Academic Emergency Medicine
Academic Emergency Medicine is a monthly peer reviewed medical journal published by Wiley on behalf of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. The editor in chief is Jeffrey A. Kline, MD. Coverage includes basic science, clinical research, education information, and clinical practice related to emergency medicine.
Discipline | Emergency medicine |
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Language | English |
Publication details | |
History | 1994-present |
Publisher | Wiley (United States) |
Frequency | Monthly |
2.5 (2015) | |
Standard abbreviations | |
ISO 4 | Acad. Emerg. Med. |
Indexing | |
CODEN | AEMEF5 |
ISSN | 1069-6563 (print) 1553-2712 (web) |
LCCN | sn93006121 |
OCLC no. | 45268302 |
Links | |
Abstracting and indexing
This journal is indexed by the following services:[1]
- Current Contents/ Clinical Medicine
- Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition
- Research Alert (Thomson Reuters)
- Science Citation Index
- Abstracts in Anthropology
- Embase
- MEDLINE/Index Medicus
According to ResearchGate, the journal's 2013 impact factor is 1.76.[2]
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gollark: People can read something like 300WPM. Be efficienter.
gollark: Obviously SSD vs HDD is a big jump, but SATA is still fast enough for most consumer uses.
gollark: I've seen 4K displays and don't really care. My laptop screen is 120Hz and it is not significantly different from my 60Hz monitor, except for slightly better colours but this isn't very related. I recently got a mid-range-ish phone instead of the cheapest-available ones I usually would and it's somewhat nicer (better haptics and sensors mostly), but premium ones seem to have very diminishing returns from the ones I've interacted with. I've tried a few mechanical keyboards and they don't seem significantly nicer (one was even *worse* for me due to excessively tall keys/high key travel). I also have an NVMe disk and it does not feel very different to the SATA SSDs I had before.
External links
References
- Catalog entry. "Academic emergency medicine". NLM Catalog. Retrieved 8 April 2014. NLM ID 9418450
- 2013 Impact Factor. "Academic Emergency Medicine" (Online). ResearchGate. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
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