The Nightingale Award 2008
Jos A. E. Spaan
0
0
J. A. E. Spaan (&) Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam
, Meibergdreef 9,
1105 Amsterdam, The Netherlands
-
In my 2006 editorial on the Nightingale Award [17], I have
provided some historical background on the award and it is
superfluous to repeat this information each year [18].
However, the meaning of the award is not only to honor a
present day manuscript but also to commemorate the person
to whom the award has been dedicated. Hence, let me spend
a few words on Alfred Nightingale who was the first Editor
in Chief of Medical & Biological Engineering &
Computing, MBEC. He was a promising scientist and pioneer in the
field of electromyography [16], but did not live long enough
to enjoy much of his accomplishments. In the year that I
started to study at the Eindhoven University of Technology,
1963, he died at the age of 40. He was even not given the
time to see the first publication of MBEC now 47 years ago.
Our prestigious Journal started with only four issues per
year but that became soon six issues in 1966. In 2006, the
Journal started with 12 issues yearly. Even the first, almost
ancient publications are readily available thanks to our
publisher Springer who took care that all issues of MBEC
are freely accessible on the Journals website, to each
member of the International Federation of Medical
and Biological Engineering, IFMBE (URL: http://www.
springer.com/IFMBE).
The yearly Nightingale Award is given to the best
scientific paper published in Medical and Biological
Engineering and Computing (MBEC) as to be decided by the
editors. This year again we selected the manuscripts that
were rated over 85 on a scale of 0100 by the reviewers.
Then, the problem remained to reorder that short list of 14
papers according to the judgment of the editors. The
invited papers from Special Issues [9, 15], as well as
review papers where excluded. We cite these papers in this
editorial as to provide credit to the authors who submitted
excellent work to the journal. Thanks to these and similar
submissions our impact factor increased from 1 to 1.38 in
2008 and we hope to be close to IF = 2 next year.
Obviously, there was close competition, but we selected a rather
classic manuscript authored by Hui-Hsun Huang, Yi-Hui,
Lee Hsiao-Lung Chan, Yong-Ping Wang, Chi-Hsiang
Huang, and Shou-Zen Fan from three different institutions in
Taiwan: National Taiwan University Hospital, National
Taiwan University College of Medicine, and Taipei and
Chang-Gung University, Tao-Yuan [8]. The title of the
manuscript is: Using a short-term parameter of heart rate
variability to distinguish awake from isoflurane anesthetic
states. The manuscript is well-balanced and presents a new
form of analysis of heart rate variability in the time
domain. It was of special importance to the editors that the
method has been validated in patients. The article has an
excellent discussion explaining the importance of, what the
study achieved, its contribution to the field and an
evaluation of its limitations. I am also happy that the award is
going to Asia. In one of my future editorials, I will spend
some attention to the regional effect of citation frequency.
Clearly, in our journal, papers from Asia are cited less than
from other regions like USA and Europe. There will be no
need to say that regional origin does not play a role in our
decisions on acceptance of papers. However, we would
wish that attention for papers would not demonstrate a
regional bias. May be that the Nightingale award 2008
contributes to that goal.
Due to emphasis on the number of citations to our
papers in our evaluations at our home institutes, it would be
logical to select the paper with the highest citation score.
However, the award is intended to recognize a paper of the
past year. Biomedical engineering papers do not collect
citations so fast and, moreover, papers published early in
the year have more chance to be cited than those published
later. However, it went not unnoticed that the paper of
Dobbe et al. [6], which also appears on the short list, has
been cited already seven times in a 12-month period.
Bio-electricity and related studies on the brain and
nervous system is an important topic for the journal and
papers from these categories are on the short list of this
year as well [1, 35, 7, 13]. Also, the heart and the
cardiovascular system are core topics of our journal [8, 14,
19]. We are also happy to publish papers on biomechanics
and especially the spine forms a subject on which we have
regular submissions [2, 11, 12]. Interestingly, over the last
years several submissions were received on the analysis of
tracheal sounds and one of them disserves mentioning in
this editorial [10]. Image analysis has become an
instrument for Biomedical Engineering and the papers related to
microvascular function [6] and brain mapping [13] could
easily be classified as such.
The cross-section of topics covered by the thirteen
excellent papers in MBEC and on the shortlist for the
Nightingale Award 2008 nicely illustrates the broad nature
of our journal, without restriction to specialized areas. We
want to especially encourage authors in the early stages of
their career to submit their work to MBEC. Our cited half
life is 9.8 years which is at the very top for any category of
journals. We carry a great history of publishing on Medical
and Biological Engineering and Computing and with our
renovated editorial and publishing procedures we are
increasing the short-term indices of our journal as well.
As always, we are grateful to IPEM and IFMBE for
maintaining the Alfred Nightingale Award.
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the
Creative Commons Attribution Noncommercial License which
permits any noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any
medium, provided the original author(s) and source are credited.
(...truncated)