图书馆主页
数据库简介
最新动态
联系我们



返回首页


 刊名字顺( Alphabetical List of Journals):

  A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M|N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z|ALL


  检 索:         高级检索

期刊名称:CONCEPTS IN MAGNETIC RESONANCE PART B-MAGNETIC RESONANCE ENGINEERING

ISSN:1552-5031
版本:SCI-CDE
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:JOHN WILEY & SONS INC, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, NJ, 07030
  出版社网址:http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/
期刊网址:http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jhome/102521729
影响因子:0.979(2008)
主题范畴:PHYSICS, ATOMIC, MOLECULAR & CHEMICAL;    SPECTROSCOPY;    CHEMISTRY, PHYSICAL;    INSTRUMENTS & INSTRUMENTATION;    

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal
Aims and Scope

 

Cover Image

Magnetic Resonance Engineering is an international journal devoted to the publication of original investigations concerned with the hardware and software of the engineering and physics aspects of magnetic resonance instrumentation. Articles concerned with both clinical and analytical systems are within the scope of the journal.

The target audience are those who are professionally concerned with signal transduction in magnetic resonance. This includes researchers form the academic, industrial, governmental and medical communities who are involved in building new equipment or in modifying existing devices. Although the majority of the articles are likely to be related to medical applications, submission of articles containing non-medical or analytical applications are encouraged. When appropriate, a reasonable attempt should be made to make the articles comprehensible to engineers in other fields, for example, acoustic engineers and those engaged in all forms of communications.

Abstracting and Indexing Information

Instructions to Authors

Aims and Scope

Magnetic Resonance Engineering is an international journal devoted to the publication of original investigations concerned with the hardware and software of the engineering and physics aspects of magnetic resonance instrumentation. Articles concerned with both clinical and analytical systems are within the scope of the journal.

The target audience are those who are professionally concerned with signal transduction in magnetic resonance. This includes researchers form the academic, industrial, governmental and medical communities who are involved in building new equipment or in modifying existing devices. Although the majority of the articles are likely to be related to medical applications, submission of articles containing non-medical or analytical applications are encouraged. When appropriate, a reasonable attempt should be made to make the articles comprehensible to engineers in other fields, for example, acoustic engineers and those engaged in all forms of communications.

Types of Articles

Magnetic Resonance Engineering publishes four types of articles:

Research Articles. Full research papers should be as concise as possible, without sacrificing documentation of results. For studies on humans, a clear statement must be provided on the use of informed consent, and that the study was conducted after Human Experimentation Review by the relevant committee.

Pedagogical/Review Articles. Pedagogical articles must not only be scientifically sound, but must also have an exceptionally clear pedagogical approach and delivery. Review articles should be concise and be critical assessments of a rapidly developing area. For both of these types of articles special reviewers will be solicited, and authors must contact the Editor-in-Chief concerning the suitability of the subject before submitting a manuscript.

Notes. Articles containing pertinent and interesting observations, and reports on new observations or studies that do not justify a full research article will be considered for the Notes section. Length should not exceed 4000 words (3 printed journal pages.) These articles will undergo full peer review.

Letters to the Editor. Comments on published papers and controversial issues will be considered for publication as Letters to the Editor. Letters may be peer reviewed.

Editorial Process and Policies

All papers will be assessed initially by the Editors, and then sent for external review to experts in the field. When a decision is reached, a decision letter will be sent to the authors, including the comments of the referee(s). To aid in the peer review, we invite authors to suggest potential reviewers of their paper ( including address, fax, and e-mail address) in the cover letter. The receipt of the manuscript will be acknowledged by letter, fax or e-mail giving the manuscript number. Authors submitting a manuscript to Magnetic Resonance Engineering agree that the work is original in presentation and content, has not been published elsewhere (including being posted on any site on the internet), nor is simultaneously under submission as a complete paper with another journal. Publication in any reasonably retrievable source constitute prior publication, but meeting abstracts or preprints do not.

Submission Procedure

Initial Submission Package should include:

1. Cover letter, which should clearly state who is the corresponding author and should include the phone number, fax number and e-mail. Recommendations for reviewers may be included in this letter. For articles written by more than one author, please designate an alternate corresponding author to contact in case the primary author cannot be reached. Include the address, phone number, fax number and e-mail address for this alternate.

2. Three copies of the double-spaced manuscript. All pages must be numbered. Figures must be clearly labled by number. Photographs containing details important to the review should be submitted in triplicate in addition to the originals.

3. Disk containing the manuscript and, if possible, the figures. It is critical that the hard copy matches the disk. The manuscript must be saved in a text format, e.g., MS Word, WordPerfect, etc. Do NOT submit it in a desktop publishing format, such as, Aldus PageMaker or Quark Xpress. Figures submitted on disk should be in PDF, GIF, TIF, JPG and EPS formats. Please label all disks with your name, the file name, and the word processing program and version used. File names. Submit the text and tables of each manuscript as a single file. Name each file with your last name (up to eight letters). Text files should be given the three-letter extension that identifies the file format. Macintosh users should maintain the MS-DOS "eight dot three" file-naming convention.

4. Diskette Submission Form, which can be obtained from the Editor or downloaded from www.interscience.wiley.com

5. Copyright Transfer Agreement (signed by each of the authors). If the paper is a "work made for hire," the agreement must be signed by the employer.

6. It is the author’s responsibility to obtain and include any letters of permission (from the appropriate publishers) to reproduce any copyrighted material.

7. Letter of permission from appropriate investigators when "personal communication" or "unpublished data" are cited in the manuscript.

Submission of revised manuscript:

1. Cover letter listing the changes made, and if appropriate, why others were not made. The original manuscript number must be stated in the cover letter.

2. Items 2 through 7 listed under Initial Submission Package.

Upon Completion of the Review Process

Accepted Papers: When a manuscript is accepted for publication it is sent to the publisher for copy-editing, typesetting, and printing. A hard copy of all figures is required for accepted manuscripts. The print copies are required for the purpose of comparison and to ensure the highest quality reproduction in cases when digital art is used. A laser proof of the typeset and copy-edited version will be sent to the author for approval. Any changes must be reported immediately to John Wiley. Laser proofs may take approximately 6 weeks to generate. The editor’s office or the publisher may be contacted with questions about proofs. See contact information at the end.

Revisions Requested: If the Editors and the reviewers respond positively to a paper and are interested in considering it further, after additional work is included, authors will be invited to resubmit the manuscript. To clarify expectations of the second version, any questions concerning the requested changes or additional work should be addressed to the Editors before submission of the revised paper. Revised manuscripts may be returned to the original reviewers for reassessment. Therefore, the review process of the revised manuscript may take over a month in some cases. The Editors maintain the option of rejecting a paper in a second or third round of revision, if the specific concerns have not been met or if the paper no longer meets a high enough level of priority. Include the original manuscript number in the cover letter. If the revised manuscript is returned later than three months, it may be treated as a new submission.

Rejected Papers: Papers will be rejected either based on the opinions of Editors or based on the comments of external reviewers. Because of the pressure for space, only papers of high priority and novelty will be considered. All disks and figures of rejected manuscripts will be returned upon request; we cannot ensure that all copies will be received back from reviewers.

Presentation of Manuscripts

Articles should be written in English (either British or American spelling).

Research articles should be divided into these sections:

  • Title Page (with title, corresponding author contact information - address, fax and e-mail, three or more key words, abbreviations used, and the appropriate Journal Category)
  • Summary/Abstract (maximum 250 words)
  • Introduction
  • Material and Methods (when appropriate)
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • Conclusions (optional)
  • Acknowledgments The acknowledgment section is an appropriate place to recognize coworkers and to indicate funding sources.
  • References
  • Tables
  • Figure Legends
  • Figures
  • Notes should begin with a Title Page with the heading "Note" and corresponding author contact information. Length should not exceed 4000 words. Although not required, it is suggested that these articles follow the same format given above for Research Articles, when appropriate.

    Letters to the Editor should begin with a Title Page with the heading "Letter to the Editor," and corresponding author contact information. Length should not exceed 2500 words.

    References

    Wiley's Journal Styles Are Now in EndNote
    EndNote is a software product that we recommend to our journal authors to help simplify and streamline the research process. Using EndNote's bibliographic management tools, you can search bibliographic databases, build and organize your reference collection, and then instantly output your bibliography in any Wiley journal style.
    Download Reference Style for this Journal: If you already use EndNote, you can download the reference style for this journal.
    How to Order: To learn more about EndNote, or to purchase your own copy, click here.
    Technical Support: If you need assistance using EndNote, contact endnote@isiresearchsoft.com, or visit www.endnote.com/support.

    References cited in the text should appear as italicized numerals enclosed in parentheses, and are also listed double-spaced in a separate reference section immediately following the text. All references must be verified by the corresponding author who submits the manuscript. Number references sequentially in the order cited in the text. A reference cited only in a table or figure is numbered in the sequence established by the first mention in the text of the table or figure containing the reference.

    Reference to a personal communication or to a manuscript categorized as "in preparation" or "submitted for publication" is discouraged. However, if such a reference is essential and refers to a written communication, the source is cited parenthetically in the text (not in the reference section) with the comment "unpublished data" or "personal communication." Written permission from the source that is cited must be sent to the Editorial Office. Reference to a paper accepted but not yet published is listed in the reference section as "in press." "In press" references must be updated by the authors as soon as publication data is available.

    Provide names of all authors in a reference when there are six or fewer: if there are seven or more authors, list only the first six, followed by "et al."

    Journal references shall include the specified information listed in the following order: authors, article title and subtitle, journal abbreviation, year, volume number in Arabic numerals, and inclusive pages.

    1. Schweitzer D and Spiess HW. Nitrogen-15 NMR of Pyridine in High Magnetic Fields. J Magn Reson 1974, 15: 529-539.


    Book references are listed as follows: authors, title, edition (if other than the first), volume (if more than one), city, publisher, year, page(s).

    2. Abragam A. The Principles of Nuclear Magnetism. Oxford: Clarendon; 1961. 4 p.


    When referencing a book chapter, the order changes as follows: authors of the chapter, title of the chapter, "In:" editors/authors of the book, title of the book, edition (if there are more than one), volume (if there are more than one), city, publisher, year, and inclusive pages of the chapter.

    3. Luketich JD, Ginsberg RJ. Diagnosis and staging of lung cancer. In: Johnson BE, Johnson DH. Lung Cancer. New York: Wiley-Liss; 1995. p 103-33.


    Theses:

    4. Kanter H. Title, Ph. D. Theses. University of California at San Fransisco; December 1984.


    Patents:

    5. Norman LO. Title, U.S. Patent 4 379 752. 1983

    Figures

    Authors should send three sets of figures, either continuous tone, glossy prints of halftone illustrations, or laser prints of fine figures. Under most circumstances figures will be printed at one-column width, 7.5 X 22 cm. Therefore, titles, letters, and other symbols should be large enough to be legible when figures are reduced in size for publication. The lettering of graphs must be large, clear, and "open" so that letters and numbers do not fill in when reduced for publication. Upon request, on an individual basis, the typesetter may allow the use of two columns for graphs or photographs. Labeling should be approximately 2 mm in height when reduced to 1-column width. Figure legends should be listed on a separate page(s) and not be part of the figure. Please label figures on the back with the author’s name and figure number, and indicate the top of the figure. Photographs containing details important to the review should be submitted in triplicate in addition to the originals.

    For best reproduction of color figures, bright, clear colors should be used. Dark colors against a dark background do not reproduce well. Please place your color images against a white background wherever possible.

    Charges

    Page charges: None.

    Reprint Charges: Twenty-five free reprints for each published paper will be sent to the corresponding author. A form for purchasing additional copies from the publisher will be included with the laser proofs of the article.

    Color charges: Please be aware that the cost of color printing will be incurred by the author. Fees are calculated on a per page basis, with US $850 for the first figure on a page and US $150 for each additional figure on that same page. If additional pages are required, the next page is again, US $850 for the first figure on the page and US $150 for each additional figure on that same page.

    Contact Information

    We invite inquires to the editorial office at any time during the editorial process.


    Submissions should be sent to:
    Daniel D. Traficante, Editor-in-Chief
    NMR Concepts
    4 Corr Way
    East Greenwich RI 02818-1246
    Telephone: 401-885-3833
    Fax: 401-885-3626
    E-Mail: NMR_Concepts@chm.uri.edu

    Procedural questions, or packets of information may be requested from Peggy Traficante, Assistant to the Editor, at the same address.



    Editorial Board

     

    E D I T O R - I N - C H I E F
    Daniel D. Traficante

    NMR Concepts
    4 Corr Way
    East Greenwich, RI 02818-1246
    E-mail:
    NMR_Concepts@chm.uri.edu

    E D I T O R I A L B O A R D

    Matthew A. Bernstein
    Mayo Clinic
    Rochester, MN
    E-mail:
    mbernstein@mayo.edu

    Bernhard Blümich
    Institut für Makromolekulare Chemie
    Aachen, Germany
    E-mail:
    bluemich@mc.rwth-aachen.de

    Edward Boskamp
    GE Medical Systems Applied Science Lab
    Waukesha, WI
    E-mail:
    eddy.boskamp@med.ge.com

    Paul T. Callaghan
    Massey University
    Palmerston North, New Zealand
    E-mail:
    p.callaghan@massey.ac.nz

    Mark Conradi
    Washington University
    St. Louis, MO
    E-mail:
    msc@howdy.wustl.edu

    David G. Cory
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Cambridge, MA
    E-mail:
    dcory@mit.edu

    Stuart Crozier
    University of Queensland
    Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
    E-mail:
    stuart.crozier@cmr.uq.edu.au

    Josef Dadok
    Carnegie-Mellon University
    Pittsburgh, PA
    E-mail:
    jd6n@andrew.cmu.edu

    Gareth R. Eaton
    University of Denver
    Denver, CO
    E-mail:
    geaton@du.edu

    Sandra S. Eaton
    University of Denver
    Denver, CO
    E-mail:
    seaton.du.edu

    William A. Edelstein
    General Electric
    Schenectady, NY
    E-mail:
    edelstein@crd.ge.com

    Thomas C. Farrar
    University of Wisconsin
    Madison, WI
    E-mail:
    tfarrar@chem.wisc.edu

    E. Mark Haacke
    The Magnetic Resonance Imaging Institute
    for Biomedical Research
    Detroit, MI
    E-mail:
    nmrimaging@aol.com

    David I. Hoult
    National Research Council Canada
    Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
    E-mail:
    david.hoult@nrc.ca

    Richard L. Magin
    University of Illinois
    Chicago, IL
    E-Mail:
    rmagin@uic.edu

    Hellmut Merkle
    National Institute of Health, NINDS
    Bethesda, MD
    E-mail:
    Hellmut_Merkle@nih.gov

    Rudi Nunlist
    University of California
    Berkeley, CA
    E-mail:
    rnunlist@purcell.cchem.berkeley.edu

    Wolfgang U. Roffmann
    University of Queensland
    Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
    E-mail:
    wolfgang@cmr.uq.edu.au

    James Tropp
    GE Medical Systems
    Fremont, CA
    E-mail:
    james.tropp@med.ge.com

    Andrew G. Webb
    University of Illinois
    Urbana, IL
    E-mail:
    a-webb2@uiuc.edu

    Felix W. Wehrli
    University of Pennsylvannia
    Philadelphia, PA
    E-mail:
    wehrli@oasis.rad.upenn.edu

    Steve Wright
    TAMU
    College Station, TX
    E-mail:
    wright@ee.tamu.edu

     

     

     

    E D I T O R - I N - C H I E F
    Daniel D. Traficante

    NMR Concepts
    4 Corr Way
    East Greenwich, RI 02818-1246
    E-mail:
    NMR_Concepts@chm.uri.edu

    E D I T O R I A L B O A R D

    Matthew A. Bernstein
    Mayo Clinic
    Rochester, MN
    E-mail:
    mbernstein@mayo.edu

    Bernhard Blümich
    Institut für Makromolekulare Chemie
    Aachen, Germany
    E-mail:
    bluemich@mc.rwth-aachen.de

    Edward Boskamp
    GE Medical Systems Applied Science Lab
    Waukesha, WI
    E-mail:
    eddy.boskamp@med.ge.com

    Paul T. Callaghan
    Massey University
    Palmerston North, New Zealand
    E-mail:
    p.callaghan@massey.ac.nz

    Mark Conradi
    Washington University
    St. Louis, MO
    E-mail:
    msc@howdy.wustl.edu

    David G. Cory
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    Cambridge, MA
    E-mail:
    dcory@mit.edu

    Stuart Crozier
    University of Queensland
    Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
    E-mail:
    stuart.crozier@cmr.uq.edu.au

    Josef Dadok
    Carnegie-Mellon University
    Pittsburgh, PA
    E-mail:
    jd6n@andrew.cmu.edu

    Gareth R. Eaton
    University of Denver
    Denver, CO
    E-mail:
    geaton@du.edu

    Sandra S. Eaton
    University of Denver
    Denver, CO
    E-mail:
    seaton.du.edu

    William A. Edelstein
    General Electric
    Schenectady, NY
    E-mail:
    edelstein@crd.ge.com

    Thomas C. Farrar
    University of Wisconsin
    Madison, WI
    E-mail:
    tfarrar@chem.wisc.edu

    E. Mark Haacke
    The Magnetic Resonance Imaging Institute
    for Biomedical Research
    Detroit, MI
    E-mail:
    nmrimaging@aol.com

    David I. Hoult
    National Research Council Canada
    Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
    E-mail:
    david.hoult@nrc.ca

    Richard L. Magin
    University of Illinois
    Chicago, IL
    E-Mail:
    rmagin@uic.edu

    Hellmut Merkle
    National Institute of Health, NINDS
    Bethesda, MD
    E-mail:
    Hellmut_Merkle@nih.gov

    Rudi Nunlist
    University of California
    Berkeley, CA
    E-mail:
    rnunlist@purcell.cchem.berkeley.edu

    Wolfgang U. Roffmann
    University of Queensland
    Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
    E-mail:
    wolfgang@cmr.uq.edu.au

    James Tropp
    GE Medical Systems
    Fremont, CA
    E-mail:
    james.tropp@med.ge.com

    Andrew G. Webb
    University of Illinois
    Urbana, IL
    E-mail:
    a-webb2@uiuc.edu

    Felix W. Wehrli
    University of Pennsylvannia
    Philadelphia, PA
    E-mail:
    wehrli@oasis.rad.upenn.edu

    Steve Wright
    TAMU
    College Station, TX
    E-mail:
    wright@ee.tamu.edu

     

     

     



     返回页首 


    邮编:430072   地址:中国武汉珞珈山   电话:027-87682740   管理员Email:
    Copyright © 2005-2006 武汉大学图书馆版权所有