Generated by GPT-5-mini| Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation | |
|---|---|
| Title | Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation |
| Discipline | Neuroscience; Rehabilitation |
| Abbreviation | JNER |
| Publisher | BioMed Central |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Frequency | Continuous |
| History | 2004–present |
| License | Creative Commons |
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation is a peer-reviewed open access journal publishing research at the intersection of neuroscience, biomedical engineering, and physical therapy. Launched in 2004, the journal publishes original research, reviews, and technical reports addressing neural restoration, assistive technologies, and rehabilitation engineering. It serves researchers affiliated with institutions such as Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Oxford, Stanford University, University College London, and Harvard Medical School.
Founded in 2004 by BioMed Central during a period of rapid growth in open access publishing, the journal emerged alongside titles like BMC Biology and BMC Medicine as part of the early 21st-century shift exemplified by events such as the Budapest Open Access Initiative and policies advocated by the Wellcome Trust. Early editors included investigators with ties to University of Toronto, Karolinska Institutet, and Imperial College London, reflecting collaborations between laboratories at Brown University, Johns Hopkins University, and ETH Zurich. The journal expanded through the 2000s amid technological advances from groups at MIT Media Lab, University of California, Berkeley, and EPFL.
The journal focuses on translational research linking neural mechanisms and engineered solutions, covering topics studied at centers like National Institutes of Health, Max Planck Society, and US Department of Veterans Affairs research programs. Typical subjects include neural prostheses tested at Case Western Reserve University, brain–computer interfaces developed at University of California, San Diego, gait analysis methodologies from Columbia University, and robotic exoskeleton trials led by teams at University of Pennsylvania and University of Washington. The journal frequently features collaborations involving hospitals and clinics such as Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, and The Johns Hopkins Hospital.
Published by Springer Nature-affiliated platforms after consolidation of open access imprints, the journal employs an editorial board drawn from institutes including King's College London, Duke University, McGill University, and Seoul National University. Peer review follows standards similar to those endorsed by organizations like the Committee on Publication Ethics and the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors, with editorial policies on data sharing and ethical approval paralleling guidance from the World Health Organization and the European Commission research frameworks. The journal's open access licensing aligns with Creative Commons principles used by entities such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust.
The journal is indexed in major databases and directories, appearing in listings maintained by PubMed Central, Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar. It is cataloged in subject-specific resources associated with institutions like National Library of Medicine, British Library, and Deutsche Nationalbibliothek, enabling discoverability alongside journals published by houses such as Elsevier, Wiley-Blackwell, and Taylor & Francis. Indexing supports citation tracking used by organizations like the Institute for Scientific Information and metrics curated by Clarivate.
The journal has influenced translational projects funded by agencies including the National Science Foundation, European Research Council, and Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. Its articles have been cited in clinical guidelines from bodies such as the American Academy of Neurology and incorporated into rehabilitation protocols at institutions like Nationwide Children's Hospital and Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital. Bibliometric measures reported by services used by universities such as University of Cambridge and University of Melbourne indicate steady citation growth, while awards and recognition have involved collaborations with foundations like the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation and the Michael J. Fox Foundation.
Noteworthy contributions include early reports on brain–computer interface paradigms that referenced landmark studies from teams at Brown University and University of California, San Francisco, clinical trials of robotic gait trainers informed by work at Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, and methodological advances in electromyography drawing on techniques from National Institutes of Health laboratories. High-impact reviews synthesized findings from conferences such as the Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, the International Brain-Computer Interface Meeting, and symposia sponsored by Society for Neuroscience. The journal has published interdisciplinary collaborations linking research groups from University of Sydney, University of Toronto, KU Leuven, Peking University, and Seoul National University Hospital that advanced neurorehabilitation devices, sensor technologies, and outcome measurement frameworks adopted by clinical centers across United States, United Kingdom, and Australia.
Category:Open access journals Category:Neuroscience journals Category:Rehabilitation medicine journals