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Aims and scope

Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation provides a forum for researchers and clinicians interested in understanding the way neuroscience and biomedical engineering are continuing to reshape physical medicine and rehabilitation and human movement augmentation. JNER hosts the introduction of new methods and the discussion of their clinical implications, and offers an opportunity to publish, in a timely manner, articles relevant to the intersection of these three fields.

Article collections

Click here to see the article collections and thematic series that the journal has published in recent years.

Most cited article published in 2024

Most Cited

Freezing of gait assessment with inertial measurement units and deep learning: effect of tasks, medication states, and stops

Po-Kai Yang, Benjamin Filtjens, Pieter Ginis, Maaike Goris, Alice Nieuwboer, Moran Gilat, Peter Slaets & Bart Vanrumste  

Articles

  1. Authors: Juan-Manuel Belda-Lois, Silvia Mena-del Horno, Ignacio Bermejo-Bosch, Juan C Moreno, José L Pons, Dario Farina, Marco Iosa, Marco Molinari, Federica Tamburella, Ander Ramos, Andrea Caria, Teodoro Solis-Escalante, Clemens Brunner and Massimiliano Rea

Open Article Collections

Advancing Assistive Technology for People with Disabilities: Insights and Innovations from the Cybathlon 2024



Engineering Innovations for Precision Medicine
New Content Item

View all article collections

Standards of reporting

Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation advocates the complete and transparent reporting of research and methods. Authors are required to follow relevant reporting guidelines and append the appropriate reporting guideline checklist to their manuscript on submission, available from the EQUATOR Network. See BMC’s policy page for further information.

Person-first language

Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation recommends the use of person-first language to speak appropriately about individuals with a disability. For example, when referring to a person with a stroke, refer to the person first using a phrase such as 'a person with a stroke' or 'a person who has a stroke'. Avoid terms such as 'victim', 'patient', 'the handicapped', 'the disabled', 'suffering', or 'brain damaged'.

Authors may wish to refer to the ADA guidelines for writing about people with disabilities.

Annual Journal Metrics

  • Citation Impact 
    Journal Impact Factor: 5.2 (2024)   
    5-year Journal Impact Factor: 6.0 (2024)    
    Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP): 2.123 (2024)    
    SCImago Journal Rank (SJR): 1.287 (2024)

    Speed 
    Submission to first editorial decision (median days): 11
    Submission to acceptance (median days): 170

    Usage 2024
    Downloads: 2,207,715
    Altmetric mentions: 530