March 14, 2010

Journal of Pathology Informatics – Now Live

BY Dr. Keith J. Kaplan

Spearheaded by Drs. Anil Parwani and Liron Pantanowitz from UPMC, a new journal dedicate to the field of pathology informatics has been started.  Thank you to Anil and Liron for your vision.

http://www.jpathinformatics.org/

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The Journal of Pathology Informatics (JPI) is an open access peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the advancement of pathology informatics. This is the official journal of the Association for Pathology Informatics (API). The journal aims to publish broadly about pathology informatics and freely disseminate all articles worldwide. This journal is of interest to pathologists, informaticians, academics, researchers, health IT specialists, information officers, IT staff, vendors, and anyone with an interest in informatics. We encourage submissions from anyone with an interest in the field of pathology informatics. We publish all types of papers related to pathology informatics including original research articles, technical notes, reviews, viewpoints, commentaries, editorials, book reviews, and correspondence to the editors. All submissions are subject to peer review by the well-regarded editorial board and by expert referees in appropriate specialties.

About the association

Association for Pathology Informatics (API): http://www.pathinformatics.org

The mission of the Association for Pathology Informatics (API) is to promote the field of pathology informatics as an academic and a clinical subspecialty of pathology. The association supports advances in the field of pathology informatics through research, education, scientific meetings, and through communications.

Staying in touch with the journal

Table of Contents (TOC) email alerts: Receive an email alert containing the TOC when a new complete issue of the journal is made available online. To register for TOC alerts go to www.jpathinformatics.org/signup.asp. Really Simple Syndication (RSS) helps you to get alerts on new publication right on your desktop without going to the journal’s website. You need a software (e.g. RSSReader, Feed Demon, FeedReader, My Yahoo!, NewsGator and NewzCrawler) to get advantage of this tool. RSS feeds can also be read through FireFox or Microsoft Outlook 2007. Once any of these small (and mostly free) software is installed, add www.jpathinformatics.org/rssfeed.asp as one of the feeds.

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