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The scholars’ exodus from Elsevier’s “NeuroImage” shines a spotlight on the difficult economics of academic publishing and the open-access movement.
NeuroImage went open access in 2020, and there were immediately concerns about the fees, which, at $3,400, seemed to bear no relationship at all to what Elsevier actually needed to pay the ...
NeuroImage: Clinical, a Journal of Diseases affecting the Nervous System, provides a vehicle for communicating important advances in the study of abnormal structure-function relationships of the ...
Dual-process contributions to creativity in jazz improvisations: An SPM-EEG study. NeuroImage, 2020; 213: 116632 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116632 ...
University of the Sunshine Coast researchers have shown, for the first time in Australia, what happens in the brain of adolescent girls when they see someone being subjected to body image-related ...
One of the world’s largest scientific publishers refused to reduce its $3,450 fee to publish in NeuroImage. All the editors left to start their own journal. Elsevier, which says it disseminated about ...
The entire editorial boards of two of the highest-ranked brain imaging journals have resigned in protest at article processing charges (APC) for the journals' open access (OA) content. Rival journal ...
The Bookseller understands academics pay an Article Publishing Charge (APC) of $3,450 (£2,735) to be published in NeuroImage, while for NeuroImage Reports it is $900 (£714) until the end of May ...
Cite this article Pineda, J., Rubio, N., Akerud, P. et al. Neuroprotection by GDNF-secreting stem cells in a Huntington's disease model: optical neuroimage tracking of brain-grafted cells.