期刊名称:MEDICAL INFORMATICS AND THE INTERNET IN MEDICINE
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Medical Informatics & The Internet in Medicine
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Medical Informatics & The Internet in Medicine promotes the application of analysis, inference and reasoning to medical information, including expert systems and the use of artificial intelligence techniques. There is no restriction on the kind of medical information dealt with - it may be hospital management information, patient records, clinical examinations, laboratory results, physiological measurements, medical images of all kinds, primary care information and epidemiology. The journal is also concerned with the gathering and organization of data and knowledge, and with applications to medical education. |
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Instructions to Authors
Click here to check your article status
***Note to Authors: please make sure your contact address information is clearly visible on the outside of all packages you are sending to Editors.***
1. The structure and organization of the Journal
The Journal is organized into the following: research papers, review articles, and technical notes, describing research with a theoretical grounding. Papers will typically be between 5000 and 8000 words, debating and exploring theoretical and methodological issues, methodological approaches, and substantive topics. However, there is not necessarily an upper limit on length, and authors of longer papers are encouraged to contact the Editors with a synopsis. Technical notes are designed as a medium for the publication of short communications that, however, do not require the fast-track publication route offered for Letters. Typically such notes are between 1000 and 2000 words. Review articles or essays are generally commissioned by invitation of the Editors.
All research papers, review articles, and technical notes will be subject to peer review.
Contacting the Editor: John Bryant E-mail: j.bryant@surrey.ac.uk
2. Submitting Papers to Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine
2.1. General guidelines
Manuscripts should be submitted by email to the Editor. Text and figures should be provided as Microsoft Word (.doc) or as Adobe Acrobat (.pdf) files. Figures may also be sent as JPEG (.jpg) files.
In writing your paper, you are encouraged to review articles in the area you are addressing which have been previously published in the journal, and where you feel appropriate, to reference them. This will enhance context, coherence, and continuity for our readers.
Please read these Guidelines with care and attention: failure to follow them may result in your paper being delayed. Note especially the referencing conventions used by Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine and for all manuscripts, non- discriminatory language is mandatory. Sexist or racist terms should not be used.
Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine considers all manuscripts on condition they are the property (copyright) of the submitting author(s) and that copyright will be transferred to Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine and Taylor & Francis Ltd if the manuscript is accepted. Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine considers all manuscripts on the strict condition that they have been submitted only to Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine, that they have not been published already, nor are they under consideration for publication, nor in press elsewhere. Authors who fail to adhere to this condition will be charged all costs, which Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine incurs, and their manuscripts will not be published.
Opinions advanced in the papers published in Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine are to be understood as individual expressions of their authors and not those of the editorial board or Taylor & Francis.
- Please write clearly and concisely, stating your objectives clearly and defining your terms. Your arguments should be substantiated with well-reasoned supporting evidence.
- For all manuscripts, non-discriminatory language is mandatory. Sexist or racist terms should not be used.
- In writing your manuscript, you are encouraged to review articles in the area you are addressing which have been previously published in the journal, and where you feel appropriate, to reference them. This will enhance context, coherence, and continuity for our readers.
- Abstracts of not more than 200 words are required for all manuscripts submitted, and should precede the text of a paper.
- Bionotes should be contained on a separate sheet and be located at the beginning of the paper.
- Authors should include telephone and fax numbers as well as e-mail addresses on the cover page of manuscripts.
The corresponding author of each paper will receive 50 offprints free.
We look forward to receiving your submissions, which should be sent to the Editorial Office at the address above.
2.2 Abstracts
Structured abstracts are required for all manuscripts, and should be submitted as detailed below, following the title and author's name and address, preceding the main text.
For manuscripts reporting original research, state the primary objective and any hypothesis tested; describe the research design and your reasons for adopting that methodology; state the methods and procedures employed, including where appropriate tools, hardware, software, the selection and number of study areas/subjects, and the central experimental interventions; state the main outcomes and results, including relevant data; and state the conclusions that might be drawn from these data and results, including their implications for further research or application/practice.
For review essays, state the primary objective of the review; the reasoning behind your literature selection; and the way you critically analyse the literature; state the main outcomes and results of your review; and state the conclusions that might be drawn, including their implications for further research or application/practice.
Abstracts should not exceed 200 words.
2.3. Copyright permission Contributors are required to secure permission for the reproduction of any figure, table, or extensive (more than fifty word) extract from the text, from a source that is copyrighted - or owned - by a party other than Taylor & Francis or the contributor.
This applies both to direct reproduction or 'derivative reproduction' - when the contributor has created a new figure or table which derives substantially from a copyrighted source.
It is essential that you adhere to convention regarding product names. Product manufacturers often require that product names are trademarked, even if the product name has become a commonplace term. For example, let us assume the Taylor & Francis product 'preview' has been trademarked by Taylor & Francis. We should require you as author to print the name as preview ®, and state the following as a footnote:
This article includes a word which is or is asserted to be a proprietary term or trade mark. Its inclusion does not imply it has acquired for legal purposes a non-proprietary or general significance, nor is any other judgement implied concerning its legal status.
The following form of words can be used in seeking permission:
Dear [COPYRIGHT HOLDER]
I/we are preparing for publication an article entitled
[STATE ARTICLE]
to be published by Taylor & Francis Ltd in Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine.
I/we should be grateful if you would grant us permission to include the following materials:
[STATE FIGURE NUMBER AND ORIGINAL SOURCE]
We are requesting non-exclusive rights in this edition and in all forms. It is understood, of course that full acknowledgement will be given to the source.
Please note that Taylor & Francis are signatories of and respect the spirit of the STM Agreement regarding the free sharing and dissemination of scholarly information.
Your prompt of this request would be greatly appreciated.
Yours faithfully
2.4. Mathematics
Special care should be taken with mathematics in manuscripts, especially subscripts and superscripts and differentiation between the letter 'ell' and the figure one, and the letter 'oh 'and the figure zero.
In the unlikely event your keyboard does not have the characters you need, it is preferable to use longhand, in which case it is important to differentiate between capital and small letters, K, k and x and other similar groups of letters. Special symbols should be highlighted in the text and explained in the margin. In some cases it is helpful to supply annotated lists of symbols for the guidance of the sub-editor and the typesetter, and/or a 'Nomenclature' following the abstract.
For simple fractions in the text, the solidus / should be used instead of a horizontal line, care being taken to insert parentheses where necessary to avoid ambiguity, for example, I /(n-1). Exceptions are the proper fractions available as single type on a keyboard.
Full formulae or equations should be displayed, that is, written on a separate line. Horizontal lines are preferable to solidi.
The solidus is not generally used for units: ms-1 not m/s, but note electrons/s, counts/channel, etc.
Displayed equations referred to in the text should be numbered serially (1, 2 etc.) on the right hand side of the page. Short expressions not referred to by any number will usually be incorporated in the text, but are discouraged.
In-text references should be in the form '… as shown in equation (2) …'
Symbols should not be underlined to indicate fonts except for tensors, vectors and matrices, which are indicated with a wavy line in the manuscript (not with a straight arrow or arrow above) and rendered in heavy type in print: upright sans serif r (tensor), sloping serif r (vector) upright serif r (matrix).
Typographical requirements must be clearly indicated at their first occurrence, e.g. Greek, Roman, script, sans serif, bold, italic. Authors will be charged for corrections at proof stage resulting from a failure to do so.
Braces, brackets and parentheses are used in the order {[( )]}, except where mathematical convention dictates otherwise (i.e. square brackets for commutators and anticommutators)
2.5. Units
Authors must adhere to SI units. Please note the following style conventions.
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2ºC |
34º 17' S |
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36º N |
decibel dB |
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differences in temp deg K |
hectares ha |
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hertz Hz |
hour h |
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kelvin K |
kilogramme kg |
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kilometre km [note lower case k] |
litre l |
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metre m |
minute min |
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radian rad |
second s |
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steradian sr |
watt W |
2.6. Glossary of terms
please add your suggestions
3. Notes on style
All authors are asked to take account of the global, diverse audience of Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine. Clearly explain or avoid the use of terms that might be meaningful only to a local or national audience. However, note also that the Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine does not aspire to be international in the ways that McDonald's restaurants or Hilton Hotels are 'international'; we much prefer papers that, where appropriate, reflect the particularities of each higher education system.
Some specific points of style for the text of articles, research reports, case studies, reports, essay reviews, and reviews follow.
1. Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine prefers US to 'American', USA to 'United States', and UK to 'United Kingdom'.
2. Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine uses conservative British, not US spelling, i.e. colour not color; behaviour (behavioural) not behavior; [school] programme not program; [he] practises not practices; centre not center; organization not organisation; analyse not analyze, etc.
3. Single 'quotes' are used for quotations rather than double "quotes", unless the 'quote is "within" another quote'.
4. Punctuation should follow the British style, e.g. 'quotes precede punctuation'.
5. Punctuation of common abbreviations should follow the following conventions: e.g. i.e. cf. Note that such abbreviations are not followed by a comma or a (double) point/period.
6. Dashes; em-dash should be clearly indicated in manuscripts by way of either a clear dash (-) or a triple hyphen (---), the en-dash should be indicated by a clear dash (-) or a double hyphen.
7. Medical Informatics & the Internet in Medicine is sparing in its use of upper case in headings and references, e.g. only the first word in paper titles and all subheads is in upper case; titles of papers from journals in the references and other places are not in upper case.
8. Apostrophes should be used sparingly. Thus, decades should be referred to as follows: 'The 1990s [not the 1990's] saw...'. Possessives associated with acronyms (e.g. APU), should be written as follows: 'The APU's findings that...', but, NB. the plural is APUs.
9. All acronyms for national agencies, examinations, etc., should be spelled out the first time they are introduced in text or references. Thereafter the acronym can be used if appropriate, e.g. 'The work of the Assessment of Performance Unit (APU) in the early 1980s...'. Subsequently, 'The APU studies of achievement...', in a reference ... (Department of Education and Science [DES] 1989a).
10. Brief biographical details of significant national figures should be outlines in the text unless it is quite clear that the person concerned would be known internationally. Some suggested editorial emendations to a typical text are indicated in the following with square brackets: 'From the time of H.E. Armstrong [in the 19th century] to the curriculum development work associated with the Nuffield Foundation [in the 1960s] there has been a shift from heurism to constructivism in the design of [British] science courses'.
11. The preferred local (national) usage for ethnic and other minorities should be used in all papers. For the USA, African-American presidential candidate, Jesse Jackson…'. For the UK, African-Caribbean (not 'West Indian'), etc.
12. Material to be emphasized (italicized in the printed version) should be underlined in the typescript rather than italicized. Please use such emphasis sparingly.
13. n (not N), % (not per cent) should be used in typescripts.
14. Numbers in text should take the following forms: 300, 3000, 30 000. Spell out numbers under 10 unless used with a unit of measure, e.g. nine pupils but 9mm (do not introduce periods with measure). For decimals, use the form 0.05 (not .05).
15. When using a word which is or is asserted to be a proprietary term or trade mark authors' must use the symbol ® or TM or alternatively a footnote can be inserted using the wording below:
This article includes a word which is or is asserted to be a proprietary term or trade mark. Its inclusion does not imply it has acquired for legal purposes a non-proprietary or general significance, nor is any other judgement implied concerning its legal status.
4. Notes on tables and figures
Artwork submitted for publication will not be returned and will be destroyed after publication, unless you request otherwise. Whilst every care is taken of artwork, neither the Editor nor Taylor & Francis shall bear any responsibility or liability for non-return, loss, or damage of artwork, nor for any associated costs or compensation. You are strongly advised to insure appropriately.
Illustrations are as important as the text, and should be as simple, relevant and clear as possible. A potential reader, after reading the title, often glances next at the figures, and their main purpose should be evident from the legend beneath the figure and the words used in labelling the parts of diagrams and the axes of graphs without reference to the text.
Black-and-white photographs should have adequate contrast. Colour illustrations can be printed if they are necessary to convey the scientific content of the illustration.
Labelling of axes of graphs should be in words whenever possible, and the dimensionless numbers on the axes should be those obtained by dividing the quantities measured by the units employed. For example, the numbers relating to density should be labeled Density/(kg M-3), and numbers relating to temperature in degrees celsius should be labeled temperature ° C.
Please use different line thicknesses for emphasis; for example, thinner lines for axes of graphs and thicker lines for curves. Use different date points and lines, dashed or dotted. When more than one curve appears in a graph, and identify their meaning in the legend or by labelling, legends should explain any abbreviations used in the figures.
1. Tables and figures should be valuable, relevant, and visually attractive. Tables and figures must be referred to in the text and numbered in order of their appearance. Each table and figure in the text should have a complete, descriptive title; and each table column an appropriative heading.
Tables and figures should be referred to in the text as follows: figure 1, table 1, i.e. lower case. 'As seen in table [or figure] 1 ...' (not Tab., fig. or Fig).
2. The place at which a table or figure is to be inserted in the printed text should be indicated clearly on a manuscript:
[Insert table 2 about here]
3. Each table and/or figure must have a title that explains its purpose without reference to the text.
4. All figures and tables must be on separate sheets and not embedded in the text. Thus tables and figures must be referred to in text and numbered in order of appearance. For all figures, original copies of figures should be supplied. All figures should allow for reduction to column width (130 mm) or page width (160mm). Please avoid figures that would require landscape reproduction, i.e., reading from bottom to top of the page. Photographs may be sent as glossy prints or negatives.
Please number each figure on the reverse in pencil.
Do not type the caption to a figure on that figure; the legends to any illustrations must be typed separately following the text and should be grouped together. Maps must have a scale and north point. Graph axes must state terms and units.
5. Citations in text
References should be cited using the numerical system (e.g. [3], [5-9]. They should be listed separately at the end of the paper in the order in which they appear in the text.
1. 'Ibid.' (and the like) are not used when repeating citations. Simply repeat the original citation verbatim, e.g. (Orwell 1945).
2. Citations should be included in prefatory material to quotes (wherever possible) rather than placing them at the end. Thus, for example, 'Orwell (1945: 23) reduces the principles of animalism to seven commandments, namely, ...' is preferred to 'Orwell reduced the principles of animalism to seven commandments, namely, ... (Orwell 1945: 23)'.
3. Multiple citations within parentheses should be divided by a comma, not a semi-colon, and there should be no use of '&' within such multiple references. References to works published in the same year should be cited as, e.g. (Smith 1991a, b).
4. Multiple citations within a text should be ordered by date, not alphabetically by authors name, e.g. (Smith 1902, Jones and Bower 1934, Brown 1955, 1958a, b, Green 1995).
5. 'et al.' may be used in references within the text when a paper or book has three or more authors, but note that all names should be given in the reference itself.
6. Page spans in references should be given in full, e.g. 'Sedgewick (1935: 102-103; emphasis added) outlines them as follows:'.
6. Acknowledgements
Any acknowledgements authors wish to make should be included in a separate headed section at the end of the manuscript. Please do not incorporate these into the bionote or notes.
7. Book Reviews
1. The following header material should appear in all reviews in the following order (note also the punctuation):
The Politics of Social Research. By Martyn Hammersley (London, Sage, 1995), 192pp., £35.00 (hbk), ISBN 0-8039-7718-2, £11.95 (pbk), ISBN 0-8039-7719.
2. Page references within reviews should be given as follows: (p. 337) or (pp. 36-37).
8. References
Medical Informatics and the Internet in Medicine uses the following conventions for references. Please note that many journal references will often be hyperlinked in the online edition of the Journal to an abstract; hence accuracy of bibliographic data is essential.
8.1. Reference to a book:
1. Ballinger,P. W., 1995, Merril's Atlas of Radiographic Positions and Radiological Procedures, 8th edn (Missouri; Mosby).
8.2. Reference to a chapter in a book:
5. Carol, J. M., and Kellog, W., 1998, Interface metaphors and user interface design. In Handbook of Human-Computer Interaction, M. Helander (ed.) (Amsterdam:Elsevier).
8.3. Reference to an article in a journal:
6. Runbaugh, J., 1994, Modeling models and viewing views: a look at the model-view-controller framework. Journal; of Object-Orientated Programming, 7, 14-20, 29.
8.4. Proceedings, technical reports and unpublished literature
8. Szekely, P., Luo, P., and Neches R., 1993, Beyond interface builders: model-based automated generation of user interfaces. Proceedings of Human Factors In Computing Systems, INTERCHI'93, Amsterdam. April 1993, pp. 383-390.
7. Rousseau, N. P., Smith, J., Candy, L and Edmonds, E. A., 1992, Supporting the realization of thinking-aloud evaluations. Loughborough University of Technology Research Report Ref. 92/K/LUTCH/0142 (Loughborough, UK: Loughborough University of Technology).
6. Momtahan, K. L. 1990, Mapping of psychoacoustic parameters to the perceived urgency of auditory warning signals, Unpublished master's thesis, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario.
8.5. Reference to a newspaper of magazine
Richards, H., 1996, Republican lite? The Times Higher Education Supplement, 1 November, 16.
8.6. Reference to an Internet source
To be cited in text only.
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/t-authors/dssauth.html
Please note this will be hyperlinked in the on line edition of the Journal.
8.7. Reference to a case in law
In text, italicize names of plaintiffs and defendants:
Miranda v. Arizona 1974
8.8. Reference to government legislation
US Congress, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, 1956, The Mutual Security Act of 1956, 84th Congress, second session, report 2273.
9. A Guide to Electronic Processing of Accepted Papers
We strongly advise you to send us the final, revised version of your article in both hard (paper) and electronic forms.
Normally we receive and process electronic versions on disk, but if you would like to employ our file transfer protocol (FTP) facility, please contact Taylor & Francis Ltd at the address or email given below.
This Guide sets out the procedures that will assure we can process your article efficiently. It is divided into three sections:
- a guide for authors using standard word-processing software packages
- a guide for authors using LaTeX mathematical software packages
- a guide for authors using graphics software packages
There are some general rules which apply to all three options.
- these guides do not apply to authors who are submitting an article for consideration and peer review; they apply only to authors whose articles have been reviewed, revised, and accepted for publication
- print out your hard (paper) copy from the disk you are sending; it is essential that the hard-copy printout is identical to the material on the disk; where versions differ, the hard copy will take precedence. We advise that you maintain back-ups of your files
- save and send your files on a standard 3.5 inch high density disk (Mac or PC); please do not attempt to send the article via file transfer protocol or email
- when saving your article onto a disk, please make sure that the files do not exceed a manageable size. Please ensure that figures are saved on a separate disk
- ensure that the files are not saved as read only
- virus-check your disk before sending it to the Editor
- label your disk
- package disks in such a way as to avoid damage in the post
Disks are not returnable after publication
If you are not sure about the usability of your disk, contact the Production Manager, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 4 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, OX14 4RN, UK. Tel: +44 1235 828600; Fax: +44 1235 828900.
9.1. A guide for authors using standard word-processing software packages
For the main text of your article, most standard PC or Mac word-processing software packages are acceptable, although we prefer Microsoft Word in a PC format.
Word-processed files should be prepared according to the journal style.
Avoid the use of embedded footnotes. For numbered tables, use the table function provided with the word-processing package.
All text should be saved in one file with the complete text (including the title page, abstract, all sections of the body of the paper, references), followed by numbered tables and the figure captions.
You should send the following to the Editor:
- a 3.5-inch disk containing the final, accepted version of the paper
- include an ASCII/text only version on the disk as well as the word processed version if possible
- two hard copy printouts
Disks should be clearly labelled with the following information:
1. Journal title
2. Name of author
3. File names contained on disk
4. Hardware used (PC or Mac)
5. Software used (name and version)
Sample disk label: text
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Journal title |
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A.N. Author |
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article.doc |
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IBM PC |
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MS Word for Windows 7.0 |
9. 2. A guide for authors using LaTeX mathematical software packages
Authors who wish to prepare their articles using the LaTeX document preparation system are advised to use article.sty (for LaTex 2.09) or article.cls (for LaTex2e). The use of macros should be kept to an absolute minimum but if any are used they should be gathered together in the file, just before the \begin{document} command
You should send the following to the Editor:
- a 3.5-inch disk containing the final, accepted version of the paper
- the files you send must be text-only (often called an ASCII file), with no system-dependent control codes
- two hard copy printouts
Disks should be clearly labelled with the following information:
1. Journal title
2. Name of author
3. File names contained on disk
4. Hardware used (PC or Mac)
5. Software used (name and version)
Sample disk label: LaTeX
9.3. A guide for authors using graphics software packages
We welcome figures on disk, but care and attention to these guidelines is essential, as importing graphics packages can often be problematic.
1. Figures must be saved on a separate disk from the text.
2. Avoid the use of colour and tints for aesthetic reasons. Figures should be produced as near to the finished size as possible.
3. High quality reproducible hard copy for all line figures (printed out from your electronic files at a minimum of 600 dpi) must be supplied in case the disks are unusable; photographs and transparencies can be accepted as hard copy only. Photocopies will not be accepted.
4. All figures must be numbered in the order in which they occur (e.g. figure 1, figure 2 etc.). In multi-part figures, each part should be labelled (e.g. figure 1 (a), figure 1 (b) etc.)
5. The figure captions must be saved as a separate file with the text and numbered correspondingly.
6. The filename for the graphic should be descriptive of the graphic e.g. Figure1, Figure2a.
7. Files should be saved as TIFF (tagged image file format), PostScript or EPS (encapsulated PostScript), containing all the necessary font information and the source file of the application (e.g., CorelDraw/Mac, CorelDraw/PC).
Disks should be clearly labelled with the following information:
1. Journal title
2. Name of author
3. Figures contained on disk
4. Hardware used (PC or Mac)
5. Software used (name and version)
Sample disk label: figures
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Journal title |
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A.N. Author |
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Figures 1-10 |
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Macintosh |
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Adobe Illustrator 5.5 |
9.4. File transfer protocol
If you would like to deposit the final version of your manuscript via FTP, please contact the Editorial Production Manager for Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 4 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, OX14 4RN, Tel: +44 (0) 1235 828600, Fax: +44 (0) 1235 829000; for a guide to access and use, or email: robert.smith@tandf.co.uk.
10. About Taylor & Francis
The foundations of Taylor & Francis were laid in pioneering fashion in 1798. Richard Taylor printed and launched the Philosophical Magazine, one of the first scientific journals published by an independent company.
It was the start of a close collaboration with scholarly societies which was cultivated throughout the 1880s. The company became the printer for the Royal Astronomical Society, the Geological Society, the Zoological Society, the Horticultural Society, the Royal Botanical Society, the British Association for the Advancement of Science, the Royal Society and the Linnean Society of London. With the proliferation of periodicals and information generated by learned societies at the turn of the century, Taylor & Francis also became pioneers in the field of abstracting journals, and in 1890 the company became the first printer of Science Abstracts the precursor of today's Physics Abstracts.
Book publishing was a mostly secondary concern for the company until the 1960s, when significant expansion was implemented at all levels from schoolbooks to high level monographs. Since then the focus of book publishing has been predominantly at the undergraduate level and above, with an ever-larger number of subject areas brought into the programme.
The principles that drove the founders of Taylor and Francis are still paramount today. Academic scholarship must be of the highest quality, which will be reflected in appropriate production practices and values. We hope that we remain true to those principles and that being a Taylor & Francis author is still a pleasant, profitable and proud experience.
Contacting Taylor & Francis:
Taylor & Francis Ltd, 4 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, OX14 4RN, UK
Tel: +44 (0) 1235 828600
Fax: +44 (0) 1235 829000
Email: info@tandf.co.uk
Web site: http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals
Editorial Board
John Bryant - European Institute of Health and Medical Sciences, EDK Building (L3), University of Surrey, Guildford GU2 7TE, UK.
Editorial Board:
K. Atsumi - University of Tokyo, Japan A. R. Bakker - BAZIS, Leyden, The Netherlands R. Badawi - Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. C. Baldock - Centre for Medical and Health Physics, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia H. L. Bleich - Harvard Medical School, USA P. Degoulet - Hôpital Broussais, Service d'Informatique Médicale, Paris, France G. Dumermuth - Children's Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland J. Fox - Imperial Cancer Research Fund, London, UK W. Giere - Zentrum der Medizinschen Informatik, Klinikum der J. W. Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt am Main, Germany M. Jenkin - Health Industry Systems, USA M. M. Jordan - National Institute for Medical Research, London, UK H. Miyake - Kanto Teishin Hospital, Tokyo, Japan D. Protti - University of Victoria, Victoria, Canada W. A. Spencer - TIRR, Houston, USA A. Todd-Popropek - University College Hospital, London, UK C. Vallbona - Baylor College of Medicine, USA J. H. van Bemmel - Erasmus University of Rotterdam, The Netherlands R. F. Walters - Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of California at Davis, USA
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