About Medical Sensors & Imaging
Scope
Medical Sensors & Imaging (MSI) is an open access journal dedicated to advancing personalized health through cutting-edge research at the intersection of physics and biomedical sciences. MSI focuses on the convergence of traditional medical physics disciplines with emerging fields such as quantum technologies, machine learning, and personalized healthcare, particularly as they pertain to medical sensors and imaging.
Our journal publishes groundbreaking findings in medical image processing, analysis, visualization, and instrumentation, as well as the development and application of biomedical sensors. We are committed to disseminating research that not only enhances scientific understanding but also has tangible applications in improving patient care and health outcomes.
MSI aims to be a leading source of innovative research and developments in medical sensing and imaging technologies. We publish content that is of significant interest to academia, industry professionals, medical engineers, and clinicians.
Why should you publish in Medical Sensors & Imaging?
- Rigorous and fair peer review: peer review is administered by the in-house editorial office in consultation with the Editor-in-Chief and with direct support from the Editorial Board. We aim for two reviewer reports on every article, ensuring quality and fairness.
- Fast: we are committed to providing you with a fast, professional service to ensure rapid first decision, acceptance and publication. We aim to accept articles in under 120 days. Once accepted, your article will be accessible to readers within 24 hours and will include a citable DOI.
- Transfer opportunities: as well as accepting direct submissions, the journal also offers you a quick and easy solution to transfer your manuscript from another IOP Publishing journal if it does not fit that journal’s scope or significance criteria. Articles are transferred along with peer review reports to save time and avoid duplication of work for reviewers.
- International Editorial Board: scientific leadership for Medical Sensors & Imaging provided by an Editorial Board of prominent researchers and supported by a large international advisory board, with a diverse scientific and geographical distribution.
- Society owned: published by IOP Publishing, on behalf of IPEM, both of which are not-for-profit companies. Revenue generated by the journal is used by both organisations (IOP and IPEM) to promote and advance the understanding and dissemination of science in the UK and across the world.
- Article flexibility: there are no page limits or forced requirements for formatting submissions, and we publish any supplementary data at no extra charge. Let us know if you have any other requirements and we will be happy to help.
Article types
- Research papers: reports of original scientific research, techniques and applications. Papers should not be more than 10,000 words long (excluding the abstract, figure captions and references) and should not comprise more than 12 figures.
- Letters: outstanding concise articles reporting important, timely new developments; not normally more than 3,000 words (four journal pages). Letters should be deserving of priority review, and you are required to upload a justification statement along with your submission.
- Topical reviews: Written by leading researchers in their fields, reviews are intended to summarize accepted practice and report on significant recent progress in selected areas, often invited by the Editorial Board. A topical review should provide a critical authoritative evaluation of the current state of research in the field, and also include a general overview and an introduction with enough basic information to make the article interesting and informative for non-specialist scientists. Typically 12,000–18,000 words in length.
- Notes: brief descriptions of a single piece of apparatus or a technique developed for a specific purpose, a small but important experimental or theoretical point or a novel solution to a commonly encountered problem in medical physics; not normally more than 3,500 words (six journal pages).
- Comments and replies: comments on, or criticisms of, work previously published in this journal. The original authors will be invited to submit a reply. Not normally more than 1,800 words (three journal pages).
- Roadmaps: Roadmaps are forward-looking articles written by leading researchers in their areas, typically invited by the Editorial Board. Roadmaps present their vision on the current status, challenges and future directions of the field. They should provide guidance for colleagues, funding agencies and government institutions in relevant and timely research areas. Under the lead of a main coordinating author, roadmaps involve multiple authors and consist of a series of 10-20 formalised two-page sections on key topics within the field (each 1,400 words with around 20 references).
This journal publishes Focus Collections which are special collections of articles on a specific theme.
Peer review
The following summary describes the peer review process for Medical Sensors & Imaging, using the ANSI/NISO Standard Terminology for Peer Review:
- Identity transparency: single-anonymous, double-anonymous (author choice)
- Reviewer interacts with: Editor
Our Publishing Support website provides more information on our reviewing process as well as checklists in both English and Chinese language to help authors prepare their manuscripts for submission.
If an article is not accepted for publication, we may offer the author the opportunity to transfer their submission to other suitable journals we publish.
Inclusivity and diversity
IOP Publishing recognises that there are inequalities within the scientific publishing and research ecosystems. We are committed to a progressive approach to inclusivity and diversity, and are working hard to eliminate discrimination to foster an equitable and welcoming publishing environment for all.
IOP Publishing follows Guidelines on Inclusive Language and Images in Scholarly Communication to ensure that journal articles use bias-free and culturally sensitive communication. We ask authors to please follow these guidelines in their manuscript submissions.
More information about our work on inclusivity is available on our Open Physics hub.
Ethics
Research data
Please note that this policy requires authors to include a data availability statement in their article.
For any questions about the policy please contact the journal.
Many research funders now require authors to make all data related to their research available in an online repository. Please refer to the policy for further information about research data, data repositories and data citation.
Open access
For more information on IOP Publishing’s open access policies please see our Open access page.
Members of the Institute of Physics (IOP) are eligible to receive a 25% discount on the article publication charge (APC) for this journal (applicable once per article). The discount can be selected during article submission.
Publication charges
Medical Sensors & Imaging has no subscription charges and the costs of publication are fully funded by article publication charges (APC).
As part of our commitment to open science, IOP Publishing is currently paying the APC for all articles submitted to the journal.
The list prices shown below will not be charged if your article is accepted for publication.
GBP | EUR | USD | |
Article publication charge* | £2590 | €3100 | $3495 |
Reduced article publication charge* for Group B countries** | £500 | €575 | $675 |
Reduced article publication charge for Group A countries** | £0 | €0 | $0 |
*excluding VAT where applicable
**eligibility criteria can be found here
APCs only apply to articles accepted for publication; there are no submission charges.
There are no other charges for publishing in Medical Sensors & Imaging.
Abstracting and indexing services
We work with our authors to make help their work as easy to discover as possible. Articles published in Medical Sensors & Imaging will be available in relevant indexing services and databases when appropriate.