International Journal for Numerical Methods in Biomedical Engineering
Journal Title
- International Journal for Numerical Methods in Biomedical Engineering
ISSN
- E 2040-7947 | P 2040-7939 | 2040-7939 | 2040-7947
Publisher
- John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
- Wiley-Blackwell
Listed on(Coverage)
JCR | 2010-2019 |
SJR | 1999-2019 |
CiteScore | 2011-2019 |
SCIE | 2010-2021 |
CC | 2016-2021 |
SCOPUS | 2017-2020 |
MEDLINE | 2016-2021 |
EMBASE | 2016-2020 |
Aime & Scopes
- Mathematical model
New mathematical models presented to more accurately describe existing or new biological and biomedical processes and solved using standard numerical methods.
Computational Method
New computational methods/procedures to more accurately solve existing mathematical models for biomedical problems. Any dimensional examples are accepted as long as the method is demonstrated to be better than competing methods.
Applications
New problems of clinical and practical interest are solved using existing mathematical and numerical models. At least 3D is required, except for a small number of special cases. Convergence and other accuracy checks are mandatory.
General: Prospective authors are invited to submit original articles and reviews in the area of biomedical engineering to International Journal for Numerical Methods in Biomedical Engineering. A standard paper should not normally exceed 20 formatted pages in length, including figures.
Topics: All differential equation based models for biomedical applications and their novel solutions (using either established numerical methods such as finite difference, finite element and finite volume methods or new numerical methods) are within the scope of this journal. Manuscripts with experimental and analytical themes are also welcome if a component of the paper deals with numerical methods. Special cases that may not involve differential equations such as image processing, meshing and artificial intelligence are within the scope. Any research that is broadly linked to the wellbeing of the human body, either directly or indirectly, is also within the scope of this journal.
/// Part A - Fundamentals: Any new mathematical models and novel numerical solutions should be classed as fundamental. Any work that discovers a fundamental physical phenomenon in biomedical engineering/science will also be categorized as fundamental.
/// Part B - Applications: Any work with immediate impact in healthcare
should be treated as application. The majority of cases that use standard and well known numerical methods to study new biomedical problems typically fall into this category.