Translational Psychiatry

Translational Psychiatry is a peer-reviewed medical journal published by Nature Publishing Group. It is a sister journal to the better-known Molecular Psychiatry.[1] While both journals cover the larger field of biological psychiatry, Translational Psychiatry is more focused on translational aspects of research. It was launched on April 5, 2011, when the editor-in-chief of both journals, Julio Licinio, announced it during the First National Symposium on Translational Psychiatry at The Australian National University. One of the first articles was a guest editorial by Thomas Insel, who stated that "Translational Psychiatry has an opportunity to make a difference by publishing the best science at a time when we can see this historic bridge being built that will link science, practice and policy. I, for one, will watch (and read) with enthusiasm."[2][3] Translational Psychiatry has been criticized for requiring author fees to submit critiques of articles published in the journal since this could insulate articles from critics.[4]

Translational Psychiatry
DisciplineBiological psychiatry
LanguageEnglish
Edited byJulio Licinio
Publication details
History2011-present
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
FrequencyUpon acceptance
Yes
LicenseCreative Commons licenses
5.182 (2018)
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Transl. Psychiatry
Indexing
CODENTPRSCF
ISSN2158-3188
OCLC no.676912891
Links

Abstracting and indexing

The journal is abstracted and indexed in:

gollark: Maybe. Growth in computing power has slowed lately.
gollark: I think people have (obviously very roughly) estimated that you would need something like an exabyte of storage and exaflop of processing power to run a brain.
gollark: We have quantum computing to some extent now. It's not magic. It just does some operations faster.
gollark: I'm not very hopeful about brain uploading soon, since brains are very complex, poorly understood in some bits, and would be very computationally intensive to simulate.
gollark: A good design would have it periodically back up to some kind of persistent storage, but noooo...

References

  1. About Translational Psychiatry
  2. Douglas, James (April 2011). "Open access journal Translational Psychiatry launches". STM Publishing. Retrieved 28 October 2013.
  3. Insel, T R (2011). "A bridge to somewhere". Translational Psychiatry. 1 (4): e2–. doi:10.1038/tp.2011.4. PMC 3309467. PMID 22832390.
  4. James Coyne. "Pay $1000 to criticize a bad 'blood test for depression' article?". Retrieved 7 December 2014.


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