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Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine

Pamela F. Jones, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2006 - 
- Vol. 2011, Iss: 1, pp 303089-303089
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TLDR
This issue marks a transition and a changing of the guard for Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine as Hindawi takes the helm and converts CMMM to the community-based, open access model that they have so successfully championed.
Abstract
This issue marks a transition and a changing of the guard for Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine (CMMM). It is with some nostalgia that we look back on our long and illustrious association with Taylor and Francis; however, at the same time we look to the future with optimism and hope as Hindawi takes the helm and converts CMMM to the community-based, open access model that they have so successfully championed. The Hindawi Publishing Corporation is one of the fastest growing academic publishers worldwide with over 200 academic journals in their portfolio and a commitment to the highest levels of peer review and excellence. Reflecting on the genesis and evolution of CMMM, it is clear that Brian Sleeman, the founding Editor-in-Chief, showed great foresight in creating a journal that brought together the disparate disciplines of mathematics and medicine and that continues to play a major role in the development of mathematical medicine. He worked passionately to develop and promote the journal through some difficult times, with the insight and courage to bring together both biomedical/clinical scientists and mathematical scientists onto a single editorial board (a practice that has become more commonplace in subsequent journals in the field). The success that the journal has enjoyed thus far is a clear testament to his hard work, dedication, and vision. The journal has continued to provide a unique forum for the dissemination of interdisciplinary research resulting from collaborations between clinicians/experimentalists and theoreticians. CMMM has also continued to evolve rapidly, reflecting the increased focus on systems and interdisciplinary collaborative efforts across the breadth of biomedical, clinical, and translational research areas. The past year also saw the result of much hard work, with the inclusion of the journal in PubMed/Medline and the Science Citation Index Expanded. This was a great development for the journal since it not only has had an enormous impact on the general awareness and profile of the journal but has also resulted in increased submissions and downloads from the journal website over the past year. It has been exciting and rewarding to see the journal develop and evolve in this manner, and we look forward to increased success following this higher profile. The future looks extremely bright for the field of mathematical medicine as it emerges from its period of infancy and takes its place as a legitimate and central field of research and enquiry. Our sincere hope and wish is that CMMM continues from strength to strength and fulfills its role and promise as envisioned originally by its founding editor. Pamela Jones Sivabal Sivaloganathan

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Estimates of the reproduction number for seasonal, pandemic, and zoonotic influenza: a systematic review of the literature

TL;DR: These R values represent the difference between epidemics that are controllable and cause moderate illness and those causing a significant number of illnesses and requiring intensive mitigation strategies to control.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

TABOR: A Graphical Model-based Approach for Anomaly Detection in Industrial Control Systems

TL;DR: A graphical model-based approach is proposed for profiling normal operational behavior of an operational ICS referred to as SWaT (Secure Water Treatment), demonstrating the model's superior performance on both precision and run-time over methods including support vector machine and deep neural networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Direct-coupling information measure from nonuniform embedding.

TL;DR: It is shown that PMIME detects correctly direct coupling and outperforms the (linear) conditional Granger causality and the partial transfer entropy, and does not rely on significance test and embedding parameters.
Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: How several among the 9 interferon-regulatory factors contribute to macrophage polarization is discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Facebook usage on smartphones and gray matter volume of the nucleus accumbens.

TL;DR: It appeared, that in particular higher daily frequency of checking Facebook on the smartphone was robustly linked with smaller gray matter volumes of the nucleus accumbens, which gives additional support for the rewarding aspects of Facebook usage.
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