Journals


The Leading Resource in Clinical Neuroimaging

Comprehensive coverage of MRI, CT, PET, ultrasound, and more—practical insights you can apply immediately.

The Journal of Neuroimaging offers full coverage of all the relevant clinical neurological aspects of MRI, SPECT, Neurosonology, CT, PET, Transcranial Doppler, Carotid Ultrasound, and other neuroimaging modalities. This journal gives you the kind of practical information you can put to immediate use but cannot find elsewhere. Save valuable time by reading this one publication; you’ll learn the developments, research, equipment and reports that have the most meaning for you. Expert authors advise readers on the best techniques for maximum results and minimal risk. Carefully reproduced images illustrate the articles with clarity and fidelity. The articles and illustrations emphasize selecting the appropriate modality and using neuroimaging techniques to improve patient care. The Journal of Neuroimaging addresses the full spectrum of human nervous system disease including stroke, neoplasia, degenerative and demyelinating disease, epilepsy, infectious disease, toxic-metabolic disease, psychoses, dementias, heredo-familial disease and trauma. Each issue offers original clinical articles, case reports, articles on advances in experimental research, technology updates, and neuroimaging CPCs.


To learn more about the Journal and how to submit your research, visit the Journal of Neuroimaging Site

Your Open Access Resource for Daily Neuroimaging Practice

High-quality, peer-reviewed content across subspecialties and modalities—supporting excellence in patient care.

As an official journal of the American Society of Neuroimaging, Clinical Neuroimaging builds upon the success of the Journal of Neuroimaging. An Open Access publication, Clinical Neuroimaging features practice-focused articles covering various subspecialties and imaging modalities. We provide comprehensive education to advance knowledge among neurologists, neuroradiologists, radiologists, neurosurgeons, students, and other healthcare professionals interested in neuroimaging. Clinical Neuroimaging encompasses brain, spine, head and neck imaging, along with non-interpretive material related to wellness and the business aspects of neuroimaging. Our mission is to engage readers by publishing high-quality, peer-reviewed material that improves patient-centered care outcomes, emphasizing quality, safety, patient satisfaction, and customer service. As a leading journal, we strive to provide clinically relevant articles for daily practice. We actively welcome submissions of original research, case series, case reports, interesting images, and reviews promoting excellence in patient care, professional development, and lifelong learning.


To learn more about Clinical Neuroimaging and how to submit your research, visit the Clinical Neuroimaging Site.

Brief History of the Journal of Neuroimaging 

Trusted Neuroimaging Research and Insights for Over 30 Years

The American Society of Neuroimaging began discussing its wish to develop a Journal to serve the Society in the 1980s. In 1990, Dr. Leon Prockop was selected as the Founding Editor-in-Chief and Little Brown as the Publisher. The inaugural issue of the new Journal of Neuroimaging (JON), the official journal of the American Society of Neuroimaging, was published in 1991. 


The contract was renegotiated in the 1990's with Little Brown shortly before the Medical Journals division was sold to Lippincott Publishers. Dr. Prockop and his editorial board served a second four-year term as allowed by the ASN By-Laws. Dr. Larry Wechsler served as the second Editor-in-Chief. Sage Publication came on as the new publisher on July 17, 2000.


In January 2006, the ASN made a strategic decision to move the Journal of Neuroimaging to Wiley Publishing, the world's largest society publisher. Dr. Rob Bakshi served as Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Neuroimaging until 2025. Dr. Andrei Alexandrov and Dr. Adnan I. Qureshi began serving as co-Editors of the Journal of Neuroimaging  in January 2026.