Generated by GPT-5-mini| Radiographics | |
|---|---|
| Title | Radiographics |
| Discipline | Radiology |
| Abbreviation | Radiographics |
| Publisher | Radiological Society of North America |
| Country | United States |
| Frequency | Bimonthly |
| History | 1981–present |
Radiographics is a peer-reviewed journal focusing on educational radiology, imaging interpretation, and pictorial reviews. It publishes comprehensive articles, teaching files, and consensus-based reviews intended for clinicians, trainees, and researchers in diagnostic radiology, interventional radiology, and related specialties. The journal emphasizes visual pedagogy and multidisciplinary collaboration, often coordinating with professional societies and specialty conferences to produce high-impact thematic issues.
Radiographics was established in 1981 under the aegis of the Radiological Society of North America to provide an image-centric forum parallel to case reports and review series produced by organizations such as the American College of Radiology and the European Society of Radiology. Early editorial leadership drew contributors affiliated with institutions like Massachusetts General Hospital, Johns Hopkins Hospital, and Mayo Clinic, which helped set standards for pictorial essays and didactic articles. Over time the journal aligned with advances from technology centers such as Stanford University, University of California, San Francisco, and Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center to integrate modalities including computed tomography innovations from GE Healthcare and magnetic resonance developments associated with research at Brigham and Women's Hospital.
The journal evolved alongside milestones such as the proliferation of multidetector computed tomography influenced by work at University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and the expansion of cross-sectional imaging championed at University of Pennsylvania Health System. Radiographics adapted through editorial reforms mirroring publishing trends at outlets like The New England Journal of Medicine and The Lancet while maintaining strong ties to professional meetings such as the RSNA Annual Meeting and specialty symposia at American Roentgen Ray Society sessions.
Radiographics publishes pictorial reviews, didactic articles, and multidisciplinary overviews addressing imaging strategies for clinical problems managed at centers like Cleveland Clinic and Stanford Health Care. Content spans modalities developed by companies including Siemens Healthineers, Philips Healthcare, and Canon Medical Systems Corporation and covers topic areas encountered at institutions such as Children's Hospital of Philadelphia for pediatric imaging and UCSF Medical Center for neuroimaging. The journal routinely includes contributions on oncologic imaging that intersect with practice at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and MD Anderson Cancer Center, as well as musculoskeletal reviews relevant to surgeons at Hospital for Special Surgery.
Article types are designed for lifelong learning frameworks employed by bodies such as the American Board of Radiology and for continuing education programming affiliated with Society of Interventional Radiology. Radiographics also addresses cross-disciplinary care pathways involving specialties at Massachusetts Eye and Ear, Mount Sinai Health System, and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center.
Editorial oversight is conducted by an editor-in-chief and editorial board comprised of faculty with appointments at centers like Yale School of Medicine, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, and Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Peer review follows standards promoted by organizations such as the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and incorporates conflict-of-interest policies resonant with guidelines from the World Health Organization and the National Institutes of Health.
Production workflows integrate digital asset management systems adopted by publishers comparable to those used by Elsevier and Wiley-Blackwell, enabling high-resolution image handling reminiscent of archival practices at The Getty Research Institute. Special-issue planning often collaborates with conference programs from entities such as European Congress of Radiology and guideline panels convened by American Heart Association.
The journal is abstracted in major bibliographic services and indexing platforms analogous to PubMed Central, Scopus, and Web of Science. Metadata ingestion aligns with standards promulgated by Crossref and cataloging used by libraries like the Library of Congress and the National Library of Medicine. Abstracting facilitates discoverability for clinicians and researchers at organizations such as ClinicalTrials.gov registries and academic repositories hosted by universities including University of Oxford and Harvard University.
Radiographics has influenced educational practice in radiology curricula at programs such as University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine and Monash University, with articles frequently cited by clinical guidelines produced by bodies like the Society of Thoracic Radiology and the European Society for Medical Oncology. Its pictorial reviews are utilized in board preparation resources distributed by the American Board of Radiology and referenced in consensus documents developed by panels involving specialists from Royal College of Radiologists and Canadian Association of Radiologists.
Critical reception highlights the journal's role in synthesizing complex imaging topics for multi-institutional readerships spanning Johns Hopkins University, Karolinska Institutet, and The University of Melbourne. Citation metrics and usage statistics are tracked in analytics systems provided by Clarivate and Elsevier's Scopus to inform institutional subscription decisions at hospitals such as Stanford Health Care and university libraries including UCLA Library.
Notable pictorial reviews and thematic issues have focused on areas like neurotrauma care pathways informed by research at Imperial College London and breast imaging advances paralleling work at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Special issues have centered on topics such as pediatric congenital heart disease with contributors from Great Ormond Street Hospital and on musculoskeletal tumor imaging involving teams at MD Anderson Cancer Center.
Other influential articles addressed abdominal imaging protocols reflecting practices at Johns Hopkins Hospital, thoracic imaging summaries aligned with consensus from American Thoracic Society, and interventional radiology technique overviews related to procedures common at Cleveland Clinic. These contributions have been cited by guideline makers at National Institute for Health and Care Excellence and educational bodies like Association of University Radiologists.
Category:Radiology journals