Announcements

6 February 2026
Acknowledgment to the Reviewers of ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information in 2025


The editorial office of ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information 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, ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information received 3377 review reports from contributors across 74 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 ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information.

Abdelaziz Merghadi I-Shian Suen Radoslaw Wolniak
Abdolraheem Khader Isidora Đurić Rafael A. Almeida
Abdulkadir Memduhoğlu Ivan Potić Rafael Córdoba Hernández
Abhishek Kala Ivan Simic Raffaella De Marco
Agostino Sotgia Ivan Stojšić Rahim Ali Abbaspour
Ágoston Winkler Ivana Ercegovac Ranganathan Rani Hemamalini
Ahmed Jaber Ivana Racetin Ratko Obradovic
Ahmet Cagdas Seckin Ivana Vasiljević Remus Creţan
Ahmet Ozgur Dogru Ivo Draganov Ren Liu
Ahmet Torun Jairo L. Vanegas Reuven Maskil-Leitan
Aikaterini Servou James Chakwizira Rindone Corrado
Akshay Kumar Jangwon Suh Roman Lozynskyy
Aleksandar Dimitrijevic Jarosław Bydłosz Rongrong Zhang
Aleksandar Milic Javier Domínguez Bravo Rui Araújo
Aleksandra Radulović Jean-Baptiste Renard Rui Figueira
Alessandro Vitale Jean-Claude Thill Rui Wang
Alexandros Bartzokas-Tsiompras Jelena Atanacković-Jeličić Ryo Inoue
Alexis Richard C. Claridades Jen-Chih Chao S. M. Amin Hosseini
Alfonso Quarati Jérôme Gensel Saja Kosanović
Ali Younes Jhon Escorcia Salahuddin M. Jaber
Alireza Sahebgharani Jia Chen Salvatore Falanga Bolognesi
Alreza Mohammadi Jiacai Pan Sergio Reyes
Amedeo Ganciu Jian Gu Seunghyeon Wang
Amila Jayasingh Jian Yang Sevim Sezi Karayazi
Aminreza Iranmanesh Jianhua Liu Shahzad Yousaf
Ana B. Ruescas Jianting Zhu Shan Liu
Ana Ispas Jianwan Ji Shangmin Zhao
Anders Holst Jie Shen Sharon M. Locke
Anderson Ferreira Jing Cheng Shengjie Liu
André Luís Muller Jinghui Qi Sheng-Yang Huang
Andrea Tomassi Jisup Shim Sherine Nagy Saleh
Andrea Vacca Jiwei Li Shi Ge
Andreas Tsatsaris Jiyin Zhang Shidong Liu
Andrej Pal João Madeiras Pereira Shisheng Chen
Andrzej Muczyński Joaquín Torres-Sospedra Shivanand Balram
Aniruddha Bhattacharjya Johannes Ernst Drewes Shiyang Ruan
Anna Markowska John Adebisi Shu Wang
Anna Petrasova Jorge Delgado Shuangfeng Wei
Antonio Carlos Daud Filho Jorge Gabriel Molinero-Sánchez Shuangsi Xue
Antonio Luís Martinez-Pujalte José Alberto Hernández Sidgley Camargo De Andrade
Antonio Zanutta José Silva Silin Zhang
Anu Kuncheria Juan Ariel Insaurralde Siniša Drobnjak
Anwar Eziz Juan José Fernández Siquan Wang
Anxiao Zhang Julie Le Gallo Socrates Basbas
Arianna Fonsati Jumadi Jumadi Soowoong Noh
Artur Budzyński Jun Jian Sornkitja Boonprong
Artur Janowski Jun Xu Soufiane Hajaj
Asif Sajjad Jung Jun Lin Srinivasa Ramanujam Kannan
Auriol Degbelo Jung Min Pak Stacy Supak
Babag Purbantoro Junxue Ma Stanislav Frangeš
Babak J. Fard Junyu He Stephan Mäs
Baiyan Wu Jurgis Zagorskas Steven C. Mccutcheon
Balamurugan Soundararaj Ka Zhang Stilianos Contarinis
Bangyu Ge Kai Li Stratis Karantanellis
Baoju Liu Kaimeng Ding Stylianos Hadjipetrou
Barbara P. Buttenfield Kamil Świętochowski Subham Roy
Bárbara Polo-Martín Kangwen Zhu Subhankar Das
Bashkim Idrizi Karel Janečka Sungsoon Hwang
Benson P. C. Liu Karolina Józefowicz Suresh Kv
Bernard Stanisław Twaróg Katarzyna Słomska-Przech Susana Freiria
Bhagwat Rimal Kevin Mwenda Suzana Lović Obradović
Bixia Hu Khaled Heba Takashi Kimura
Blagovest Chanev Belev Kiwon Lee Takashi Oguchi
Bojan Đerčan Kleftodimos Alexandros Tamara Lukic
Byron Nakos Knut Jetlund Tamara Marič
Caixia Wang Konstantinos Nikolakopoulos Tamara Zaninović
Carlos José Lopes Balsas Krisztián Kerkovits Tao Shu
Cédric Grueau Krzysztof Sornek Tao Wang
César De Oliveira Ferreira Silva Ksenija Tijanić Štrok Taskin Kavzoglu
César De Santos-Berbel Kuna Jakub Tatiana Jaworska
Chander Prakash Lars Harrie Teng Shao
Chané Bruyn László Bengi Thyago C. C. Nepomuceno
Chang Gan Laurențiu Droj Tianpei Tang
Changho Lee Lazaro Zuquette Todd Fagin
Chao Zhang Lei Chen Tongxin Chen
Chen Wang Leonardo Marchiori Ugur Alganci
Cheng Liao Letícia Peret Antunes Hardt Usman Mazhar
Chengji Xu Lia Duarte Vadym Avrutov
Chengpeng Li Liangliang Xiao Vahid Mousavi
Chengyi Liu Lingxiang Wei Varga Ágnes
Chenhui Wang Liu Yang Vasil Yordanov
Chenliang Wang Loredana Crenganis Vasilica Istrate
Christos Staboulis Lu Xu Vassilios Andronis
Chunguang Hu Ľubica Hudecová Velislava Simeonova
Chun-Hsiang Chan Lucian Blaga Veraldo Liesenberg
Cihan Altuntas Luis André Wernecke Fumagalli Vicente Bayarri
Congying Fang Luis Copano Ortiz Virgilio Pérez
Daikun Wang Luis José Andrade Pais Vitalie Florea
Dan Meng Lukáš Herman Vlado Cetl
Daniele Oxoli Lvyang Ye Wael Ahmed
Daniella Schettino Maja Ahac Wael M. Eldessouki
Danielle Elis Garcia Furuya Majid Hojati Wang Jin
Daohong Gong Marcin Kłos Wangle Zhang
Daqian Liu Marcin Kulawiak Wei Liu
Dariusz Gotlib María Del Carmen Garrido Carrera Wei Ma
Darshana Athukorala Marian Poniewiera Weihan Rong
Dazhi Yang Marina Maura Calandrelli Weihua Liu
Deyu Li Mario Miler Wen Dai
Di Liu Marios Tzouvaras Wen Liu
Diep Dao Marta Czaplicka Wenhao Yu
Dinh Thuan Le Mateus Daniel Almeida Mendes Wenjian Pan
Dmitry Pavlyuk Mateusz Ilba Wenseslao Plata Rocha
Domenico D'Uva Matthias Ripp William Emiliano
Dongxu Chen Mátyás Gede Xi Lu
Dorian Gorgan Maurici Ruiz-Pérez Xiao Zhou
Dorota Celińska-Janowicz Maurizio Pollino Xiaodong Wu
Dursun Zafer Seker Meihan Jin Xiaolan Zhuo
Dušan Jovanović Meizhen Wang Xiaolong Chen
Dylan Moinse Melissa Anne Beryl Vogt Xiaolong Zhao
Eduardo Augusto Werneck Ribeiro Michael Grieves Xiaomin Lu
Eduardo Cândido Cordeiro Gonçalves Michael Sakellariou Xin Li
Elena Ascari Michail Vaitis Xin Xiao
Elías Albornoz Michał Grodecki Xin Yang
Elias Nasr Naim Elias Michele Campagna Xingguo Zhang
Elisabetta Doria Miguel Ángel Manso Callejo Xiuling Zuo
Elisavet Tsilimantou Miguel Saraiva Xiwen Zhang
Elżbieta Macioszek Mikel Emaldi Xosé Somoza-Medina
Emre Eftelioglu Miktha Farid Alkadri Xu Yin
Esteban Zalamea Milan Gavrilović Xuechao Xia
Estela Marine-Roig Milica Radaković Xuning Qiao
Fabio Maggio Miljenko Lapaine Yafei Sun
Fang Ren Min Zhang Yakui Shao
Farha Sattar Minfeng Yao Yakun Han
Fatih Gulgen Mirko Stanimirović Yanan Wu
Fatima Zahra Echogdali Mohamed M. Elsharkawy Yanbin Chen
Feng Lu Mohamed Mahmoud Sebbab Yanfeng Wu
Fengliang Tang Mohammad Amin Khalili Yang Cao
Florian Hruby Mohammed M. Gomaa Yang Chen
Florian Ledermann Mohsen Alawi Yangsong Gu
Florin Stoica Mohsen Ansari Yanlong Guo
Francesca Leccis Muhammad Aufaristama Yannick Useni Sikuzani
Francesco Rouhana Muhammad Farhan Hanif Yanyan Gu
Francesco Sera Muhammad Shahzad Sarfraz Yanyu Chen
Francis Roy Müslüm Hacar Yaseen Mustafa
Franz Conraths Mustafa Üstüner Ye Liu
Frédéric Hubert Mustafa Zeybek Yebin Chen
Fritz Kessler Muzaffer Can Iban Yehia Miky
Gábor Timár Nabaz R. Khwarahm Yi He
Gabriel Camară Nai Yang Yijing Li
Genyu Xu Nataša Danilović Hristić Yiming Li
Gerardo Febres Nataša Moreti Yinghui Zhang
Gerardo Francisco Ubilla-Bravo Nenad Višnjevac Yong Gao
Gheorghe Badea Nerea Ríos Rodríguez Yongge Hu
Giada Varra Nicola Pisacane Yoomi Kim
Gianluigi Salvucci Nijia Qian Youliang Chen
Giovanni Guzmán-Lugo Nikolaos Tavoularis Youssef M. Youssef
Goran B. Markovic Nikolay Teslya Yu Zhang
Goran Sibenik Nourhan Hamdy Yue Ma
Grażyna Rosa Olawale Ogunrinde Yuefei Zhuo
Guimin Zhu Olga Petrakovska Yuling Hu
Guiming Zhang Oscar Frausto Martínez Yunfei Huang
Haiqiang Xin Ozan Ozturk Yunlu Zhang
Halil Şenol Pablo Ariel Escudero Zaipeng Xie
Hamad Altuwaijri Pablo Cabrera-Barona Zbigniew Piotrowski
Hamada Esmaiel Patrick Erik Bradley Zdeněk Stachoň
Hamed Goharipour Patrick Miller Zeenat Kotval-Karamchandani
Hamed Sangin Pavle Pitka Zehua Zhang
Han Luo Paweł Droździel Željko Stević Stević
Hanqiu Yue Pei Xiang Zhangcai Yin
Hao Lyu Peiyuan Qiu Zhen Zhang
Hartmut Müller Peng Chen Zheng Li
Heide Lukosch Peng Ye Zhenguo Niu
Hisham Abusaada Pengtao Wang Zhenhai Liu
Hoi-Fung Ng Peter S. Lee Zhenhua Zhang
Hong Xu Pietro Bonfanti Zhibao Wang
Hong Zhang Pingyi Fan Zhiguo Shao
Hongxia Wang Piotr Gibas Zhiwei Hou
Hongya Tang Piotr Jaskowski Zhiwei Wan
Hongzhi Cui Po-Chun Hsu Zhong Zheng
Hrvoje Grofelnik Poonam Redhu Zhongting Wang
Hrvoje Matijević Poya Sohrabi Zhongzhong Zeng
Hua Liao Prasongchai Setthasuravich Zifu Wang
Huajin Li Przemysław Klapa Zihua Wu
Inés Santé Qiang Luo Zijing Tan
Ingrid Luffman Qing Luo Zilong Qin
Irina Harris Rabindra K. Barik Zsolt Magyari-Sáska
Iris Bostjančić    

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.

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.

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.

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.

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:

  1. Communalism – knowledge as a public good
  2. Universalism – evaluation based on merit, not status or identity
  3. Disinterestedness – orientation toward truth over personal or financial gain
  4. 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.

Stefan Tochev
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).

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)

Dr. Elisa Felicitas Arias,

Université PSL, France

Editorial | view inaugural issue

atomic clocks; time and frequency metrology; GNSS systems; relativity and relativistic timekeeping; fundamental physics in space |

view journal scope | submit an article

Prof. Dr. José F.F. Mendes,

University of Aveiro, Portugal

Editorial | view inaugural issue

complex systems; network science; nonlinear dynamics and chaotic behaviour; information theory and complexity; computational complexity |

view journal scope | submit an article

Prof. Dr. Roberto Morandotti,

Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique—Énergie, Matériaux et Télécommunications (INRS), Canada

Editorial | view inaugural issue

light generation; light sources and applications; light control and measurement; human responses to light; lighting design |

view journal scope | submit an article

Prof. Dr. Savvas A. Chatzichristofis,

Neapolis University Pafos, Cyprus

Editorial | view inaugural issue

generative AI and large language models in education; multimodal and embodied AI; personalization and adaptive systems; assessment, feedback, and academic integrity; learning analytics |

view journal scope | submit an article

Prof. Dr. Jon Andoni Duñabeitia,

Universidad Nebrija, Spain

Editorial | view inaugural issue

cognitive psychology; cognitive neuroscience; psycholinguistics; applied linguistics; experimental psychology |

view journal scope | submit an article

Prof. Dr. Caiwu Fu,

Wuhan University, China;

Prof. Dr. Longxi Zhang,

Peking University, China

Editorial | view inaugural issue

cultural practices; cultural theory; cultural policy; cultural heritage; transregional and transnational cultural flows|

view journal scope | submit an article

Dr. Ghassem R. Asrar,

iCREST Environmental Education Foundation, USA

Editorial | view inaugural issue

biosphere interactions, processes, and sustainability; ecosystem science and dynamics; biodiversity conservation; global change and environmental adaptation; biogeochemical cycles |

view journal scope | submit an article

Dr. Giuseppe Mulè,

University of Palermo, Italy

Editorial | view inaugural issue

cardiorenal syndromes; chronic heart failure and chronic kidney disease; cardiorenalmetabolic syndrome; hypertension and diabetes in relation to the abovementioned syndromes; diagnostic techniques |

view journal scope | submit an article

Transferred Journals

Editor-in-Chief

Journal Topics (Selected)

Prof. Dr. Peter Matt,

Lucerne Cantonal Hospital (LUKS), Switzerland

Editorial | view first issue

cardiology; cardiovascular and aortic surgery; cardiovascular anatomy, physiology and pathophysiology; congenital heart disease and pediatric cardiology;

cardiovascular regenerative and reparative medicine |

view journal scope | submit an article

Prof. Dr. Oana Săndulescu,

Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Romania;

National Institute for Infectious Diseases “Prof. Dr. Matei Bals”, Romania

Editorial | view first issue

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 |

view journal scope | submit an article

Dr. Roxana Elena Bohiltea,

“Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Romania

Editorial | view first issue

public health; disease prevention; screening and early detection; lifestyle interventions and health education; digital and innovative prevention |

view journal scope | submit an article

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).

7 January 2026
ISPRS International Journal of Geo-Information | Highly Cited Papers in 2024–2025

“Synergy of Remote Sensing and Geospatial Technologies to Advance Sustainable Development Goals for Future Coastal Urbanization and Environmental Challenges in a Riverine Megacity”
by Minza Mumtaz, Syed Humayoun Jahanzaib, Waqar Hussain, Sadia Khan, Youssef M. Youssef, Saleh Qaysi, Abdalla Abdelnabi, Nassir Alarifi and Mahmoud E. Abd-Elmaboud
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(1), 30; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14010030
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/1/30

“Urban Vitality Measurement Through Big Data and Internet of Things Technologies”
by Young-Long Kim
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(1), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14010014
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/1/14

“Unraveling Spatial Nonstationary and Nonlinear Dynamics in Life Satisfaction: Integrating Geospatial Analysis of Community Built Environment and Resident Perception via MGWR, GBDT, and XGBoost”
by Di Yang, Qiujie Lin, Haoran Li, Jinliu Chen, Hong Ni, Pengcheng Li, Ying Hu and Haoqi Wang
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(3), 131; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14030131
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/3/131

“A Methodological Framework for Assessing Overtourism in Insular Territories—Case Study of Santorini Island, Greece”
by Akrivi Leka, Apostolos Lagarias, Anastasia Stratigea and Panayiotis Prekas
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(3), 106; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14030106
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/3/106  

“A Novel Evolutionary Deep Learning Approach for PM2.5 Prediction Using Remote Sensing and Spatial–Temporal Data: A Case Study of Tehran”
by Mehrdad Kaveh, Mohammad Saadi Mesgari and Masoud Kaveh
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(2), 42; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14020042
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/2/42

“Evaluation of Pedestrian-Perceived Comfort on Urban Streets Using Multi-Source Data: A Case Study in Nanjing, China”
by Jiarui Qin, Yizhe Feng, Yehua Sheng, Yi Huang, Fengyuan Zhang and Kaixuan Zhang
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(2), 63; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14020063
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/2/63  

“Investigating Social Vulnerability to Extreme Heat: Heat Islands and Climate Shelters in Urban Contexts: The Case of Bologna”
by Elisa Maccabiani, Munazza Usmani, Riccardo Nanni and Maurizio Napolitano
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14010017
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/1/17

“Fine-Tuning LLM-Assisted Chinese Disaster Geospatial Intelligence Extraction and Case Studies”
by Yaoyao Han, Jiping Liu, An Luo, Yong Wang and Shuai Bao
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(2), 79; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14020079
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/2/79  

“The Impact of Built-Up Area Dispersion on the Cultural Heritage of the Region of the South Aegean, Greece”
by Efstratia Chatzi, Evangelia-Theodora Derdemezi and Georgios Tsilimigkas
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2025, 14(3), 97; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi14030097
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/14/3/97  

“Investigating Spatial Effects through Machine Learning and Leveraging Explainable AI for Child Malnutrition in Pakistan”
by Xiaoyi Zhang, Muhammad Usman, Ateeq ur Rehman Irshad, Mudassar Rashid and Amira Khattak
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(9), 330; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13090330
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/9/330  

“The Application of Space Syntax to Enhance Sociability in Public Urban Spaces: A Systematic Review”
by Reza Askarizad, Patxi José Lamíquiz Daudén and Chiara Garau
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(7), 227; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13070227
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/7/227  

“Community Quality Evaluation for Socially Sustainable Regeneration: A Study Using Multi-Sourced Geospatial Data and AI-Based Image Semantic Segmentation”
by Jinliu Chen, Wenquan Gan, Ning Liu, Pengcheng Li, Haoqi Wang, Xiaoxin Zhao and Di Yang
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(5), 167; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13050167
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/5/167  

“Enhancing Maritime Navigational Safety: Ship Trajectory Prediction Using ACoAtt–LSTM and AIS Data”
by Mingze Li, Bing Li, Zhigang Qi, Jiashuai Li and Jiawei Wu
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(3), 85; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13030085
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/3/85  

“Is ChatGPT a Good Geospatial Data Analyst? Exploring the Integration of Natural Language into Structured Query Language within a Spatial Database”
by Yongyao Jiang and Chaowei Yang
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(1), 26; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13010026
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/1/26

“Influencing Factors of Street Vitality in Historic Districts Based on Multisource Data: Evidence from China”
by Bing Yu, Jing Sun, Zhaoxing Wang and Sanfeng Jin
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(8), 277; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13080277
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/8/277  

“Exploring the Spatiotemporal Effects of the Built Environment on the Nonlinear Impacts of Metro Ridership: Evidence from Xi’an, China”
by Yafei Xi, Quanhua Hou, Yaqiong Duan, Kexin Lei, Yan Wu and Qianyu Cheng
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(3), 105; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13030105
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/3/105  

“ChatGeoAI: Enabling Geospatial Analysis for Public through Natural Language, with Large Language Models”
by Ali Mansourian and Rachid Oucheikh
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(10), 348; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13100348
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/10/348  

“Dynamic Graph Convolutional Network-Based Prediction of the Urban Grid-Level Taxi Demand–Supply Imbalance Using GPS Trajectories”
by Haiqiang Yang and Zihan Li
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(2), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13020034
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/2/34  

“How Does the 2D/3D Urban Morphology Affect the Urban Heat Island across Urban Functional Zones? A Case Study of Beijing, China”
by Shouhang Du, Yuhui Wu, Liyuan Guo, Deqin Fan and Wenbin Sun
ISPRS Int. J. Geo-Inf. 2024, 13(4), 120; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijgi13040120
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2220-9964/13/4/120

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:

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/.

31 December 2025
MDPI INSIGHTS: The CEO's Letter #30 - Scaling with Integrity, Highly Cited Researchers, KEMÖ Consortium, Michele Parrinello, and Best PhD Thesis Awards

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


With colleagues at MDPI headquarters in Basel, representing the people behind our global growth and shared commitment to integrity.

Scaling with Integrity: A Year of Growth, Responsibility, and Trust

When I look back on 2025, one phrase seems to sum up the year: “Scaling with integrity.” That was our watchword for 2025, and it will remain so as we move forward in to 2026.

Our journal portfolio continued to grow in 2025, reflecting the trust of a widening proportion of the scholarly community.

Today, MDPI has 355 journals indexed in Scopus and 330 in Web of Science – a testimonial to the scale at which our journals meet established external quality criteria. During the year, 45 of our journals were newly accepted into Scopus and 29 into Web of Science (this excludes transferred journals to our portfolio that were already indexed), following rigorous, independent evaluation by the world’s leading indexing bodies

Meeting external quality benchmarks

These results underline the fact that scaling responsibly is not only about expanding our catalogue, but also about meeting external quality benchmarks consistently, transparently, and at scale. Our indexing performance remains one of the strongest independent validations of MDPI’s commitment to rigor, trust, and long-term sustainability.

Over the course of 2025, we made targeted investments to ensure that the integrity of our editorial process scaled to keep pace with our growth. We strengthened our editorial governance by doubling down on our dedicated Publication Ethics department, appointing a Head of Ethics, and expanding our research integrity team by the addition of new specialists plus the creation of embedded editorial ethics roles across key journals. We also introduced new internal ethics guidelines, pre-review integrity checks, and monitoring dashboards to help teams identify potential issues and apply consistent standards across our portfolio.

Besides investing in systems and tools, we of course also invested heavily in our people and culture, delivering organisation-wide training on topics such as image integrity, AI use in publishing, and ethical oversight, while actively engaging with the wider publishing community through COPE and STM forums.

All these efforts reflect a simple principle: growth only matters if it is matched by rigor, responsibility, and trust.

Technology and AI: Supporting the editorial decision-making process

At MDPI, AI is designed to assist, not replace, editorial decision-making. It is one element in a broader system that combines people, technology, and processes to support scale responsibly.

In 2025, we continued to invest heavily in technology that supports quality rather than shortcuts. Our AI team doubled in size, ensuring that increased automation goes hand-in-hand with expertise and oversight. Proprietary AI tools such as Scholar Finder have significantly improved the precision of reviewer matching, while Ethicality has been widely adopted across editorial workflows to identify contextual signals, such as scope alignment and citation behaviour, so that human judgment can be applied where it matters most.

Partnerships: Institutional Open Access Program (IOAP) agreements and Societies

Our recent growth is also reflected in the strength of our partnerships. In 2025, we entered into more than 150 new IOAP agreements, bringing our total to 975 active agreements worldwide. This activity included the signing of our first-ever consortium agreements in North America, renewals of all major national consortia in the UK, Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, Austria, and Croatia, and the conclusion of several flat-fee agreements. At the same time, we concluded a total of 30 agreements, encompassing 24 new Society affiliations, four strategic publishing partnerships, and two journal acquisitions.

In 2025, we opened MDPI USA in Philadelphia – our latest global office, which complements our Toronto office in representing North America. MDPI USA is responsible for accelerating Open Access in the US through ongoing support of our scholars and for expanding our institutional and society partnerships.

On the other side of the globe, meanwhile, we signed an IOAP agreement in India, allowing researchers discounted Article Processing Charges (APCs), streamlined APC management for universities, and visibility into submissions, supporting India’s push for wider Open Access by offering flexible models and helping institutions meet national mandates such as Plan S.

Sustainability, sponsorships and awards

We continued to expand our sustainability efforts during 2025, hosting the 11th World Sustainability Forum, awarding CHF 125,000 in sustainability-related funding, and launching the Z-Forum on Sustainability and Innovation conference, which will officially take place in January 2026.

We also saw a record year for conference sponsorships and awards (while establishing new awards such as the Michele Parrinello Award), recognising scholars across disciplines and reinforcing our commitment to supporting the global research community at every stage of the academic journey.

Deepening our relationships

In 2025, I had the opportunity to travel more widely than ever before on MDPI business, meeting many of our stakeholders face to face and relishing the opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of their science communication needs. It was also excellent to visit a large number of MDPI offices and witness the commitment and service orientation of so many of our colleagues around the world. I shall resume my itinerary in the new year, and I look forward to many more such interactions.

Looking ahead to 2026, we will be celebrating a very significant milestone: 30 years of MDPI. From our foundation as a single Open Access journal in 1996 to the global publishing organisation we are today, our mission has remained consistent: advancing Open Access through rigorous and trustworthy scientific communication.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank all our stakeholders – authors, Editors-in-Chief, Editorial Board members, and reviewers – who have placed their trust in us during 2025. On behalf of the entire MDPI team, I look forward to deepening our relationships yet further in 2026 and celebrating 30 Years of Open Science at MDPI, something we’ve built together.


Basel, Switzerland, where MDPI was founded in 1996.

Impactful Research

621 MDPI Editors Named Highly Cited Researchers in 2025

I am pleased to share an important milestone for our editorial community and for MDPI. In late November, Clarivate announced the 2025 Highly Cited Researchers, and 621 MDPI Editorial Board Members were included among the most influential scientific contributors over the past decade! 

The 621 editors come from 33 countries, representing 21 scientific disciplines, and account for nearly one in every ten Highly Cited Researchers globally. This recognition speaks to the depth of expertise across our Editorial Boards and the strength of the scientific communities that choose to collaborate with MDPI. It is important to note that while citation metrics are not in themselves a proxy for quality, they do offer one lens on sustained scientific influence.

“Our strength comes from the scientific communities who choose to work with us”

Why this is important

Having more than 600 editors recognized on this list highlights:

  • The high level of expertise guiding peer review across our journals
  • The global and disciplinary diversity within our Editorial Boards
  • Our commitment to maintaining strong, knowledgeable, and engaged editorial oversight

Impactful science is of course shaped by broad, diverse research communities, and no single metric captures the full picture of research quality. However, this recognition does serve as meaningful, independent affirmation of the calibre of many editors who contribute to MDPI’s work.

A closer look at the recognition

Clarivate’s methodology highlights researchers whose publications rank in the top one per cent by citation count, reflecting consistent influence over the past decade. The process includes:

  • Evaluation of c. 200,000 highly cited papers
  • Removal of retracted publications
  • Filtering of papers with unusually large authorship groups to focus on clear contributions

That so many of our editors meet these thresholds reflects the impact of the communities behind our journals.

What this means going forward

This recognition underlines the fact that our strength comes from the scientific communities who choose to work with us.

For authors, partners, and readers, it confirms that:

  • MDPI journals benefit from editorial guidance grounded in active, high-impact research
  • Our Editorial boards include leaders who are helping shape the future direction of their fields
  • MDPI continues to attract experts who value openness, efficiency, and scientific integrity

For our internal teams, it is a reminder that the work we do every day (supporting editors, refining workflows, and improving systems) directly contributes to the trust placed in MDPI by researchers worldwide.

Thank you to all our editorial teams, publishing staff, and journal relationship specialists, and to everyone who collaborates with our Editorial Boards. Achievements like this are only possible because of your ongoing hard work, dedication, and collaboration.


From our first annual MDPI UK Summit in Manchester, bringing together over 30 Chief Editors and Editorial Board Members to discuss MDPI’s mission, achievements, and collaborations in the UK.

Inside MDPI

MDPI Launches the Michele Parrinello Award for Computational Physical Science

In case you missed it, in November, we announced the launch of the Michele Parrinello Award. This new biennial international award will recognize pioneering contributions in computational physical science. The award honours Michele Parrinello, one of the most influential scientists of the past half-century in atomistic simulations and computational materials research.

This award reflects MDPI’s long-standing commitment to recognizing scientific excellence, supporting foundational research, and inspiring the next generation of scholars across disciplines.

“Be confident that what you do is meaningful”

Honouring a transformative scientific legacy

Professor Parrinello’s work has fundamentally reshaped how scientists model matter at the atomic scale. Together with Roberto Car, he introduced ab initio molecular dynamics, widely known as the Car–Parrinello method, opening new pathways in electronic structure calculations and molecular simulations. His subsequent contributions, including the Parrinello–Rahman method and metadynamics, have become core tools across physics, chemistry, materials science, and increasingly biology.

“Do not be afraid of new things. I see it many times when we discuss a new thing that young people are scared to go against the mainstream a little bit, thinking, ‘What is going to happen to me?’ and so on. Be confident that what you do is meaningful, and do not be afraid, do not listen too much to what other people have to say.”

 – Professor Michele Parrinello

A global, community-led award

The award committee is chaired by Xin-Gao Gong, Professor of Physics at Fudan University and academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

The Institute for Computational Physical Sciences at Fudan University will serve as the supporting institute, reinforcing the award’s international and cross-cultural foundation.

Nominations for the first edition of the Michele Parrinello Award opened on 1 November 2025, with submissions accepted until March 2026. The award will recognize scientists whose work has advanced computational physical science across physics, chemistry, and materials research – fields increasingly central to energy, sustainability, advanced manufacturing, and technological innovation.

Why this matters for MDPI

The Michele Parrinello Award is part of the MDPI Sustainability Foundation, which supports science as a driver of long-term societal progress.

Alongside other foundation-level honours, including the World Sustainability Award, the Emerging Sustainability Leader Award, and the Tu Youyou Award, this new prize builds on our role in supporting excellence across career stages and disciplines.

MDPI journals and programs continue to recognize researchers through Best Paper Awards, Young Investigator Awards, Travel Awards, Best PhD Thesis Awards, and Outstanding Reviewer Awards. Together, these initiatives reflect a simple belief: strong scientific communities are built through recognition, trust, and sustained support.

As MDPI approaches its 30th anniversary, the launch of the Michele Parrinello Award highlights our commitment not only to publishing research but also to helping shape the future of science by celebrating those who expand its boundaries.

Coming Together for Science

KEMÖ Consortium (Austria) Extends Open Access Agreement with MDPI until 2027

I’m pleased to share that MDPI has renewed its Institutional Open Access Program (IOAP) agreement with the Austrian library consortium KEMÖ, extending our partnership through 2027.

The renewed agreement now includes 23 Austrian institutions, with the Medical University of Vienna and the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences (BOKU) joining the partnership. Participating institutions benefit from APC discounts across MDPI’s more than 495 journals, with centralized funding options further reducing the administrative burden for researchers and libraries.

“This renewal reflects shared commitment to advancing Open Access publishing in Europe”

Austria continues to be an important and engaged research community for MDPI, with 525+ Austrian Editorial Board Members, eight Editors-in-Chief, and 15 Section Editors-in-Chief contributing to our journals.

This renewal reflects long-term trust and shared commitment to advancing Open Access publishing in Europe, and improves MDPI’s collaboration with national OA infrastructures such as the Open Access Monitor Austria. Such long-term agreements show how MDPI’s growth is increasingly built on institutional trust, collaboration, and shared commitment to Open Access.

A big thank-you to the IOAP team and everyone involved in supporting this partnership.

Closing Thoughts

Celebrating the Next Generation of Scholars: MDPI’s 2024 Best PhD Thesis Awards

One of the privileges of working in scholarly publishing is supporting the beginning of new scientific journeys. We recently announced the recipients of MDPI’s 2024 Best PhD Thesis Awards, recognizing some of the most promising emerging researchers across disciplines.

These awards do more than celebrate academic excellence. They reflect something deeper about our mission: supporting the next generation of authors and the future of Open Science.

Recognition of Excellence

This year, we made awards to 55 early-career researchers across seven fields:

For those of you who have completed a PhD, you’ll know first-hand that behind each number is a story of perseverance, curiosity, and sustained effort. These researchers represent institutions around the world, with thesis topics spanning:

  • Brain–machine interfaces and neural engineering
  • Sustainable materials and next-generation batteries
  • Cancer genomics, tumour microenvironments, and immunotherapy
  • AI-driven image analysis, robotics, and computational models
  • Climate change monitoring and environmental risk assessment
  • Regenerative medicine, biomaterials, and drug development

These dissertations are early signs of the scientific directions that will shape the coming decade.

“Our mission is about building a global community of authors”

Why this is important

Every year, millions of scholars begin their research careers with limited visibility and few platforms for sharing their work. By recognizing outstanding PhD theses, we elevate authors early in their academic journeys, build MDPI’s connection to the global research community, reinforce our commitment to quality and rigor, and highlight the depth and breadth of scholarship published across our portfolio (from biology to materials science to mathematics).

A foretaste of the future

These 55 awardees represent the next generation of researchers whose work will influence science, policy, and society in the years ahead. What we support today helps shape the scientific ecosystem of tomorrow. Our mission goes beyond publishing papers. It is about building a global community of authors who will define the next era of scientific discovery.

To explore more about MDPI Awards, including current and upcoming Best PhD Thesis Awards, please click here.

Thank you to the editors, reviewers, and teams across MDPI who make these awards possible each year.

Everything we achieved this year was made possible by the collective effort of our global teams and the trust placed in us by the scholarly community. Thank you again, and here’s to the successful continuation of our collaboration in 2026!

Stefan Tochev
Chief Executive Officer
MDPI AG

11 December 2025
Article Layout and Template Revised for Future Volumes

We are pleased to announce updates to our article template, aimed at improving the readability and visual appeal of our publications. The following updates will be applied to articles published in volumes in 2026, starting from 19 December 2025.

Left information bar:

  • Updated the logo and URL for “Check for updates”;
  • Removed the “Citation” section (Note: Citation details remain accessible via “Cite” in the online article version);
  • Changed the link in “Copyright” to a hyperlink format.

Footer:

  • Added a DOI link at the bottom-right corner of each page.

The updated template is now available for download from the Instructions for Authors page of each journal.

We hope that the new version of the template will provide users with better experience and make the process more convenient.

For any questions or suggestions, please contact our production team at production@mdpi.com.

18 November 2025
Meet Us at the Conference on Geoinformation 2025, 24–28 November 2025, Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico


MDPI will be attending the Conference on Geoinformation 2025 in Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico, which will take place from 24 to 28 November 2025. The Latin American Society for Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Systems (SELPER) organizes the SELPER National Conference every two years in Mexico. This event is aimed at public and private organizations working in resource management, urban planning, spatial data infrastructure, risk management and, in general, all academic and scientific agencies working with Geographic Information Systems and Remote Sensing Technology. This two-day Congress offers several multidisciplinary discussion forums for the advancement of geospatial technologies through interactive plenary sessions led by leading researchers and agencies in the region. This year’s Congress theme is “Cooperatives build a better world”. The United Nations declared 2025 as the International Year of Cooperatives with the aim of reflecting the global impact of cooperative models, which are a crucial solution to address global challenges. If you are attending the conference, please visit our booth; our delegates look forward to meeting you in person and answering any questions you may have.

The following open access journals will be represented at the conference:

  • Remote Sensing (leading);
  • IJGI (leading);
  • Atmosphere;
  • Climate;
  • Geographies;
  • GeoHazards;
  • Geomatics.

17 November 2025
Topics Webinar | EO&GEO Series: GIS Day – GeoAI Frontiers: Advancing Trajectory Analysis and LLMs for the Future of Autonomous Geospatial Systems, 19 November 2025


This special webinar is organized to celebrate GIS Day and raise awareness of the importance of geography and GIS technology.

In the 2025 edition, the webinar presents GeoAI Frontiers – Trajectory Analysis, LLMs, and the Future of Autonomous Geospatial Systems, designed to explore both the foundational methodologies and the latest advancements shaping the field of Geospatial Information Science (GIScience).

Our objective is to provide attendees with a comprehensive view of critical techniques for analyzing spatial change (such as Trajectory Analysis) while simultaneously offering in-depth perspectives on the most transformative emerging technology: the integration of Generative AI and Large Language Models (LLMs) into geospatial workflows. The session will cover the impact of these technologies across key areas, including geospatial education, cloud-native solutions, and the strategic vision for creating Autonomous GIS platforms. Attendees will gain actionable insights into the evolution of analysis and data generation at the frontier of AI.

Date: 19 November 2025
Time:
3:00 p.m. CET | 9:00 a.m. EST
Webinar ID:
828 0337 4217

Register now for free!

Speaker/Presentation

Time in CET

Time in EST

Prof. Dr. Eliseo Clementini
Chair Introduction

3:00–3:10 p.m.

9:00–9:10 a.m.

Prof. Dr. Robert Gilmore Pontius Jr.
Trajectory Analysis Describes Gross Losses, Gross Gains, and Alternation in a Time Series of Maps

3:10–3:30 p.m.

9:10–9:30 a.m.

Prof. Dr. Hartwig H. Hochmair
Perspectives on GeoAI: LLMs in Education, Spatial Representation, and Cloud-Native Tech (Student Chatbot Use and Perception in Two Geomatics Courses)

3:30–3:50 p.m.

9:30–9:50 a.m.

Dr. Hao Li
Perspectives on GeoAI: LLMs in Education, Spatial Representation, and Cloud-Native Tech (Leveraging GeoAI and Cross-View Imagery for Rapid Disaster Response)

3:50–4:10 p.m.

9:50–10:10 a.m.

Dr. Levente Juhász
Perspectives on GeoAI: LLMs in Education, Spatial Representation, and Cloud-Native Tech (Cloud-Native Frameworks as Enabling Technologies in Geospatial Data Science)

4:10–4:30 p.m.

10:10–10:30 a.m.

Q&A Session

4:30–4:45 p.m.

10:30–10:45 a.m.

Prof. Dr. Eliseo Clementini
Closing of Webinar

4:45–4:50 p.m.

10:45–10:50 a.m.

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information on how to join the webinar. Registrations with academic or institutional email addresses will be prioritized.

Unable to attend? Feel free to register nonetheless; we will inform you once a recording of the webinar becomes available.

Webinar Chair and Keynote Speakers:

  • Prof. Dr. Eliseo Clementini, Department of Industrial and Information Engineering and Economics, University of L’Aquila, Italy;
  • Prof. Dr. Robert Gilmore Pontius Jr., School of Geography at Clark University in the United States of America;
  • Prof. Hartwig H. Hochmair, Geomatics Sciences, University of Florida, USA;
  • Dr. Hao Li, Department of Geography, National University of Singapore;
  • Dr. Levente Juhász, GIS Center, Florida International University, USA.

Relevant Special Issues:
Advances in AI-Driven Geospatial Analysis and Data Generation (2nd Edition)
Guest Editors: Dr. Levente Juhász, Prof. Dr. Hartwig H. Hochmair and Dr. Hao Li
Deadline for Manuscript Submission: 31 December 2025

Indoor Mobile Mapping and Location-Based Knowledge Services
Guest Editors: Prof. Dr. Eliseo Clementini and Dr. Zhiyong Zhou
Deadline for Manuscript Submission: 31 December 2025

LLM4GIS: Large Language Models for GIS
Guest Editors: Prof. Dr. Huayi Wu and Prof. Dr. Zhipeng Gui
Deadline for Manuscript Submission: 31 August 2026

For more information about this webinar, please visit the following link: https://sciforum.net/event/Topics-45.

If you have any questions about this webinar, please contact journal.webinar@mdpi.com.

Topics Webinar Secretariat

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