Biomedical Informatics Publications: a Global Perspective

Journal:Methods of Information in Medicine
ISSN:0026-1270
DOI:http://dx.doi.org/10.3414/ME11-01-0060
Issue:2012 (Vol. 51): Issue 1 2012
Pages:82-90

Biomedical Informatics Publications: a Global Perspective

Part I: Conferences

Original Article

V. Maojo (1), M. García-Remesal (1), C. Bielza (2), J. Crespo (3), D. Perez-Rey (1), C. Kulikowski (4)

(1) Biomedical Informatics Group and Dept. of Artificial Intelligence, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Madrid, Spain; (2) Department of Artificial Intelligence, Universidad Politecnica de Madrid, Madrid, Spain; (3) Biomedical Informatics Group and Department of Languages and Software Engineering, Universidad Politecnica; (4) Department of Computer Science, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA

Summary

Background: In the past decade, Medical Informatics (MI) and Bioinformatics (BI) have converged towards a new discipline, called Biomedical Informatics (BMI) bridging informatics methods across the spectrum from genomic research to personalized medicine and global healthcare. This convergence still raises challenging research questions which are being addressed by researchers internationally, which in turn raises the question of how biomedical informatics publications reflect the contributions from around the world in documenting the research. Objectives: To analyse the worldwide participation of biomedical informatics researchers from professional groups and societies in the best-known scientific conferences in the field. The analysis is focused on their geographical affiliation, but also includes other features, such as the impact and recognition of the conferences. Methods: We manually collected data about authors of papers presented at three major MI conferences: Medinfo, MIE and the AMIA symposium. In addition, we collected data from a BI conference, ISMB, as a comparison. Finally, we analyzed the impact and recognition of these conferences within their scientific contexts. Results: Data indicate a predominance of local authors at the regional conferences (AMIA and MIE), whereas other conferences with a world-wide scope (Medinfo and ISMB) had broader participation. Our analysis shows that the influence of these conferences beyond the discipline remains somewhat limited. Conclusions: Our results suggest that for BMI to be recognized as a broad discipline, both in the geographical and scientific sense, it will need to extend the scope of collaborations and their interdisciplinary impacts worldwide.

Keywords

Medical Informatics, Bioinformatics, biomedical informatics, Journal Impact Factor, conference rankings

DOI

http://dx.doi.org/10.3414/ME11-01-0060

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Part II: Journals

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Methods of Information in Medicine 2012 51 2: 131-137

http://dx.doi.org/10.3414/ME11-01-0061

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Report

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Methods of Information in Medicine 2011 50 1: 1-6

http://dx.doi.org/10.3414/ME10-05-0005

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