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Announcements
4 March 2026
MDPI’s 2025 Best Paper Awards—Award-Winning Papers Announced
MDPI is honored to announce the recipients of the 2025 Best Paper Awards, celebrating exceptional research for its scientific merit and broad impact. After a rigorous evaluation process conducted by Academic Editors, this year’s awards showcase papers that stand out for their innovation, relevance, and high-quality presentation.
Out of a highly competitive pool, 396 winning papers have been recognized for their exceptional contributions. We congratulate these authors for pushing the boundaries of their respective disciplines.
At MDPI, we are dedicated to broadening the reach of innovative science. To learn more about the award-winning papers and explore research projects in your field of study, please visit the following links:
- Biology and Life Sciences;
- Business and Economics;
- Chemistry and Materials Sciences;
- Computer Sciences and Mathematics;
- Engineering;
- Environmental and Earth Sciences;
- Medicine and Pharmacology;
- Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities;
- Physical Sciences;
- Public Health and Healthcare.
About MDPI Awards:
To reward the global research community and enhance academic dialogue, MDPI journals regularly host award programs across diverse scientific disciplines. These awards, serving as a source of inspiration and recognition, help raise the influence of talented individuals who have been credited with outstanding achievements and whose work drives the advancement of their fields.
Explore the Best Paper Awards open for participation, please click here.
4 March 2026
Meet Us at the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Annual Meeting 2026, 7–11 December 2026, San Francisco, USA
Conference: American Geophysical Union (AGU) Annual Meeting 2026
Organization: American Geophysical Union
Date: 7–11 December 2026
Place: San Francisco, USA
Booth: #330
MDPI journals will be attending the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Annual Meeting 2026 as an exhibitor. AGU’s annual meeting, the largest gathering of Earth and space scientists, convenes 25,000+ attendees from 100+ countries to share research and connect with friends and colleagues. Scientists, educators, policymakers, journalists and communicators attend AGU26 to better understand our planet and environment, opening pathways to discovery, opening greater awareness to address climate change, opening greater collaborations to lead to solutions and opening the fields and professions of science to a whole new age of justice equity, diversity, inclusion and belonging.
The following MDPI journals will be represented:
- Remote Sensing;
- Water;
- Atmosphere;
- Geosciences;
- World;
- Hydrology;
- Environments;
- Coasts;
- Land;
- Biosphere;
- Fire;
- Earth;
- GeoHazards;
- Glacies;
- Geomatics;
- Meteorology;
- Mining;
- Minerals;
- Oceans;
- Quaternary;
- Stratigraphy and Sedimentology.
If you plan on attending this conference, feel free to stop by our booth, #330. Our delegates look forward to meeting you in person to answer any questions you may have.
For more information about the conference, please visit the following link: https://www.agu.org/annual-meeting.
28 February 2026
MDPI INSIGHTS: The CEO’s Letter #32 - MDPI China and Thailand, China Science Daily, 1,000 Partnerships, R2R
Welcome to the MDPI Insights: The CEO's Letter.
In these monthly letters, I will showcase two key aspects of our work at MDPI: our commitment to empowering researchers and our determination to facilitating open scientific exchange.
Opening Thoughts

Reflections from China: Year-End-Celebrations and Open Access Publishing
In February, I had the pleasure of joining over a thousand colleagues from our Tongzhou and Haidian offices at their end-of-year annual celebration in Beijing.
Spending time with our teams in China is also a powerful reminder of the scale and complexity of MDPI as a global organization. Our colleagues in Beijing, Wuhan, and across the country play a significant role in our day-to-day operations and long-term development. I’m grateful for the hospitality, collaboration, and commitment shown by our managers and teams in China, alongside colleagues worldwide, who have helped steadily build MDPI, brick by brick, over the years.
Below are some data on Open Access (OA) publishing in China and our collaboration in this important research market.
Open Access Publishing in China
China has been the world’s leading country in research and review article publication volume since 2019, exceeding one million publications in 2025. Over the past five years, the gap between China and the second-ranked country, the United States, has continued to widen.
In 2025:
- 47% of China’s research output was published Open Access
- Of those OA publications, 76% were Gold Open Access (approximately 382,930 articles)
- The overall OA distribution remained stable compared with 2024, with Gold OA increasing by 1%
Over the past five years (2021–2025):
- China published 4,398,050 research and review articles
- Approximately 48% of this output was OA
According to Dimensions, when comparing the top 20 countries by publication volume (2021–2025):
- China ranks 1st worldwide in publication volume
- China ranks 9th in citation performance within this group (for comparison, the US ranks 2nd in publication volume and 10th in citation ranking)
- Average citations per article: 12.51
Among the top 10 universities globally by publication volume, six are Chinese institutions, alongside Harvard University (USA), the University of São Paulo (Brazil), the University of Toronto (Canada), and the University of Oxford (UK).

MDPI and China
China is an important and long-standing part of MDPI’s global publishing ecosystem:
- In 2025, MDPI was the largest fully Open Access publisher in China
- MDPI published 22% of China’s Gold Open Access output (82,133 papers)
- We received 290,999 submissions from China-affiliated authors and published 82,133 articles
- There are 8,500+ active Editorial Board Members based in China
- 64% (5,438) have an H-index above 26
- MDPI works with:
- 117 Editors-in-Chief
- 103 Section Editors-in-Chief
- 71 China-based institutions currently hold IOAP agreements with MDPI, seven of which rank among the top 10 Chinese institutions by publication volume
China's scale in research output means that the publishing platforms chosen by Chinese scholars will continue to influence the direction of scholarly publishing. At the same time, MDPI’s strength comes from its international collaboration, with colleagues, editors, reviewers, and authors working together across regions and disciplines.
Thank you to all our colleagues in China, and around the world, who support MDPI’s publishing activities across departments and help advance open access research every day.
Impactful Research

“Progress in open science is built through trust, dialogue, and relationships”
Behind the Scenes: A Conversation with China Science Daily
During my trip to Beijing, I also had the opportunity to visit China Science Daily and take part in an interview and broader exchange with their team in Beijing. Visits like this matter because progress in open science is built not only through platforms and infrastructure, but also through trust, dialogue, and relationships across research communities and regions.
China Science Daily: History Museum
As part of the visit, I was given a tour of their History Museum, which offers a thorough perspective on the evolution of China’s first science and technology newspaper, established in 1959. The exhibition highlights how the organization developed into a trusted institution connecting research with the public and policymakers. It was a helpful reminder that at the core of publishing is stewardship, credibility, and long-term public engagement with science.

An Open Exchange on Open Science
During the visit, I met with Dr. Zhao Yan, Editor-in-Chief of ScienceNet. We had an open and engaging conversation about MDPI’s role in Open Access, the evolution of open science globally, and the potential for more collaboration going forward. He especially appreciated the candid and personal nature of our exchange, noting that this kind of dialogue feels important in a landscape where trust and transparency matter.

Interview on Open Access
I also participated in an interview with Ms. Yan Jie, from the Online Media Center and Editor-in-Chief of ScienceNet, China Science Daily. Our discussion covered the growth of Open Access over the past 30 years, MDPI’s mission and values, academic integrity, collaboration with the Chinese research community, and MDPI’s own 30th anniversary milestone. It was a great opportunity to reflect on how open science has matured, and where shared responsibility across publishers, institutions, and researchers continues to matter most.
“Progress in open science is built by more than scale and infrastructure”
I’m sharing a few photos from the visit as a glimpse behind the scenes. The full interview will be published by China Science Daily in due course, and I look forward to sharing it when it is available.

More broadly, visits like this reinforce something I’ve always believed in: progress in open science is built not only through scale and infrastructure, but also through continued dialogue, mutual respect, collaboration, and a willingness to listen across regions and perspectives. That remains central to our work, especially as MDPI reflects on 30 years of publishing, built together.
Inside MDPI

Bangkok Visit: Growth, Partnership, and Local Impact
In February, I also had the opportunity to visit our Bangkok office for the second time in two years to support their local meetings and deliver a training session on how we present MDPI at a corporate level.
It’s easy to spend time with our colleagues in Thailand. From Editorial and Production to Conferences, Marketing, Design, and our Regional Journal Relations Specialist (RJRS), the team continues to grow in scale and professionalism. I’d also like to recognize our local management and admin teams, who have been steadily expanding our office and supporting more than 500 colleagues on the ground.
Academic Partnerships
During the visit, we met with the Engineering Department at King Mongkut’s Institute of Technology Ladkrabang (KMITL). Our discussion focused on the recent MDPI developments, Institutional Open Access Program (IOAP) opportunities, Author Publishing Workshops (APW), and the potential use of JAMS to support their institutional journal.

“MDPI is the third-largest OA publisher in Thailand”
We also shared insights into the growth of Open Access (OA) in Thailand and KMITL’s own publishing trends. These conversations matter because institutions are looking for sustainable ways to support their researchers. Our IOAP agreements are one simple example of how we can provide value in this area while maintaining accessibility for authors.
Thailand and MDPI: 2025 Snapshot
Our Bangkok office, officially launched in 2022, has been growing to support over 500 staff members while continuing to expand its engagement in scholar visits, workshops, and conference collaborations. As at 2025, Thailand submissions to MDPI have increased about 21% and publications by about 25%, maintaining a rejection rate close to the company average. MDPI is the third-largest OA publisher in Thailand, publishing 15% of all Gold OA output in 2025.
Representing MDPI Externally
During the visit, I delivered a training session on how we present MDPI at external events.

This session covered topics related to:
- Our aim and guiding principles
- High-level company milestones and Indexing facts and figures
- Industry partnerships and collaborations
- Market trends in OA and subscription publishing
- Country-specific publishing data and collaborations with MDPI
- Insights from our Voice of Community report
I find that while many colleagues are very familiar with the specific journal for which they have responsibility, fewer have visibility into the broader MDPI ecosystem and the company’s global positioning. These sessions help build alignment, confidence, and consistency in how we represent the company.
What stands out most is that MDPI’s growth is not abstract: it’s visible in the people, the partnerships, and the professionalism developing across our offices.
Coming Together for Science

1,000 Institutional Partners: A Milestone Built on Trust
This month, we reached an important milestone: more than 1,000 institutions worldwide are now part of MDPI’s Institutional Open Access Program (IOAP). On paper, that is a number. In practice, it represents trust.
This milestone symbolizes thousands of conversations with libraries and institutions. It stands for negotiations, renewals, consortium expansions, and, most importantly, relationships built over time. It reflects the work of colleagues across publishing, institutional partnerships, marketing, editorial, finance, and many other teams who contribute to making these agreements operational.
In 2025 alone, more than 61,300 research articles benefited from article processing charge (APC) discounts through IOAP agreements. Tens of thousands of authors were able to publish through a simplified and structured process. At the same time, institutional administrators gained clearer oversight and streamlined workflows.

Why IOAP Matters
When we launched IOAP, the objective was straightforward: to reduce barriers for researchers while supporting institutions in navigating the evolving OA landscape. Over the past decade, the research ecosystem has changed. Funder mandates, national policies, and Plan S–aligned requirements have accelerated the transition to OA.
Institutions need publishing partners who provide transparency, scalability, and operational efficiency. IOAP was designed to support that reality.
For colleagues who would like to better understand the program, this blog-post overview of MDPI’s IOAP provides additional context, including common questions around the transition to OA and how our institutional partnerships are structured.
“Institutions need publishing partners who provide transparency, scalability, and operational efficiency”
Recent Examples
Our agreements continue to evolve across regions:
- In Sweden, MDPI signed a national Open Access publishing agreement with 96 institutions, enabling affiliated researchers to publish without managing individual APC payments.
- In Spain, we extended our flat-fee agreement with Universidad Católica de Valencia, reinforcing institutional support for OA publishing.
These examples show that institutions seek structured, predictable models that support their researchers at scale.
Looking Ahead
Crossing the threshold of 1,000 partners tells us that institutions see MDPI not just as a publisher but as a reliable operational partner in advancing open science. This milestone is not a finish line. It is a reminder that the work continues.
Thank you to the entire IOAP team and to all colleagues who contributed to reaching this achievement.
P.S. You can read about this milestone across industry outlets, including STM Publishing News, ALPSP, Research Information, EurekAlert, Brightsurf, among others. You can also read about the coverage in Poland (e.g., media-room, bomega) Korea (newstap), and Romania (EduLike).
Closing Thoughts

Reflections from the Researcher to Reader Conference
During 24–25 February, I attended the 2026 Researcher to Reader Conference in London, UK. Leaders from across scholarly publishing, research infrastructure, libraries, and technology gathered to discuss AI and research integrity, peer review reform, metadata and infrastructure, community engagement, open research policy, and the evolving role of publishers in a rapidly shifting ecosystem.
The conversations were open and honest, and at times uncomfortable – exactly what we need at times. Below are a few reflections that stayed with me.
The Battle for Knowledge: What Becomes Accepted as ‘True’?
One recurring theme was not whether science evolves but whether our infrastructure is resilient enough to sustain trust at scale. Science does not promise certainty: it promises process. As publishing systems grow more complex and become more technologically mediated, the question is how intentionally we design, monitor, and strengthen that process.
Peer Review: Speed, Credentials, and Structural Loops
Researchers consistently call for faster peer review. At the same time, reviewer credentials are often tied to publication records. This creates a structural loop. Publishing history opens reviewing opportunities, reviewing strengthens credentials, and those without early access remain outside the cycle.
There is a need for us to reflect on how opportunity circulates within our systems: we should ask how we create more inclusive pathways for researchers globally to participate in peer review.
Community Engagement Workshop
One of the highlights of R2R was the workshop format, whereby small groups met repeatedly over two days and moved from ideas to tangible strategies.
I joined the Community Engagement workshop led by Lou Peck (CEO at The International Bunch) and Godwyns Onwuchekwa (Principal Consultant at Global Tapestry Consulting). We explored two deceptively simple questions: What is a community? and What does engagement truly mean?
“Engagement requires shared design and shared responsibility”
Too often, organizations equate communication with engagement. The framework discussed mapped a maturity spectrum – from enablement (broadcasting, informing and consulting) to true engagement (collaborating and co-creating).
It was a useful reminder of the fact that if we want trust and loyalty, engagement must go beyond announcements and surveys. It requires shared design and shared responsibility.
AI: Democratization or Digital Colonialism?
I especially enjoyed the thought-provoking presentation from Nikesh Gosalia (Chief Partnership Officer at Cactus Communications), which highlighted an uncomfortable reality:

- 93% of AI-generated content is in English
- Approximately 2% is in French
- Approximately 2% is in German
- More than 7,000 languages are represented in less than 5% of the content within large AI systems
The implications are profound. Is AI democratizing access to scholarly publishing (making it easier for researchers everywhere to participate in global knowledge production)? Or are we encoding colonialism at scale (entrenching linguistic and structural hierarchies, and making it harder for voices from the Global South to be heard)?
AI is already reshaping how research is created, reviewed, discovered, and shared. Its potential is enormous. But its impact depends not only on capability, but on governance, design, and intentionality. Publishers, funders, and researchers all share responsibility in shaping how these systems evolve.
Ethicality in practice (Lightening Talk)

It was also great to have our colleague Dr Miloš Čučulović (Head of Technology Innovation at MDPI) present MDPI’s Ethicality platform during a lightning talk.
“Technology alone is not the answer”
Ethicality embeds AI-driven checks directly into the submission workflow, supporting editors proactively rather than reacting after publication. As we scale, tools like this help balance trust, efficiency, and research integrity.
This goes back into the underlying theme of the conference that technology alone is not the answer. However, technology embedded thoughtfully within clear governance frameworks can strengthen confidence in the editorial process.
Final thought
The question is no longer whether technology will transform research infrastructure: it is already doing so. The real question is what role each of us will play in shaping that transformation deliberately, with structural maturity, inclusive governance, and engagement that moves from informing to co-creating.
Science needs to evolve, responsibly. And that responsibility extends not only to what we publish, but also to how the systems behind publication are designed. Some important topics to continue reflecting on both internally and within our broader community.
Chief Executive Officer
MDPI AG
20 February 2026
MDPI Virtual Academic Publishing Workshop (New Harvest), 25 February 2026
This Academic Publishing Workshop will be led by MDPI Regional Journal Relations Specialist, Dr. Sally Wu, on “Author Training”. Participants will receive practical advice on essential aspects of writing academic articles. Participants will leave with a clearer understanding of the academic publishing landscape and how to successfully contribute to it.
Date: 25 February 2026
Time: 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. EST
Schedule:
|
Speaker |
Program |
Time in EST |
|
Dr. Sally Wu |
Introduction |
11:30–11:40 a.m. |
|
Dr. Sally Wu |
Tips for Writing Great Research Papers
|
11:40 a.m.–12:15 p.m. |
|
Dr. Sally Wu |
How to Respond to Peer Reviewers
|
12:15–12:50 p.m. |
|
Dr. Sally Wu |
AI in Publishing: Challenges and Opportunities
|
12:50–13:30 p.m. |
Speakers:
|
|
Dr. Sally Wu received a PhD in medical science from the University of Toronto in the fall of 2025. She joined MDPI in February 2025 as an Assistant Editor for Cells. She was recently promoted to Regional Journal Relations Specialist position in August. In this role, she works with many journals, liaising with authors, board members, and EiCs. She has attended several conferences across North America, hosted scholar visits, and taken part in other outreach events. |
18 February 2026
MDPI’s Open Access Program Reaches 1,000 Institutions Worldwide
MDPI has surpassed the milestone of 1,000 partners within the Institutional Open Access Program (IOAP). The agreements span 59 countries, covering North and South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Oceania.
Last year alone, more than 150 new libraries and academic institutions joined MDPI’s IOAP. With the expansion of an existing consortium deal in Sweden we welcomed a further 75 partners to the program in January 2026, enabling us to surpass the 1,000-partners milestone.
The IOAP supports affiliated researchers by streamlining submission processes, reducing administrative burdens, and offering discounted Article Processing Charges (APCs). Through IOAP membership, more than 61,300 research articles received APC discounts in 2025, driving greater visibility and accessibility for partner institutions and global research communities alike.
"This milestone marks a significant step towards expanding MDPI’s global impact," said Stefan Tochev, MDPI's CEO. "Reaching 1,000 IOAP partnerships is a true testament to the growing trust and collaboration we’ve built with universities, libraries, and research organizations worldwide. We are proud to lead the way in Open Access publishing, ensuring researchers have the support they need to reach global audiences." "The success of our program is reflected in the growing global demand for Open Science and quality publishing services," said Becky Castellon, MDPI institutional partnerships manager. "Equally, institutions are increasingly seeking Open Access publishing options that support funder and national mandates. Joining the IOAP makes compliance simple."
12 February 2026
Acknowledgment to the Reviewers of Atmosphere in 2025
The editorial office of Atmosphere would like to extend its sincere gratitude to all reviewers who contributed to the improvement of the journal quality by providing their expert opinion and evaluation of the submitted research.
We appreciate that thorough peer review demands considerable time and intellectual investment from our reviewers. In 2025, Atmosphere received 7719 review reports from contributors across 89 countries and territories, demonstrating the breadth of international expertise and scholarly engagement that has strengthened our publication standards.
The reviewers who agreed to have their names published this year are listed below in alphabetical order by first name. The editorial team acknowledges with gratitude all reviewers, named and anonymous alike, for their vital role in maintaining the scholarly standards of Atmosphere.
| A. S. Rashed | Hang Li | Olesya Nazarenko |
| A. Santos Nouri | Hao Luo | Olesya Sazonova |
| Abbas Abbaszadeh Shahri | Hasan Hadi Albo Salih | Olga D. Sokolova |
| Abdelfettah Benchrif | Hasan Saygin | Olga Kudryashova |
| Abdulla Al Kafy | Hasan Yildizhan | Olga Maltseva |
| Abdulmalik Altuwayjiri | Hazrul Abdul Hamid | Olga Mitrofanova |
| Abhilash Singh Chauhan | Helder José Farias Da Silva | Olga Shevchenko |
| Abhinandan Ghosh | Hemalatha Gunasekaran | Oliver Meseguer-Ruiz |
| Ádám István Szabó | Hennadii Hapich | Olympia Zogou |
| Adil Dilawar | Hermanni Aaltonen | Omid Ghaffarpasand |
| Adil Moumane | Heyi Wei | Oscar Alejandro López-Núñez |
| Adilson Pacheco De Souza | Hiroyo Ohya | Oscar F. Reyes-Mendoza |
| Adnan Masic | Hiroyuki Sasaki | Osvaldo Luiz Leal De Moraes |
| Adolfo Hernández-Moreno | Hongxia Luo | Oswaldo Maillard |
| Adrian Rosu | Hristo Chervenkov | Oxana V. Masyagina |
| Adrian Stancu | Huang Honglian | Pan Xia |
| Adriana Radosavac | Hugo Wai Leung Mak | Paolina Bongioannini Cerlini |
| Ahmed M. Saqr | Hui Li | Paolo Biagi |
| Aikaterini Bougiatioti | Huibin Li | Paolo Ceci |
| Aikaterini Karagianni | Huibing Gan | Patricia Drach |
| Alan Cezar Bezerra | Humberto L. Varona González | Paul Marshall |
| Alan Robins | Humberto Lázaro Varona | Paulina Mielcarek-Bocheńska |
| Alberto Ordaz | Ibrahim Ouchen | Paulo R. R. Mesquita |
| Albino Martínez-Sibaja | Ifeanyi Chukwudi Achugbu | Pavel Grudinsky |
| Aldo German Benavides-Moran | Igor Fufurin | Paweł Rydzewski |
| Aleksander Pistol | Igor Konovalov | Pedro Caridade |
| Aleksandra Figurek | Igor Nasyrov | Pedro Luiz Lima Bertarini |
| Aleksandra Kolarski | Igor Novozhilov | Pedro Melo Rodrigues |
| Aleksandras Chlebnikovas | Igor S. Kovalev | Pedro Robledo Ardila |
| Alexander B. Murynin | Igor Shchapin | Peiyong Ni |
| Alexander Bannov | Iimran Shahid | Penelope Papadopoulou |
| Alexander Chupin | Ilaria Perissi | Peng Chen |
| Alexander Georgiadi | Iman Janghorban Esfahani | Peng Cui |
| Alexander Mangold | Inga Grinfelde | Pengtao Wang |
| Alexander Shitov | Inga Zinicovscaia | Peter Halaj |
| Alexander Shvets | Ioan Aurel Chereches | Petri Räisänen |
| Alexandr Shein | Ioana Ionel | Pierdavide Coïsson |
| Alexey Danilov | Ioannis Logothetis | Pietro Scala |
| Alexey I. Shinkevich | Ioannis Roussis | Pınar Cihan |
| Alexey Lyubushin | Ioannis Tegoulias | Piotr Antoni Gauden |
| Alexey Selyukov | Ion V. Ion | Piotr Korbel |
| Alexey Shaposhnik | Iosefina Laura Smuleac | Plamen Trenchev |
| Ali Athar | Issah M. Alhamad | Po-Chun Hsu |
| Alice Cavaliere | Iustinian Bejan | Pooya Lotfabadi |
| Alireza Karimi | Ivan Bergier | Potula Sree Brahmanandam |
| Alison De Oliveira Moraes | Ivan Kovalets | Qi Wang |
| Alla Amarbievna Tashilova | Ivett Vargáné Gálicz | Qianfeng Zhang |
| Amelia Staszowska | Jakub Duszczyk | Qiang Wei |
| Amit Awasthi | Jakub M. Gac | Qiaoli Wang |
| Ammar Bany-Ata | Jamal M. Alabid | Qiaoling Fang |
| Ana Carolina Mateos | Jamal-Eddine Salhi | Qingqing Wang |
| Ana Carolina Vasques Freitas | James Hayes | Qingyang Liu |
| Ana Milanović Pešić | Jamshid Eslamdoust | Rabia Shahid |
| Ana R. Oliveira | Janak Raj Joshi | Radel Sultanbekov |
| Anália Matos Clérigo | Jan-Frederik Flor | Radu Drobot |
| Anand Alembath | Janusz Adamczyk | Radu Nicolae Pietraru |
| Anas El Ouali | Janusz Majewski | Rafael Da Silva Palácios |
| Anastasia P. Revokatova | Janusz Miśkiewicz | Rafael Gordilho Barbosa |
| Anastasiya Narozhnyaya | Javier Lopez-Solano | Rafael Maroneze |
| Anca Plesa | Jean-Baptiste Renard | Rajendran Shobha Ajin |
| Anderson Augusto Volpato Sccoti | Jerzy Sowa | Ram B. Singh |
| Andre Lanfer Marquez | Jhones da S. Amorim | Ranka Godec |
| Andrea Bergomi | Jia Sun | Raoof Mostafazadeh |
| Andreas Peckhaus | Jiacheng Zhou | Rasa Zalakeviciute |
| Andreas Sterl | Jian Wang | Raúl Arasa Agudo |
| Andreas Sundermann | Jianfeng Chen | Ray-Yeng Yang |
| Andrei Kartoziia | Jianqiao Leng | Reda Elkacmi |
| Andrei Sin’kevich | Jianwan Ji | Renata Lukianova |
| Andrés M. Vélez-Pereira | Jiawei Kuai | Renaud De Richter |
| Andrey Goryachev | Jiawei Tian | René Esteban Ulloa-Espíndola |
| Andrey Ivantsov | Jie Yu | René Parra |
| Andrey K. Gorshenin | Jimy Dudhia | Ricardo A. Marenco |
| Andrey Kalugin | João C. G. Lanzinha | Riccardo Boiocchi |
| Andrey Lavrinenko | Joaquin Blanco | Ricky Anak Kemarau |
| Andrey Puchkov | Job Teixeira De Oliveira | Rilka Valcheva |
| Andrey Tsapalov | Johan Pérez | Robert Kalbarczyk |
| Andrey Zhuikov | John Christodoulakis | Robert Popek |
| Andrii Perekrest | John Kalogiros | Robert Twardosz |
| Andrzej Wnorowski | John Robert Saffell | Robert Zakinayn |
| Angela Melgarejo Morales | John Van Boxel | Roberta Valentina Gagliardi |
| Angelo De Santis | Johny Montaña | Roberto Avelino Cecílio |
| Anna A. Shestakova | Jonathan Suazo-Hernández | Roberto Bizzarri |
| Anna Aleksandrovna Vinogradova | Joonho Lee | Roberto Franco Plata |
| Anna Grincova | Jorge Mendez-Astudillo | Roberto Maria Rosario Di Martino |
| Anna Izabella Jackiewicz | José Antonio Suarez-Navarro | Robin Ekelund |
| Anne Lusk | José Carlos Curvelo Santana | Rocio Garcia Martinez |
| Anosh Nadeem Butt | José Francisco Oliveira Júnior | Rodrigo Fernando Dos Santos Salazar |
| Anthony Brazel | Jose Luis Diaz-Hernandez | Rogério Duarte |
| Anton Pyzhev | Josef Křeček | Romario Trentin |
| Anton Verhoef | Joseph Samuel Akpan | Ronan Adler Tavella |
| Antonina Karlina | Jouni Räisänen | Rosendo Romero-Andrade |
| Antonio De La Casa | Juan Carlos Osorio Gómez | Rostyslav Sipakov |
| Antonio Lidón | Juan Gabriel Rueda Bayona | Rui Manuel Filipe |
| António Mário Almeida | Juan L. Navarro-Mesa | Rui Pitarma |
| Anwar Eziz | Juan Pablo Urdánigo | Runguo Xu |
| Anxiao Zhang | Juliana Anochi | Ruslan Fedorov |
| Aparajeo Chattopadhyay | Julio Angeles Suazo | Sabab Ali Shah |
| Arnoud Apituley | Julio Cesar Wasserman | Sabur Fuzailovich Abdullaev |
| Artem Abunin | Jun Du | Saddam Waheed |
| Artem Shikhovtsev | Jun Jian | Sagit Valeev |
| Artur Jaworski | Junbo Wang | Sahar Zahiri |
| Arturo Corrales-Suastegui | Junchao Xu | Said El Kafhali |
| Aryasree Sudharaj | Junda Huang | Said Munir |
| Asia Lachir | Junehyeong Park | Saïdou |
| Asim Yaqub | Juner M. Vieira | Saikat Ghosh |
| Asit Kumar Mishra | Junior Gonçalves da Silva | Saja Kosanovic |
| Asya Ovsepyan | Junyi He | Sak Sittichompoo |
| Athena Progiou | Junyu He | Salim Heddam |
| Atul Saini | Jüri Liiv | Salvatore Romano |
| Aytac Perihan Akan | Jus Kocijan | Sandeep Panchal |
| Azimeh Zare-Harofteh | Jyothi Ravi Kiran Kumar Dabbakuti | Satoshi Nakai |
| Babak Ghazi | K. Dissanayaka | Şaziye Özge Atik |
| Badreddine Alaoui | Kai Wang | Sebastian Pater |
| Bailing Zhou | Kai Xie | Sebastien Lebonnois |
| Bangyu Ge | Kaitao Li | Selma Ergin |
| Bartosz Ciupek | Karan Nayak | Serafim Kontos |
| Bernard Twaróg | Karol Dąbrowski | Sergei Rudenko |
| Bettina Eck-Varanka | Katarzyna Gładyszewska-Fiedoruk | Sergei Shevyrev |
| Biao Zhao | Katarzyna Janoszka | Sergey Galichenko |
| Bin Chen | Kateryna Shmeltser | Sergey Nikolayevich Kivalov |
| Binglin Liu | Katharina Bastl | Sergey Rozanov |
| Bingqing Zhang | Kazım Onur Demirarslan | Serkan Doganalp |
| Bo Xiong | Kazuya Hayata | Seyed Mohammad Hossein Mousakazemi |
| Bonface Ombasa Manono | Kelvin Walls | Shan Huang |
| Boris Igor Palella | Kenneth Okechukwu Ekpetere | Shaohong Wu |
| Boris Kutuza | Kenneth Okedu | Sheng-Hung Wang |
| Bowen Li | Kevin Ignatowicz | Shengpeng Yang |
| Bruno Godinho | Keyvan Soltani | Shenliang Chen |
| Buddhi Pushpawela | Khanh Do | Shichao Zhang |
| Burhan Shamurad | Kitti Alexandra Berényi | Shichun Zhang |
| Caijian Hua | Konstantin Gribanov | Shinji Hirooka |
| Carina Mariane Stolz | Konstantin Vergel | Shisheng Chen |
| Carlos J. L. Balsas | Konstantinos Vantas | Shiwei Ren |
| Carlos Salazar-Briones | Kresimir Pavlic | Shouji Pang |
| Carol Nash | Krisangella Sofia Murillo Camacho | Shuai Fu |
| Catalin Silvestru | Krishnendu Sekhar Paul | Shuhao Li |
| Cécil J. W. Meulenberg | Kristian Fabbri | Shuwen Han |
| César de Oliveira Ferreira Silva | Krzysztof Blazejczyk | Silvia Puiu |
| Češljar Goran | Kseniia Nepeina | Sinisa Polovina |
| Chad Anderson | Kubilay Kaptan | Snaiki Reda |
| Chen Chen | Kwan Ngok Yu | Sofia Papadogiannaki |
| Chen Cheng | Kyriakos Vafiadis | Soumik Basu |
| Chen Song | Laina Hilma Sari | Soumyadeep Ghosh |
| Chen-Chiung Hsieh | Laurencas Raslavičius | Srinivasa Ramanujam Kannan |
| Cheng Li | Le Cao | Stanislav Juráň |
| Cheng Yang | Lei Chen | Stanislaw Pietrzyk |
| Chenggong Liu | Leonid Plotnikov | Stavros Cheristanidis |
| Chenghao Tan | Lijie Gao | Stavros-Andreas Logothetis |
| Chengyu Li | Ljiljana Jankovic Mandic | Stefan Liess |
| Chen-Yi Sun | Ljiljana R. Gulan | Stefano Cascone |
| Chiara Maria Motta | Louis Shing Him Lee | Steigvilė Byčenkienė |
| Ching-Feng Yu | Loyde Vieira de Abreu-Harbich | Stephan Hülsmann |
| Chris Dritselis | Luca Giovanni Lanza | Stephan Stephany |
| Christian Martin Fuchs | Luca Schifano | Steven Soon-Kai Kong |
| Christopher Phillips | Luca Shindler | Subrata Kundu |
| Chunguang Hu | Lucienne G. Basaly | Sujan Shrestha |
| Ciprian Claudiu Manzu | Lucio Souza | Sulaymon Eshkabilov |
| Claudia Rivera | Luis Alfonso Menéndez-García | Suman Maity |
| Cornelius Hald | Luis Izquierdo-Horna | Susan Gabriela Lakkis |
| Costinela Fortea | Luisa Andronie | Sushovan Ghosh |
| Cristian Banciu | Luisa Dias Pereira | Svetlana Boldina |
| Cristian Gabriel Anghel | Luisa Leonie Brokmeier | Svetlana Polevova |
| Daiewn Kang | Lup Wai Chew | Syed Ali |
| Dakota Mccarty | Lvyang Ye | Sylwester Wereski |
| Dani Khoury | Lyes Rabhi | Szymon Bijak |
| Dani Sarsekova | Mădălina Călbureanu | Szymon Hoffman |
| Daniel Badulescu | Magdalena Wróbel-Jędrzejewska | Taehyun Park |
| Daniel Constantin Diaconu | Mahesh Bade | Takeharu Kouketsu |
| Daniel Feldman | Maida Domat | Tamerlan T. Magkoev |
| Daniel Rábago | Maja Jovanović | Tânia Ferreira |
| Daniel Ramos Louzada | Maja Poznanović Spahić | Taoufik Hermassi |
| Daniel Santos | Maksim Zhmaev | Tatiana A. Zenchenko |
| Daniela Avetisyan | Maksymilian Mądziel | Tatiana Gheorghe Gutium |
| Daniela Debone | Małgorzata Holka | Tatiana Gorbunova |
| Daniele Contini | Mano Priya Angappan | Tatiana Minnikova |
| Daniil Kozlov | Manuchehr Farajzadeh | Tatiana Pasko |
| Danitza Klopper | Manuel Bravo | Tatiana Sheshko |
| Danka Kostadinović | Manuel Pinto | Tatyana V. Belonenko |
| Daocheng Gong | Manuel Saba | Teng Shao |
| Dapeng Gu | Manuela Almeida | Teodoro Georgiadis |
| Daria Bogatova | Marc Sarazin | Terisha Ghazi |
| Dariia Kholiavchuk | Marcelo I. Guzman | Tiago Monteiro Condé |
| Dario Camuffo | Marcelo Zeri | Tiago Palma Pagano |
| Dario Recchiuti | Marco A. Franco | Tianfang Xie |
| David Enrique Flores-Jiménez | Marco Spada | Tianheng Shu |
| David Garcia-Rodriguez | Marcos André de Oliveira | Tianquan Liang |
| David Kieda | Margarita Tecpoyotl-Torres | Tie Zheng |
| David Sládek | Maria Abunina | Tien Anh Tran |
| Debesh Mishra | Maria Aleshina | Timoteo Marchini |
| Deepa Raveendranpillai | Maria D. King | Tomasz Janusz Teleszewski |
| Dejan M. Vasović | Maria Emanuela Mihailov | Toni Kekez |
| Dejana Jakovljević | María Fernanda Cabré | Ukkyo Jeong |
| Dejun Yang | Maria Grazia Alaimo | Ullrich Finke |
| Dénes Lóczy | María Inmaculada Rodríguez García | Ulrich Foelsche |
| Denis Miroshnichenko | María Margarita Préndez | Ulrich J. Pont |
| Deokwoo Lee | Maria Rosaria Alfio | Uma Langkulsen |
| Di Wu | Maria Savanović | Umberto Baresi |
| Dimitrios Bousiotis | María Sotelo Pérez | Upendra Rajak |
| Dimitrios Kontses | Maria Stella Lux | Uroš Durlević |
| Dimitrios Nikolopoulos | Mariam Elizbarashvili | Usman Mazhar |
| Dimitrios Psychas | Marian Gaiceanu | Vadim Rakitin |
| Dimitris Kaskaoutis | Mariana Carmelia Bălănică Dragomir | Vahdettin Demir |
| Dimitris Skuras | Mariana Falco | Vasilică Istrate |
| Dina P. Starodymova | Mariette Geyser | Veli Yavuz |
| Dina Petrovna Gubanova | Marina Vladimirovna Frontasyeva | Venugopal Reddy Thandlam |
| Disong Fu | Mario Valerio Velasco-García | Vera Bachtiar |
| Dmitrii Andreev | Marius Mihai Cazacu | Veronika V. Vodopyanova |
| Dmitry Budnikov | Mariusz Rogulski | Victor Herrera |
| Dmitry Chernyshov | Marlenne Gómez-Ramírez | Victor M. Rodriguez-Moreno |
| Dmitry Ruban | Marta Cebulska | Victor Novikov |
| Dominik Koll | Marta Marçal Gonçalves | Vijay Tallapragada |
| Dominika Siwiec | Martin Falk | Vijayaraja Loganathan |
| Dong-In Lee | Martina Zbasnik-Senegacnik | Viktor Mileikovskyi |
| Dongxiang Wang | Masayuki Shima | Vinícius B. P. Chagas |
| Dragoljub Bajic | Masoud Esfandiari | Violeta Mugica-Álvarez |
| Dušan Branislav Topalović | Mateusz Rzeszutek | Vitalii Ishchenko |
| Edgard Gonzales | Matteo Vitali | Vladimir Brigida |
| Edinéia Aparecida Dos Santos Galvanin | Matthew Cody Zoerb | Vladimir Chukin |
| Edoardo Bucchignani | Matthias Karl | Vladimir Guryanov |
| Eduardo Olaguer | Maurizio Arena | Vladimir Ivanovich Ponomarev |
| Edwin Villagran | Mauro Morichetti | Vladimir Kindra |
| Ehsan Badakhshan | Max Van De Kamp | Vladimir Kostsov |
| Ekaterina Chebykina | Maxim Ogurtsov | Vladimir Tabunshchik |
| Ekaterina Sergeevna Zolotova | Maxim Sakharov | Vladislav Demyanov |
| Ekaterina Sukhova | Maxim Shikhovtsev | Walter Mucha |
| Elena A. Mamontova | Md Farhad Hasan | Wei Fang |
| Elena Dilonardo | Md Sakhawot Hossain | Wei Zhang |
| Elena Magaril | Md. Mostafizur Rahman | Weizhen Hou |
| Eleonora Buoio | Md. Nuralam Hossain | Wen-Cheng Liu |
| Eliseo Bustamante García | Mendelssolm Pietre | Wenjin Sun |
| Eliza Kalbarczyk | Meng Li | Wen-Jun Shi |
| Elsayed Eldeeb Mehana | Meng-Syue Li | Wenkai Li |
| Elvira Kovač-Andrić | Miaohua Mao | Wenlong Zhang |
| Elżbieta Macioszek | Michael Francis Vansco | Wenxu Dong |
| Emanuele Lodolo | Michael Gorbunov | William P. L. Carter |
| Emeritus Ognjen Bonacci | Michael James Mcphaden | Wisam Al-Shohani |
| Emilia Correia | Michael Rock | Xavier Pons |
| Emyr Wyn Benbow | Michael Rycroft | Xiangbai Wu |
| Eresanya Olaoluwa Emmanuel | Michael Splitt | Xiangchen Meng |
| Erna Frins | Michail Kalogiannakis | Xiangyang Lu |
| Ernst Stadlober | Michele Barsanti | Xiao Li |
| Erzsébet Kristóf | Michele Doro | Xiaohan Sally Li |
| Erzsébet Szeréna Zoltán | Michele Penza | Xiaohui Ma |
| Estefany Ingrid Medina Reyes | Miguel Felizardo | Ximena Martínez-Blanco |
| Eugene A. Silow | Miguel Imaz | Xinchen Gu |
| Euripides N. Avgoustoglou | Mihailo Savić | Xingbi Lei |
| Evandro Watanabe | Mihalj Bakator | Xu Feng |
| Evangelos Tsiaras | Mikhail A. Krinitskiy | Xuan Ma |
| Everaldo Barreiros de Souza | Mikhail Nikolaevich Lyulyukin | Xunxiu Zhou |
| Evgeny Chuvilin | Mikhail Proskurnin | Xuying Ma |
| Evgeny Nikulchev | Mikhail Semin | Yafei Sun |
| Evgeny Yakovlev | Mikhail Taschilin | Yahia Z. Hamada |
| Ewa Referowska | Mikhail V. Tarasenkov | Yameng Wang |
| Faezeh Borhani | Milad Bagheri | Yan Xing |
| Fan Xu | Milan Gocić | Yana Virolainen |
| Fan Zhou | Milan Marinković | Yangyang Liu |
| Fatima Zahra Echogdali | Miloš Davidović | Yangyang Wei |
| Fei Yu | Min Lu | Yanhao Miao |
| Feifei Shen | Mingyang Guo | Yanjie Song |
| Felipe Toledo | Mircea Neagoe | Yanlong Guo |
| Fengwei Wang | Mirjana Miletić | Yanru Huang |
| Fernando Catalani | Mirjana Radenkovic | Yanting Qiu |
| Fernando Henrique Antunes de Araujo | Mirko Stanimirović | Yaroslav Vyklyuk |
| Fernando Oñate-Valdivieso | Miroslav Betuš | Yasin Arslanoglu |
| Filipe Jorge Santos Ferreira Adão | Miroslaw Janik | Yasuyuki Ishida |
| Flávia Matias Oliveira Silva | Mohamad Padri | Yenca Migoya-Orué |
| Florian Mandija | Mohamed Ahmed Ali | Yi He |
| Francesca Becherini | Mohamed Darwish | Yih Jeng |
| Francesca Vichi | Mohamed Owis Badry | Yin Liu |
| Francesco Sommese | Mohamed Salim | Yining Yu |
| Francis O. Okeke | Mohamed Shamrukh | Yong Ha Kim |
| Francis Olawale Abulude | Mohammad Ali Goudarzi | Yong Zhang (Lanzhou University) |
| Francisco Javier Sanchez-Ruiz | Mohammad S. Alsoufi | Yong Zhang (Meteorological Observation Center) |
| Francisco Magaña Hernández | Mohanad Al-Ghriybah | Yongxiao Ge |
| Francisco Molero | Moira Evelina Doyle | Yoshiaki Ando |
| Franz Josef Maringer | Mona Riza Mohd Esa | Yoshihide Takano |
| Fratita Michael | Monami Dutta | Yoshika Sekine |
| Fredy S. Monge-Rodríguez | Mónica Guzmán-Rojo | Younes Khosravi |
| Fu Wang | Mounia Tahri | Youness El Mghouchi |
| Fuat Basciftci | Moussa Diakhaté | Yu V. Shlyugaev |
| Fulya Islek | Muhammad Azher Hassan | Yu Yan |
| Furqan Tahir | Muhammad Imran Azam | Yugang He |
| Gabriel Alarcón Aguirre | Murat Bayraktar | Yulia V. Ioni |
| Gabriel Badescu | Mykola Kut | Yun-Feng Pan |
| Gabriel Williams | Myrto Tzamali | Yuriy G. Rapoport |
| Gabriela Iorga | Nada Nhhala | Yuriy Rapoport |
| Gabriele Franzese | Nadezhda Voropay | Yury Selyutskiy |
| Gabriella Meltzer | Nagornov Ilya | Yuzhu Liu |
| Galina Dultseva | Namal Rathnayake | Yvan J. Orsolini |
| Galina Kopylova | Natalia V. Yakovenko | Zaheer Ahmed |
| Galyna Trypolska | Nataliya V. Bakhmetieva | Zbigniew J. Kabala |
| Ganesh Kumar Poongavanam | Natallia Miatselskaya | Zeda Yin |
| Gary Li-Kai Hsiao | Natalya Denissova | Zeinab Salah Abdullah |
| Gaurav Tiwari | Natalya Ivanova | Zeki Yılbaşı |
| Geena Prasad | Nataša Branko Dragić | Zeng-Zhen Hu |
| Gennady Kolesnikov | Natasa Nord | Zhaojin Rong |
| George Marin | Natasha Picone | Zhe Wang |
| George Murătoreanu | Nawaz M Mian | Zhen Zhang |
| Geovanni Hernández Galvez | Nazario Tartaglione | Zheng Li |
| Gert-Jan Steeneveld | Neeraj Dhanraj Bokde | Zheng Lu |
| Gianmarco Lazzini | Nevena Milcheva Mileva | Zheng Ma |
| Gilberto Fisch | Ngadisih Ngadisih | Zhengxiao Yan |
| Gilberto Vaz | Nicholas Sarlis | Zhenhai Liu |
| Giorgi Dalakishvili | Nick Middleton | Zhenhai Zhang |
| Giorgio Passerini | Nikita V. Bykov | Zhibao Wang |
| Giorgos Stavrianakis | Nikola Mirkov | Zhifeng Jia |
| Giovanni Ettore Gigante | Nikolaos Mihalopoulos | Zhifeng Yang |
| Giovanni Santi | Nikolaos Tavoularis | Zhijun Li |
| Giuseppe Barbero | Nina Håkansson | Zhijun Zhen |
| Giuseppe Riccio | Nina Viktorovna Dudorova | Zhiqiang Li |
| Goksel Gokkus | Niranjika Wijesooriya | Zhiwei Wan |
| Graziano Salvalai | Nofel Lagrosas | Zhongjun Zhang |
| Grzegorz Pach | Noor Ahmad Akhundzadah | Zihua Wu |
| Guirong Xu | Nuria Galindo | Ziqin Ding |
| Gulzhan Daumova | Ofelia Andrea Valdés-Rodríguez | Zohreh Adavi |
| Guoxiang Chen | Ognjen Bonacci | Zoran R. Mijić |
| Hammadi El Farissi | Ohad Zivan | Zsolt Magyari-Saska |
| Hana Chaloupecká | Oladimeji Ezekiel Mudele | Zuzana Vranayová |
| Hanbai Park | Olaf Scholten | Zuzanna Bielec-Bąkowska |
2 February 2026
MDPI INSIGHTS: The CEO's Letter #31 - MDPI 30 Years, 500 Journals, UK Summit, Z-Forum Conference, APE
Welcome to the MDPI Insights: The CEO's Letter.
In these monthly letters, I will showcase two key aspects of our work at MDPI: our commitment to empowering researchers and our determination to facilitating open scientific exchange.
Opening Thoughts

MDPI at 30: Three Decades of Open Science, Built Together
As we begin 2026, we approach a meaningful milestone in MDPI’s history: 30 years of advancing Open Science.
What began in 1996 as a small, researcher-driven initiative has grown into a global open-access publisher, supporting hundreds of journals, millions of researchers, and a shared belief that scientific knowledge should be openly available to all. Over these three decades, Open Access has moved from the margins to the mainstream, and MDPI has been proud to help shape that transformation.
To mark this anniversary year, we are pleased to share our MDPI 30th Anniversary logo.
The Anniversary logo is intentionally simple, confident, and enduring, designed to work across cultures, disciplines, and digital environments. It reflects both continuity and progress, honouring MDPI’s established identity while representing the company we are today. The green accent symbolizes our connection to the research communities we serve and the collaborative nature of Open Science itself.
Alongside the visual identity, we are also introducing our 30th Anniversary tagline:
30 Years of Open Science, Built Together.

This phrase captures what has always defined MDPI. Open Science is not the work of a single organization: it is a collective effort shaped by researchers, editors, reviewers, institutions, and the many teams who support the publishing process every day. MDPI’s role has been to provide the infrastructure and commitment that allow this collaboration to thrive.
Throughout 2026, we will mark this anniversary through regional events, global conversations, and editorial initiatives that reflect on MDPI’s evolution, its impact across disciplines, and the communities that make this work possible.
“Open Science is a collective effort”
Whether you have been part of MDPI’s journey for decades or are engaging with us for the first time this year, this milestone belongs to all of us. The past 30 years have shown what is possible when openness, trust, and collaboration are placed at the centre of scholarly communication.
As we look ahead, our focus remains clear: continuing to strengthen quality, integrity, and partnership – so that Open Science can keep moving forward, together.
Impactful Research

A Shared Milestone: MDPI’s Journal Portfolio Reaches 500 Titles
MDPI has reached an important milestone: our journal portfolio grew to more than 500 academic journals last year, spanning the fields of chemistry, engineering, biology, medicine, environmental sciences, the social sciences, and beyond.
The number itself is significant, but what matters more is what supports it: hundreds of scholarly communities that have chosen to collaborate, grow, and publish with MDPI.
From our beginnings nearly 30 years ago with a single Open Access journal (Molecules), MDPI has been guided by a simple aim: advancing Open Science. Reaching 500 journals is not an endpoint. It reflects the diversity of disciplines, ideas, and research cultures that now form part of our shared ecosystem.
Growth with Purpose
Every journal exists because a specific community believes there is a need for focus, visibility, and dialogue in a particular field. As our portfolio has expanded, so has our responsibility to ensure that scale is matched with strong editorial standards, robust research integrity practices, and meaningful academic leadership.
This milestone comes as we enter MDPI’s 30th anniversary year, a fitting moment to reflect on what scale in scholarly publishing truly requires: not only reach, but also dedicated long-term stewardship.
New Journals, New Communities
In December 2025 alone, MDPI welcomed eight newly launched journals and three journal transfers (details below), all of which published their inaugural issues by year-end.

Each of these journals is shaped by its Editors-in-Chief, Associate Editors, and Editorial Board Members, who define its scope, standards, and direction. We are grateful for the time, expertise, and commitment they bring to building these new communities.
Welcoming Transferred and Acquired Journals
We were pleased to publish the first MDPI issues of three recently transferred or acquired journals:
- Cardiovascular Medicine – advancing research on the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of cardiovascular disease
- Germs – addressing infectious diseases through clinical, public health, and translational perspectives
- Romanian Journal of Preventive Medicine (RJPM) – supporting population health, early detection, and preventive care in collaboration with the Romanian Society of Preventive Medicine
Each of these journals brings an established identity and legacy. Our role is to support their continued development with the same editorial rigor, transparency, and Open Access principles that guide our broader portfolio.
A Collective Achievement
Reaching more than 500 journals is not the achievement of any single team or individual. It is the result of collaboration across the entire scholarly ecosystem. As such, I would like to thank our authors, reviewers, academic editors, and Editorial Board Members, as well as our colleagues across MDPI, who support these communities every day.
As we look ahead, we will continue to expand the breadth and depth of our publishing activities while remaining attentive to the evolving expectations of Open Science, research integrity, and responsible growth.
This milestone is a reminder that Open Access publishing is not only about making research available. It is about building platforms where knowledge can be shared, challenged, improved, and trusted, at scale, and with care.
Inside Research

MDPI UK Summit 2026 in Manchester (21–22 January)
On 21–22 January, we had the pleasure of hosting the MDPI UK Summit 2026 in Manchester. Over two days, we welcomed more than 20 Editors-in-Chief (EiC), Section Editors-in-Chief (SEiC), and Associate Editors for an open, in-depth conversations about how MDPI supports Open Science, editorial independence, and research standards across our journals.
What stood out most was not just the quality of the discussions, but the openness, curiosity, and mutual respect that shaped every session.
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What We Covered
The programme was designed to give insight into how MDPI works behind the scenes and how different teams collaborate to support our journals and editors. Topics included:
- MDPI overview and the evolving Open Access market
- MDPI–UK collaboration and local engagement
- Editorial and peer-review processes
- Research integrity and publication ethics
- Institutional partnerships
- Indexing, journal development, and academic community engagement
Sessions were led by MDPI colleagues across editorial, research integrity, indexing, partnerships, and UK operations, showing how cross-functional our work truly is.
What We Heard
The feedback from editors was both encouraging and grounding:
- 92% rated the Summit Excellent (8% Good)
- 100% said their understanding of MDPI’s values, editorial processes, and local collaborations had significantly improved
- 69% attended primarily to stay informed about academic publishing and research integrity
- 85% felt fully heard and engaged
A few comments that stayed with me:
- “Today’s event truly gave me the opportunity to see the heart of MDPI UK.”
- “The summit was very informative – I really enjoyed seeing the behind-the-scenes operations.”
- “Keep being open to discussions and making editors feel part of the MDPI family.”
These reflections remind us that transparency, listening, and dialogue are not nice-to-haves: they are foundational to trust.
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Looking Ahead
The UK Summit is one of more than 10 MDPI Summits we are organizing this year across North America, Europe, and APAC. Each one is an investment in relationships, shared understanding, and improvement.
Thank you to the MDPI UK team and supporting colleagues across departments who made this event possible. This was a positive step in strengthening our editorial engagement and kicking off a year of MDPI Summits.
Coming Together for Science

Recapping the Z-Forum 2026 Conference on Sustainability and Innovation (15–16 January 2026)
In January, MDPI supported and participated in the Z-Forum on Sustainability and Innovation, held across Zurich (ETH Zurich) and the city of Baden. With 96 participants and more than 30 speakers and panellists, the forum brought together leaders from government, academia, industry, and innovation ecosystems to explore how sustainability, Open Science, and innovation intersect in practice.
Why this mattered for MDPI
As a Swiss-based publisher with global reach, our investment in Z-Forum reflects a strategic intent: to anchor MDPI more deeply within Swiss research networks while contributing to national and international conversations on sustainability and innovation.
This was not only about visibility; it was also about relationship-building and long-term engagement with institutions shaping research policy and practice in Switzerland.
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High-level participation and credibility
The forum was supported and sponsored by several key Swiss institutions, including:
- The Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) – Switzerland’s central research funding body
- ETH Zurich
- The University of Zurich
- The University of Basel
- Swiss Innovation Park Central
The sponsorship of SNSF lent the forum strong institutional credibility and signalled the relevance of the themes discussed, especially around sustainability, innovation frameworks, and responsible research practices.
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Beyond the Room: Extending the Conversation
While attendance was intentionally focused to encourage dialogue, the forum’s reach extended well beyond the venue. Multiple LinkedIn posts before and during the event (e.g., Link 1, Link 2, Link 3, and more) built on the discussions and helped position MDPI as an active and credible contributor within Switzerland’s research and innovation landscape.
A Broader Strategic Signal
Z-Forum is part of a wider effort to:
- Build on MDPI’s Swiss institutional relationships
- Reinforce our leadership in Open Science and sustainability
- Engage proactively with funders, universities, and innovation bodies
- Ensure MDPI remains a visible and constructive partner in the ecosystems where research policy and practice are shaped
Thank you to our Conference team and everyone involved in supporting this event, both behind the scenes and on the ground. These moments of engagement may be small in scale, but they are foundational in impact.

Closing Thoughts

Reflections from the Academic Publishing in Europe Conference
During 13-14 January, I attended the Academic Publishing in Europe (APE) Conference in Berlin, a long-standing forum for discussing scholarly publishing and the deeper principles that support it.

MDPI was proud to be a Gold Sponsor of the 20th Anniversary of the APE conference, reflecting our continued commitment to supporting the scholarly community to engage in critical industry discussions.
This year’s program covered a range of topics, from AI and research integrity to policy, infrastructure, and trust, but one theme stood out clearly for me: academic freedom, and what it means to protect the conditions under which knowledge can be produced, evaluated, and shared responsibly.
Before turning to that, I would like to highlight the opening keynote by Carolin Sutton (CEO, STM), which helped set the tone for the conference.
An Independent Publishing Industry: The Case for Checks and Balances
In her opening remarks, Carolin focused on the importance of continually evolving systems of checks and balances, both operationally and at the marketplace level, to prevent any single actor from dominating knowledge production. Her framing emphasized shared responsibility across publishers, institutions, and research communities, rather than placing the burden on any one group.
As part of this, she revisited the work of sociologist Robert K. Merton, and his CUDOS norms of scientific ethos, first articulated in his 1942 work, The Normative Structure of Science.

Merton outlined four ideals that support healthy scientific systems:
- Communalism – knowledge as a public good
- Universalism – evaluation based on merit, not status or identity
- Disinterestedness – orientation toward truth over personal or financial gain
- Organized Skepticism – systematic, critical scrutiny of claims
While these are ideals, and not guarantees that are perfectly lived up to, they remain powerful reference points today for research systems and organizations as they aim to grow and scale.
It was interesting to see how closely these norms align with foundational principles of Open Access. For example, making research openly available supports communalism. Transparent peer review and editorial processes reinforce universalism and organized skepticism. Strong ethics frameworks and governance help counter conflicts of interest and support disinterestedness.
“Merton’s ideals remain powerful reference points today”
Safeguarding Research: Academic Freedom
Several of the conference sessions touched on the pressures faced by researchers, editors, and institutions: geopolitical tensions, online harassment, misinformation, reputational risk, shrinking resources, and politicized narratives around science.

“Integrity is not static. It must be actively maintained as systems grow.”
A particularly timely presentation came from Ilyas Saliba, who talked about academic freedom. His remarks resonated strongly and underlined the fact that safety in academia is not only physical or digital, but also intellectual.
Academic freedom means safeguarding the ability to ask difficult questions, challenge consensus, publish negative or unexpected results, and participate in scholarly debate without fear of undue personal, political, or commercial consequences. These discussions were a reminder that publishers play an important role in supporting the integrity, accessibility, and credibility of scholarly knowledge, particularly as researchers and institutions face mounting external pressures.
Looking Ahead
The discussions at APE reminded me that integrity is not static. It must be actively maintained as systems grow, expectations evolve, and pressures increase. This applies equally to research integrity, academic freedom, and the broader trust placed in scholarly communication.
I left APE encouraged by the openness of the dialogue and the willingness across publishers, institutions, and communities to engage with difficult questions rather than avoid them. Forums like this play a pivotal role in helping our industry pause, reflect, and recalibrate.
As MDPI continues to grow and as we enter our 30th anniversary, these conversations remind me of the core purpose of science: advancing knowledge for the benefit of society.
Chief Executive Officer
MDPI AG
26 January 2026
MDPI at AGU 2025: Celebrating Open Science and Academic Excellence
From 15 to 19 December 2025, MDPI participated in the American Geophysical Union (AGU) Fall Meeting 2025 held in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA at booth #922 in the Entrance Hall. The conference attracted over 25,000 attendees from more than 100 countries, with academic participants from universities accounting for 70.5% of the total.
Academic Engagement: Dialogue and Collaboration
Meet the Editors
We hosted several insightful sessions with editorial leaders from top journals:
- Prof. Dr. Magaly Koch (Section Editor-in-Chief of Remote Sensing);
- Prof. Dr. Xi Chen (Editorial Board Member of Water);
- Dr. Elizabeth Silber (Guest Editor of Atmosphere);
- Dr. Andrea Zerboni (Guest Editor of Water).
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These discussions fostered meaningful connections between attendees and editors, strengthening our commitment to supporting scholarly exchange.
Environmental and Earth Sciences Journal Editorial Board Meeting

Leaders from MDPI’s environmental and earth sciences journals and editorial board members gathered for an in-person Editorial Board Meeting held on 16 December at the Hilton Riverside Hotel in New Orleans during the conference to exchange updates and discuss editorial practices, peer review developments, and key challenges in the field. The discussion highlighted the importance of collaboration and shared efforts to maintain high scientific and publishing standards. The meeting was attended by Dr. David L. Feldman, Prof. Dr. Zong-Liang Yang, Dr. Paul Kucera, Dr. Pavel Grosiman, Prof. Dr. Carlo De Michele, Prof. Dr. Xi Chen, Dr. May Wu, Prof. Sayed M. Bateni, Prof. Dr. Assefa M. Melesse, Prof. Pietro Milillo, Prof. Peng Fu, Dr. Dongdong Wang, Prof. Dr. Hatim Sharif, Prof. Dr. Jie Shan, Prof. Dr. Soe Win Myint, and Prof. Dr. Brian Horton.
Looking Ahead: Advancing Open Science
Participating in the AGU Annual Meeting was a profoundly enriching experience. We engaged in profound dialogue not only with authors, reviewers, and members of the Editorial Boards associated with MDPI, but also had the invaluable opportunity to disseminate our institutional mission to emerging scholars.
As an entity steadfastly committed to fostering open scientific exchange across all academic disciplines, MDPI reaffirms its unwavering dedication to advancing global scholarship. We earnestly look forward to connecting with researchers from around the world, collaborating in unison to expand the frontiers of knowledge and advocate for open science.
9 January 2026
MDPI’s Newly Launched Journals in December 2025
We have expanded our open access portfolio with eight new journals publishing their inaugural issues in December 2025, as well as three journal transfers. These additions span physical sciences, social sciences, arts and humanities, environmental and Earth sciences, medicine and pharmacology, and public health and healthcare. We extend our sincere thanks to the Editors-in-Chief, Associate Editors, and Editorial Board Members who are shaping these journals’ direction. All journals uphold strong editorial standards through a thorough peer review process, ensuring impactful open access scholarship.
Please feel free to browse and discover more about the new journals below.
|
New Journals |
Founding Editor-in-Chief(s) |
Journal Topics (Selected) |
|
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Dr. Elisa Felicitas Arias, Université PSL, France |
atomic clocks; time and frequency metrology; GNSS systems; relativity and relativistic timekeeping; fundamental physics in space | |
|
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Prof. Dr. José F.F. Mendes, University of Aveiro, Portugal |
complex systems; network science; nonlinear dynamics and chaotic behaviour; information theory and complexity; computational complexity | |
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Prof. Dr. Roberto Morandotti, Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique—Énergie, Matériaux et Télécommunications (INRS), Canada |
light generation; light sources and applications; light control and measurement; human responses to light; lighting design | |
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Prof. Dr. Savvas A. Chatzichristofis, Neapolis University Pafos, Cyprus |
generative AI and large language models in education; multimodal and embodied AI; personalization and adaptive systems; assessment, feedback, and academic integrity; learning analytics | |
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Prof. Dr. Jon Andoni Duñabeitia, Universidad Nebrija, Spain |
cognitive psychology; cognitive neuroscience; psycholinguistics; applied linguistics; experimental psychology | |
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Prof. Dr. Caiwu Fu, Wuhan University, China; Prof. Dr. Longxi Zhang, Peking University, China |
cultural practices; cultural theory; cultural policy; cultural heritage; transregional and transnational cultural flows| |
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Dr. Ghassem R. Asrar, iCREST Environmental Education Foundation, USA |
biosphere interactions, processes, and sustainability; ecosystem science and dynamics; biodiversity conservation; global change and environmental adaptation; biogeochemical cycles | |
|
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Dr. Giuseppe Mulè, University of Palermo, Italy |
cardiorenal syndromes; chronic heart failure and chronic kidney disease; cardiorenalmetabolic syndrome; hypertension and diabetes in relation to the abovementioned syndromes; diagnostic techniques | |
|
Transferred Journals |
Editor-in-Chief |
Journal Topics (Selected) |
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Prof. Dr. Peter Matt, Lucerne Cantonal Hospital (LUKS), Switzerland |
cardiology; cardiovascular and aortic surgery; cardiovascular anatomy, physiology and pathophysiology; congenital heart disease and pediatric cardiology; cardiovascular regenerative and reparative medicine | |
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Prof. Dr. Oana Săndulescu, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Romania; National Institute for Infectious Diseases “Prof. Dr. Matei Bals”, Romania |
infectious diseases across clinical and public health domains; epidemiology of communicable diseases; clinical microbiology and applied virology; vaccinology and immunization; host–pathogen interactions and immunity | |
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Dr. Roxana Elena Bohiltea, “Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Romania |
public health; disease prevention; screening and early detection; lifestyle interventions and health education; digital and innovative prevention | |
We would like to thank everyone who has supported the development of open access publishing. If you would like to create more new journals, you are welcome to send an application here, or contact the New Journal Committee (newjournal-committee@mdpi.com).
6 January 2026
Meet Us at the EGU General Assembly 2026, 3–8 May 2026, Vienna, Austria
Conference: EGU General Assembly 2026
Date: 3–8 May 2026
Location: Vienna, Austria
MDPI will attend the EGU General Assembly 2026 as an exhibitor. This meeting will be held in Vienna, Austria, from 3 to 8 May 2026 in a hybrid format.
The EGU General Assembly 2026 is organized by the European Geosciences Union (EGU), aiming to bring together geoscientists from all over the world to one meeting covering all disciplines of the Earth, planetary, and space sciences.
Topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
- Atmosphere, Climate, and Space Sciences;
- Hydrology and Environmental Earth Systems;
- Solid Earth, Hazards and Measurement Technologies.
The following open access journals will be represented:
- Remote Sensing;
- Water;
- Atmosphere;
- Geosciences;
- Earth;
- Hydrology;
- Journal of Non-Destructive Testing (NDT);
- Nitrogen;
- Climate;
- Geomatics;
- ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information (IJGI) ;
- Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (JMSE);
- Resources;
- Limnological Review;
- Aerobiology;
- Meteorology;
- GeoHazards;
- Forests;
- Soil Systems;
- Land;
- Applied Sciences;
- Quaternary;
- Glacies;
- Oceans;
- Gases;
- Geographies;
- Coasts.
If you are attending this conference, please feel free to start an online conversation with us. Our delegates look forward to meeting you in person at booth #19 and answering any questions that you may have. For more information about the conference, please visit the following website: https://www.egu26.eu/.

































