaries, special communication, letters to the editor, book reviews, and editorials (see additional details on each of these categories below). Given the international readership of JBI, country-specific health systems or approaches will be considered only if they offer generalizable lessons that are relevant to the broader readership, regardless of their country, language, culture, or health system.

Specific considerations for manuscripts in certain topical areas have also been provided in recent editorials.

If you are considering an article with a focus on translational bioinformatics, please read this editorial. Biologic discoveries based on the use of routine informatics techniques may be important biologic contributions, but are not suitable for JBI. In addition, please note that JBI publishes bioinformatics papers only if they deal with issues in translational (human) science (e.g., translational bioinformatics papers).

If you are considering an article describing a new machine learning approach, please read this editorial. Machine learning papers would be considered only if the methods that are introduced demonstrate substantial novelty and advancement beyond the current SoA and their evaluation is sound and includes an assessment of the potential of the method to be used in clinical practice. For example, submissions reporting publishing marginally SoA findings without an in-depth analysis or discussion of how the methods are potentially generalizable (or applicable in a wider setting) would not be considered. Novel and important clinical problems addressed by existing machine learning methods may warrant Special Communication papers if their discussion includes novel insights or lessons learned for future research in such domains.

Authors considering an article on biomedical privacy and security, please read this editorial. To be considered, the privacy and security methods that are introduced should demonstrate substantial novelty and advancement beyond the SoA, should be specific to the biomedical informatics domain, and their practical application and/or likely real-world usefulness in the biomedical domain.

Please also note that papers related to signal processing, imaging, medical devices, or communication networks are generally considered outside the scope of the journal. To be considered, such papers must introduce novel informatics methods that build on deep understanding and utilization of medical domain knowledge and should be translatable into applications. Papers on such topics should focus on information processing and management or knowledge-based approaches.

Please also consult the editorial that explains where to direct Artificial Intelligence in Medicine-related manuscripts for peer review and possible publication, considering the different scope of the three Elsevier medical informatics journals: JBI, Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, and Intelligence-based Medicine.


Paper Categories

Papers are generally of seven types:

Original research: Presentation and discussion of a biomedically or clinically motivated system or approach that has required the development of innovative methods rather than the application of established techniques. Motivating applications may be discussed, but the new method should be discussed so that generalizability is clear, ideally with an assessment of its range of applicability. Please choose the article type "Research Paper" during the submission process.

Methodological review: Reviews of a methodological approach that summarize its introduction, use, successes, and limitations. Such reviews will also often propose future research directions or critique a method and discuss the range of problems for which it may not be an appropriate solution. Note that such reviews should focus on a method or approach, not on specific application domain (e.g., avoid submitting on reviews such as "Computers in Diabetes Management") Please choose the article type "Review article" during the submission process.

Special communication: These are articles that address an issue of broad interest to the methodologically-oriented informatics research community and clearly communicate generalizable novel conclusions/recommendations/lessons-learned that are useful to the developers or users of biomedical informatics methods. These lessons should be based on the application of existing biomedical informatics methods and should present such results. They may report on the results of research studies, including an application of an existing biomedical informatics approach in a new informatics domain. If submission of a special communication is being considered, please submit a brief proposal to morpeleg@is.haifa.ac.il beforehand. If your submission of a Special Communication has been approved by the editor, please choose the article type "Short Communication" during the submission process and specify in the cover letter that your manuscript is intended as a Special Communication. Note that this is just a category of submission, used for technical reasons in the Editorial Manager information system; your paper does not need to be particularly short.

Please note the maximum word count and count of figures and tables in submission of Original Research, Special Communication, Methodological Review papers:
Structured abstract (<= 350 words, usual structure of Objective, Methods, Results, Conclusion).
6,000 words for the body of the manuscript (excluding abstract, references, appendices, figures and tables).
Total of figures and tables: 8.


Commentaries: These are articles, generally shorter than research papers, that tend to discuss previously published articles or a theme that is an important area of focus for the methodological basis of biomedical informatics research and its application. Commentaries are often invited, but may be submitted by anyone after a discussion with the editors. If submission of a commentary is being considered, please submit a brief proposal to morpeleg@is.haifa.ac.il beforehand. If your submission of a Commentary has been solicited, or approved by the editor, please choose the article type "Commentary" during the submission process.

Letters to the Editor: Letters may be submitted and will be considered for possible publication in the journal. They typically comment on a previously published paper. Please choose the article type "Correspondence" during the submission process.

Book reviews: The editors will occasionally identify a new book that is likely to be of interest to the JBI readership. They will invite individuals to write reviews of these volumes, and such submissions are by invitation only. Unsolicited book reviews will not be considered. Please choose the article type "Book review" during the submission process.

Editorials: The editors or their invitees will occasionally publish editorials, but unsolicited editorials will not be considered. Please choose the article type "Editorial" during the submission process.


Special Issues

We devote two or three issues per year to special methodological topics overseen by guest editors who propose such special issues to us. Further information regarding special issues can be found in the Guide for Authors.

When an author is submitting a manuscript in response to a call for papers for a special thematic issue, the submission category should be the Special Issue title, but the cover letter should indicate whether the article is an original research paper, methodological review, a special communication, or a commentary.

Prof. Mor Peleg
Editor-in-Chief
收录体裁
Regular research papers
Methodological review papers
Commentaries
Special communications
Letters to the Editor
Book reviews
Editorials
投稿指南 https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/journal-of-biomedical-informatics/publish/guide-for-authors
投稿模板
参考文献格式 https://www.elsevier.com/journals/journal-of-biomedical-informatics/1532-0464/guide-for-authors
编辑信息

Editor-in-Chief

Edward Shortliffe, MD, PhD

Edward Shortliffe, MD, PhD

Columbia University Department of Biomedical Informatics, New York, United States

Clinical decision support; Artificial intelligence; Internet in health care

Deputy Editor

Mor Peleg, PhD

Mor Peleg, PhD

University of Haifa Department of Information Systems, Haifa, Israel

Clinical decision-support; Knowledge representation; Ontologies; Computer-interpretable guidelines

Former Editors

Allan Pryor

1994-2000

Homer Warner

1968-1993

Associate Editors

Riccardo Bellazzi, PhD

University of Pavia, Department of Electrical, Computer and Biomedical Engineering, Pavia, Italy

Data Mining; Artificial Intelligence; Clinical research informatics; Translational Bioinformatics

Wendy Chapman, PhD

University of Melbourne Centre for Clinical and Public Health Informatics Digital Health and Informatics, Melbourne, Australia

Biomedical informatics; Natural language processing

James Cimino, MD

University of Alabama School of Medicine Informatics Institute, Birmingham, Alabama, United States

Internal Medicine; Clinical Informatics

Robert Greenes, MD, PhD

Arizona State University-Skysong, Scottsdale, Arizona, United States

Biomedical Informatics

Vimla Patel, PhD

New York Academy of Medicine, New York, New York, United States

Cognitive Informatics

Peter Tarczy-Hornoch, MD

University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, United States

Methods: Data integration; Data modeling; Data science; Decision support; People and organizational issues. Applications: Translational bioinformatics; Genomic medicine; Precision medicine; Clinical research informatics; Secondary use of EHR data for discovery and applications; Clinical informatics; Comparative effectiveness research 

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