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Announcements
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.
3 December 2025
Information | Highly Cited Papers in 2024
1. “Recurrent Neural Networks: A Comprehensive Review of Architectures, Variants, and Applications”
by Ibomoiye Domor Mienye, Theo G. Swart and George Obaido
Information 2024, 15(9), 517; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15090517
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/9/517
2. “Artificial Intelligence-Enabled Intelligent Assistant for Personalized and Adaptive Learning in Higher Education”
by Ramteja Sajja, Yusuf Sermet, Muhammed Cikmaz, David Cwiertny and Ibrahim Demir
Information 2024, 15(10), 596; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15100596
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/10/596
3. “Generative Pre-Trained Transformer (GPT) in Research: A Systematic Review on Data Augmentation”
by Fahim Sufi
Information 2024, 15(2), 99; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15020099
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/2/99
4. “Optimized Ensemble Learning Approach with Explainable AI for Improved Heart Disease Prediction”
by Ibomoiye Domor Mienye and Nobert Jere
Information 2024, 15(7), 394; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15070394
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/7/394
5. “The Convergence of Artificial Intelligence and Blockchain: The State of Play and the Road Ahead”
by Dhanasak Bhumichai, Christos Smiliotopoulos, Ryan Benton, Georgios Kambourakis and Dimitrios Damopoulos
Information 2024, 15(5), 268; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15050268
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/5/268
6. “FUSeg: The Foot Ulcer Segmentation Challenge”
by Chuanbo Wang, Amirreza Mahbod, Isabella Ellinger, Adrian Galdran, Sandeep Gopalakrishnan, Jeffrey Niezgoda and Zeyun Yu
Information 2024, 15(3), 140; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15030140
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/3/140
7. “Toward Generating a New Cloud-Based Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) Dataset and Cloud Intrusion Traffic Characterization”
by MohammadMoein Shafi, Arash Habibi Lashkari, Vicente Rodriguez and Ron Nevo
Information 2024, 15(4), 195; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15040195
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/4/195
8. “Optimization of Traditional Stock Market Strategies Using the LSTM Hybrid Approach”
by Ive Botunac, Jurica Bosna and Maja Matetić
Information 2024, 15(3), 136; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15030136
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/3/136
9. “Unmanned Autonomous Intelligent System in 6G Non-Terrestrial Network”
by Xiaonan Wang, Yang Guo and Yuan Gao
Information 2024, 15(1), 38; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15010038
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/1/38
10. “Mapping the Landscape of Misinformation Detection: A Bibliometric Approach”
by Andra Sandu, Ioana Ioanăș, Camelia Delcea, Laura-Mădălina Geantă and Liviu-Adrian Cotfas
Information 2024, 15(1), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/info15010060
Available online: https://www.mdpi.com/2078-2489/15/1/60
6 November 2025
MDPI Launches the Michele Parrinello Award for Pioneering Contributions in Computational Physical Science
MDPI is delighted to announce the establishment of the Michele Parrinello Award. Named in honor of Professor Michele Parrinello, the award celebrates his exceptional contributions and his profound impact on the field of computational physical science research.
The award will be presented biennially to distinguished scientists who have made outstanding achievements and contributions in the field of computational physical science—spanning physics, chemistry, and materials science.
About Professor Michele Parrinello
"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
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Born in Messina in 1945, he received his degree from the University of Bologna and is currently affiliated with the Italian Institute of Technology. Professor Parrinello is known for his many technical innovations in the field of atomistic simulations and for a wealth of interdisciplinary applications ranging from materials science to chemistry and biology. Together with Roberto Car, he introduced ab initio molecular dynamics, also known as the Car–Parrinello method, marking the beginning of a new era both in the area of electronic structure calculations and in molecular dynamics simulations. He is also known for the Parrinello–Rahman method, which allows crystalline phase transitions to be studied by molecular dynamics. More recently, he has introduced metadynamics for the study of rare events and the calculation of free energies. |
For his work, he has been awarded many prizes and honorary degrees. He is a member of numerous academies and learned societies, including the German Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften, the British Royal Society, and the Italian Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, which is the major academy in his home country of Italy.
Award Committee
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The award committee will be chaired by Professor Xin-Gao Gong, a computational condensed matter physicist, academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and professor at the Department of Physics, Fudan University. Professor Xin-Gao Gong will lead a panel of several senior experts in the field to oversee the evaluation and selection process. The Institute for Computational Physical Sciences at Fudan University (Shanghai, China), led by Professor Xin-Gao Gong, will serve as the supporting institute for the award. |
"We hope the Michele Parrinello Award will recognize scientists who have made significant contributions to the field of computational condensed matter physics and at the same time set a benchmark for the younger generation, providing clear direction for their pursuit—this is precisely the original intention behind establishing the award."
——Professor Xin-Gao Gong
The first edition of the award was officially launched on 1 November 2025. Nominations will be accepted before the end of March 2026. For further details, please visit mparrinelloaward.org.
About the MDPI Sustainability Foundation and MDPI Awards 
The Michele Parrinello Award is part of the MDPI Sustainability Foundation, which is dedicated to advancing sustainable development through scientific progress and global collaboration. The foundation also oversees the World Sustainability Award, the Emerging Sustainability Leader Award, and the Tu Youyou Award. The establishment of the Michele Parrinello Award will further enrich the existing award portfolio, providing continued and diversified financial support to outstanding professionals across various fields.
In addition to these foundation-level awards, MDPI journals also recognize outstanding contributions through a range of honors, including Best Paper Awards, Outstanding Reviewer Awards, Young Investigator Awards, Travel Awards, Best PhD Thesis Awards, Editor of Distinction Awards, and others. These initiatives aim to recognize excellence across disciplines and career stages, contributing to the long-term vitality and sustainability of scientific research.
Find more information on awards here.
4 November 2025
MDPI INSIGHTS: The CEO's Letter #28 - WSF11, Nobel Laureates, Proofig AI, Romania Summit, STM and FBF
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

Highlights from the 11th World Sustainability Forum in Barcelona
I’m pleased to share some highlights from the 11th World Sustainability Forum (WSF 11), held in Barcelona on 2–3 October 2025 under the theme Sustainable and Resilient Cities.
Why WSF matters
The WSF series is a flagship initiative for MDPI and is supported by the MDPI Sustainability Foundation. It serves as a transdisciplinary platform for researchers, policymakers, and stakeholders to engage on sustainability challenges. WSF is now held annually as part of our commitment to maintain momentum in the sustainability discourse.
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This year’s Barcelona edition focused on urban resilience, landscape design, and social community impact in the sustainability space. Over 48 hours of sessions, we brought together leading minds across disciplines to translate vision into practice. With participants from 53 countries across all continents, WSF 11 was truly global in scope.

“WSF is now held annually as part of our commitment to maintain momentum in the sustainability discourse”
What made WSF 11 especially successful (from my vantage point) was the level of positive engagement with our participants. Chief editors, researchers, and attendees repeatedly told me how professionally executed the event was, highlighting the high energy, logistical smoothness and quality of MDPI’s event management. That kind of recognition from peers really builds our reputation as more than just a publisher, but as a convener of meaningful scientific dialogue.
Our conferences are a form of experiential marketing as they create memorable and immersive connections between a brand and attendees. These positive associations build promotion and brand loyalty, ultimately impacting the MDPI’s trust and reputation for the better.
WSF 11: By the numbers
Here’s a quick snapshot of WSF 11’s scale and reach:
- 181 registrations across global participants.
- 8 keynote speakers and 5 invited speakers.
- 144 abstracts accepted (over 355 submitted), resulting in 75 short talks and 69 posters.
- 53 countries were represented across all continents, making it a truly international event.
- First time that we ran parallel sessions for WSF (an ambitious program).
- A dedicated awards ceremony to honour outstanding sustainability research: World Sustainability Award (WSA) x 2 winners, and Emerging Sustainability Leader Award (ESLA) x 3 winners.
Interviews with our World Sustainability Award Winners
One of the most rewarding parts of WSF is recognizing researchers whose work advances sustainability in powerful ways. In our Blog series, Daniella Maritan-Thomson (Content Specialist, MDPI) interviewed the two winners of the World Sustainability Award, Professor Dr. Stuart Pimm and Dr. Abdelbagi M. Ismail, who offered insights to the human side of sustainability research, the people behind the data, and the stories behind the science.
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Prof. Stuart Pimm, whose decades of conservation work make him a leader in biodiversity preservation, reflected on his WSF Award experience and research in this interview: [Interview: Prof Stuart Pimm] |
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Dr. Abdelbagi M. Ismail, an expert in crop improvement and winner of the WSF Award, shares his journey and perspectives here: [Interview: Dr Abdelbagi M. Ismail] |
“Our conferences create memorable and immersive connections”
Emerging Sustainability Leader Award winners

Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI), Prof. Dr. Vhahangwele Masindi, Dr. Katya Rhodes, and Prof. Dr. Myriam Ertz (left to right).
We also recognized three recipients of the Emerging Sustainability Leader Award: Prof. Dr. Vhahangwele Masindi, Dr. Katya Rhodes, and Prof. Dr. Myriam Ertz, for their contributions as early-career researchers advancing sustainability through innovation, impact, and academic excellence across the field.
What this means for MDPI
- Building our global identity in events
WSF is a marquee MDPI event, not just a gathering, but a statement of how we wish to position ourselves in the global sustainability ecosystem. The positive feedback helps us build on our approach for future editions, so that we remain a reference point for quality, relevance, and engagement. - Expanding capacity across offices
The success of WSF 11 in Barcelona’s would not have happened without great teamwork from Basel, Barcelona, Romania, the UK, and the APAC Conference team. Thanks to everyone for their work to bring this ambitious event to life. - Supporting MDPI’s mission
At this event, I had the opportunity to present on MDPI's role in Open Access, sustainability publishing, and the intersection of science and policy. WSF is not only about the science; it’s also a platform for us to position MDPI as a thought leader and a collaborator in shaping the future of sustainable research.
I look forward to the WSF momentum as we work towards WSF 12 in Hong Kong, which is scheduled for August 2026.

MDPI Colleagues at the 11th World Sustainability Forum in Barcelona, Spain, 2–3 October 2025.
Impactful Research

Celebrating 2025 Nobel Laureates who have published with MDPI
October is always an inspiring month in science. It’s when the world turns its attention to the Nobel Prize announcements, recognizing discoveries that have changed how we understand the world.
Over the years, many distinguished researchers who have received the Nobel Prize have chosen to publish their work with MDPI. These are scientists whose breakthroughs have shaped entire fields of research, and who have entrusted our Open Access journals to share their findings with the world.
“The work we support can be world-class and world-changing”
Congratulations to the 2025 Laureates
Dozens of Nobel Laureates have published in our journals: as at 2024, more than 40 laureates had contributed over 115 articles across more than 35 MDPI journals. Congratulations to the three 2025 Nobel prize-winners who have published with MDPI during their careers. Below are links to their MDPI publications and announcements for further reading:
- Omar M. Yaghi (Chemistry)
- Awarded for his pioneering work on metal-organic frameworks (MOFs). MDPI published his article “Covalent Organic Frameworks: Organic Chemistry Beyond the Molecule” in Molecules (2017).
- MDPI Announcement: https://www.mdpi.com/news/13455
- Nobel Prize in Chemistry – The Science Behind the Prize
- Shimon Sakaguchi (Medicine)
- Recognized for discoveries in immune-system self-tolerance and regulatory T-cells. Published in Cancers (2021).
- MDPI Announcement: https://www.mdpi.com/news/13443
- Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine – The Science Behind the Prize
- John M. Martinis (Physics)
- Recognized for quantum tunnelling in electrical circuits. MDPI’s Journal of Nuclear Engineering (2025) includes his co-authored work.
- MDPI Announcement: https://www.mdpi.com/news/13450
- Nobel Prize in Physics – The Science Behind the Prize
These connections strengthen our mission to make research freely available and ensure that transformative ideas reach the widest possible audience.
Publishing at the leading edge of knowledge
The privilege of hosting such contributors resonates deeply with our editorial teams. It shows that top-tier scientific work has a home at MDPI, which builds our visibility in the research community. It signals that our publishing model, our editorial workflows, and our commitment to Open Access are respected at the very highest levels of science. It also gives our authors, reviewers, editors and staff the message that the work we support can be world-class and world-changing.
Publishing at the leading edge of knowledge isn’t just about individual papers – it’s about the ecosystem of support, transparency, and accessibility that makes discovery possible. Let’s continue to build a publishing platform and provide a service that attracts and enables both everyday research and the breakthroughs of tomorrow.
Inside MDPI

Strengthening Research Integrity: MDPI partners with Proofig AI
I’m pleased to share that MDPI has entered a multi-year partnership with Proofig AI, a leader in AI-driven proofing and integrity software for scientific publishing. This follows the success of our pilot program, in which Proofig AI proved highly effective in detecting duplicated, altered, and manipulated images across biomedical submissions.
Safeguarding the credibility of the research we publish
Research integrity is at the core of MDPI’s mission. The life sciences, in particular, face increasing risks of image-related issues due to advanced editing tools and generative AI. By integrating Proofig AI into our workflows, we improve our ability to detect issues early, reduce post-publication corrections, and safeguard the credibility of the research we publish.
Pilot outcomes
- Successful detection of duplicated confocal and histology images, even when altered to disguise similarities.
- Early results showed a significant drop in post-publication image manipulation flags year-on-year.
- Positive feedback from editors and staff highlighted the tool’s ease of use and reliability.

Dr. Dror Kolodkin-Gal (co-founder and CEO of Proofig AI) said:
“The MDPI team conducted a highly professional and carefully monitored pilot, achieving excellent results in detecting problematic images.
Their fast and effective integration process was impressive, and we are excited to contribute to this important collaboration.”

Sanita Meijere (IT Product and Project Manager, MDPI), shared:
“For more than a year, we’ve tested all the available image manipulation detection tools. Proofig AI’s quality and ease of use, alongside positive feedback from our internal users, made their software a clear stand-out.
We’re thrilled to be moving forward with this partnership, ensuring we do our utmost to protect MDPI’s biomedical journals. Using this advanced image proofing software reaffirms MDPI’s commitment to maintaining the highest standards in research integrity.”
Raising the bar for integrity
This partnership sets a new benchmark for quality control in biomedical publishing.

As Tim Tait-Jamieson (Head of Publication Ethics, MDPI), explains:
“The life sciences are disproportionately affected by research integrity issues, making vigilance in this field especially critical. This is driven, in part, by the increasing sophistication of image editing software and generative AI.
Whether accidental or deliberate, image manipulation can have a lasting impact on credibility. By integrating Proofig AI into our editorial workflows, we strengthen our ability to detect scientific misconduct early and reduce post-publication amendments.”
Faster and more accurate quality control
Proofig will automatically flag potentially problematic images during submission checks, giving our editors more confidence in the integrity of manuscripts and freeing up time to focus on editorial decisions. The tool will also reduce the burden of manual checks, while supporting faster and more accurate quality control. This partnership reinforces MDPI's reputation as a publisher that takes integrity seriously and continues to invest in tools to support authors, editors, and reviewers alike.
A big thank-you to all colleagues who supported the pilot and rollout. You can read more in our MDPI Blog post.
Coming Together for Science

The MDPI Romania Summit 2025
On 21–22 October, I had the pleasure of joining our colleagues in Bucharest for the MDPI Romania Summit 2025. The event was organized by our Romania Marketing team, with support from colleagues across our Romanian offices. It brought together academics, policymakers, and collaborators to discuss the country’s evolving research landscape.
Over two days, we welcomed more than 30 participants, including Editorial Board Members, Guest Editors, and policy-makers from the Romanian research and education sectors, including representatives from the Romanian Academy and the National Commission for the Accreditation of Academic Titles (CNATDCU).
The discussions and presentations reflected the strength and growth of Romania’s research community and its active engagement in Open Access publishing.
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“The discussions and presentations reflected the strength and growth of Romania’s research community”
Romania’s role in Open Access
Romania loves Open Access and has emerged as one of MDPI’s most engaged national research communities. The numbers speak for themselves:
- 67% of all publications in Romania were Open Access in 2024.
- MDPI accounts for 39% of the country’s total OA publications (14,779 in 2024).
- Over the last five years (2020–2024), Romanian institutions published over 33,000 papers with MDPI.
- There are 460 active Editorial Board Members from Romania, including 8 Chief Editors.
- 29 institutions are part of our Institutional Open Access Program (IOAP), with 8 new members joining in 2025.
These numbers reflect the trust and reliable partnership we have built with the Romanian academic community.
Highlights from the Summit
The program covered a wide range of topics from MDPI’s achievements and updates to our editorial processes, peer-review quality, AI in publishing, IOAP and Open Access funding models, and publication ethics.
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Agenda Highlights:
- MDPI Introduction, Performance & Achievements, and Collaboration with Romania – Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI).
- Trust the Process: Editorial Workflow and Quality in Publishing – Dr. Liliane Auwerter (Scientific Review Group).
- Publication Ethics at MDPI: Safeguarding the Integrity of the Published Scholarly Record – Diana Cristina Apodaritei (Research Integrity Specialist).
- Institutional Partnerships – Becky Castellon (Institutional Partnerships Manager, MDPI).
- AI in Publishing and MDPI's Actions – Sanita Meijere (AI Product Manager).
- Closing Remarks – Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI).
Participants shared feedback and ideas for future collaborations, including organizing author workshops, possible conference collaborations, and strengthening our engagement with national institutions such as the Ministry of Education and Research and the National Council of Romanian Rectors.
As Acad. Dr. Nicolae-Victor Zamfir, Vice President of the Romanian Academy, noted during the discussions:
“The organization of the event is very timely, because MDPI is a publishing house in full development and expansion. The opinion of researchers is important for increasing the quality of published works.”
A collaborative future
Events like this remind us how essential it is to engage locally and listen directly to the voices of our editors, authors, and institutional partners. They help us build relationships, improve our understanding of the local market, and align our shared goals in advancing Open Access and research quality.
Thank you to everyone involved, especially our Romania Marketing team, who organized the event, and to all colleagues who continue to build relationships with our academic communities around the world.

Thank you!
A special thank-you to the Romanian Marketing team and all colleagues behind the scenes who made this Summit such a success. Your efforts are greatly appreciated. We look forward to building on this momentum with future Summits in Europe and beyond.
Closing Thoughts

STM and FBF 2025: Connecting Through Science and Publishing

Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI), Constanze Schelhorn (Head of Indexing, MDPI) at STM Conference, Frankfurt, 14 October 2025.
On 13–14 October, I attended the STM Frankfurt Conference 2025, my fourth visit to the Frankfurt event, and it continues to be one of the most valuable gatherings in our industry.
The STM meeting brings together the publishing community and key opinion leaders to speak on current trends and challenges shaping our industry.
This year’s theme – “Science Diplomacy: What is it and How Does it Work?” – unpacked the growing intersection of science, policy, and publishing.
Discussion topics ranged from what is science diplomacy and how publishers can contribute to global collaboration to how science communication can help maintain trust during an era of disruption.
I was joined by Dr. Constanze Schelhorn, our Head of Indexing, who met with representatives from Scopus, Web of Science, Digital Science, ProQuest, and other partners. These meetings give us a chance to share feedback on our collaborations, learn about new updates being developed, and build our relationships with indexing bodies.
“The STM meeting brings together the publishing community and key opinion leaders”
STM also provides a space to connect with industry peers, as I did with colleagues from Elsevier, Frontiers, Clarivate, Sage, and STM itself, reinforcing MDPI’s engagement within the broader publishing community. It was also nice to bump into some former colleagues and see them continuing to grow in their publishing careers.
At the Frankfurt Book Fair

The MDPI booth at the 2025 Frankfurt Book Fair.
Following STM, I spent the next day at the Frankfurt Book Fair (15–19 October) – one of the largest and most influential events in the publishing world.
It’s always inspiring to see the scale and energy of this global gathering, which spans everything from books and education to digital innovation and academic publishing.
We set up an MDPI booth to host discussions with partners, vendors, and researchers.
The Fair ran into the weekend, with colleagues from several MDPI departments attending to represent the company and connect with the scholarly community.
Events like STM and FBF are a nice reminder of how dynamic and interconnected our industry is, and how important it is for MDPI to continue taking part in global conversations about science, communication, and the future of publishing.
Chief Executive Officer
MDPI AG
27 October 2025
Prof. Dr. Leandros Maglaras Appointed Section Editor-in-Chief of Section “Information Security and Privacy” in Information
We are pleased to announce the appointment of Prof. Dr. Leandros Maglaras as the new Section Editor-in-Chief of the Section “Information Security and Privacy” in Information (ISSN: 2078-2489).
Prof. Dr. Leandros Maglaras is a Professor at the School of Computer Science and Informatics at De Montfort University, where he conducts research at the Cyber Security Centre and the Software Technology Research Laboratory. Recognized for his academic contributions, he is featured on Stanford University’s list of the World’s Top 2% Scientists.
He holds a PhD in electrical and computer engineering from the University of Thessaly, Greece. With significant public service experience, Prof. Maglaras has served as the Director of Greece’s Cyber Security Directorate and as the Head of the National Cyber Security Authority.
He has authored over 200 papers published in scientific journals and conference proceedings. Additionally, he serves on the editorial boards of several international peer-reviewed journals.
Prof. Maglaras is a Senior Member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, a member of the Institution of Engineering and Technology, and a member of the Technical Chamber of Greece. He has participated in numerous research programs across diverse fields, including vehicular and ICT technologies, sustainable development, cybersecurity, as well as the optimization and prediction of the dielectric behavior of air gaps.
The following is a short Q&A with Prof. Dr. Leandros Maglaras, who shared his vision for the journal with us, as well as his views on the current state of the field:
1. What appealed to you about the journal that made you want to take on the role as its Section Editor-in-Chief?
My decision to accept the role was driven by three main factors: the journal’s interdisciplinary relevance, its dedication to open science, and the strategic importance of the “Information Security and Privacy” Section itself.
The journal Information serves as a high-visibility, centralized platform for the core concepts driving the digital world: data, knowledge, and communication. In an era where security is a cross-disciplinary challenge, being published in a journal with a strong standing (e.g., Q2 in Computer Science/Information Systems) ensures our Section’s research reaches a wide, high-impact audience that includes AI engineers, data scientists, and information system architects.
Moreover, as a pioneering open access journal published by MDPI, Information aligns with my belief in the democratization of scientific knowledge. In a field like cybersecurity, where threats and defenses evolve daily, rapid and free access to the latest research is crucial for practitioners and academics globally.
Finally, the dedicated “Information Security and Privacy” Section offers a focused, high-quality home for vital work. It’s an honor to lead efforts to publish rigorous, cutting-edge research directly addressing the most complex and pressing global security and privacy challenges.
2. What is your vision for the Section?
My vision is to establish the “Information Security and Privacy” Section as the premier global reference point for impactful, forward-looking security research, fostering work that transitions quickly from theoretical proof to real-world application.
My priorities for the Section are as follows:
- Focus on Applied Resilience and Zero-Trust: We must move beyond simple perimeter defense. I will prioritize submissions that focus on resilient architectures, zero-trust models, and human-in-the-loop security validation for both conventional and new-age systems like Industrial Control Systems (ICSs) and Critical Infrastructures (CIs);
- Emphasizing AI/ML and Decentralized Systems: We will actively seek out research at the nexus of security and emerging technologies, including federated learning security, explainable AI (XAI) for threat detection, and privacy-preserving mechanisms in Blockchain/Web3 environments;
- Upholding Stringent Integrity: To maintain and enhance the journal’s reputation, my team and I will ensure a highly efficient, yet absolutely stringent, peer-review process, guaranteeing that all published work is scientifically sound, novel, and ethically responsible.
3. What does the future of this field of research look like?
The future of information security and privacy research is defined by three interconnected transformations: autonomy, decentralization, and privacy-by-design.
As attackers increasingly use AI, defenses must become autonomous. Future research will center on generative adversarial network (GAN) defenses, building trustworthy and secure AI models (Sec-AI/Trustworthy AI), and developing new models to predict novel threat vectors before they are observed in the wild.
In addition, the move toward decentralized systems (Blockchain, Web3) and the looming threat of quantum computing necessitate new research paths. This is translated into a sharp increase in work on post-quantum cryptography (PQC), homomorphic encryption, and highly secure distributed ledger technologies that balance transparency with data privacy.
Finally, privacy is shifting from a compliance issue to a core system requirement. The future of research lies in privacy-enhancing technologies (PETs), like differential privacy and secure multi-party computation, ensuring that user data can be analyzed for value without ever being exposed.
4. What do you think of the development of open access in the publishing field?
I view the development of open access (OA), particularly the MDPI model, not just as a desirable trend but as the necessary and inevitable future of scholarly communication. For a field as globally critical and time-sensitive as information security and privacy, the benefits are many. Open access ensures that critical, time-sensitive knowledge—such as new vulnerabilities, countermeasure strategies, and security protocols—is immediately and freely available to researchers, governments, and industry professionals around the world, regardless of their institutional budget. This accelerates the defensive cycle against global threats.
By removing paywalls, OA significantly increases the visibility, accessibility, and citation rate of published research, maximizing the scientific impact for our authors and the journal itself. OA fulfills the moral imperative to ensure that the public and industry can benefit directly from publicly funded scientific output.
The challenge now is to ensure that the speed and accessibility of open access publishing are consistently paired with the highest standards of rigor and ethical peer review, a standard MDPI is committed to upholding.
We wish Prof. Dr. Leandros Maglaras every success in his new position, and we look forward to his contributions to the journal.
15 October 2025
MDPI’s Newly Launched Journals in September 2025
Nine new journals covering a range of subjects launched their inaugural issues in September 2025. We are excited to be able to share with you the newest research rooted in the value of open access.
We extend our sincere thanks to all Editorial Board Members for their commitment and expertise. Each journal is dedicated to upholding 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.
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Founding Editor-in-Chief |
Journal Topics (Selected) |
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Prof. Dr. Joseph G. Grzywacz, San José State University, USA |
family formation and dynamics; family relationships; family diversity and structure; family processes; family challenges; global perspectives of family | |
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Prof. Dr. Chengkuo Lee, National University of Singapore, Singapore |
AIoT sensing technologies; distributed AI and federated learning; AI-enhanced edge analytics; sensor fusion in edge computing; low-power AI sensing; security and privacy in edge-AI systems; AI-driven optimization of IoT networks | |
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Prof. Dr. Steven Paul Nistico, Sapienza University of Rome, Italy |
aesthetics; reconstructive surgery and plastic surgery; dermatology; oral and maxillofacial surgery; surgical procedures; non-surgical procedures | |
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Prof. Dr. Mauro Tonelli, University of Pisa, Italy |
plasma physics and technology; atomic and molecular physics; nuclear physics; quantum physics and technology; dielectrics, ferroelectrics, and multiferroics; semiconductor physics and devices; engineering physics; material physics; biophysics| |
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Prof. Dr. Sergej M. Ostojic, University of Agder, Norway; |
biochemical research methods; biochemistry and molecular biology; cell biology; clinical and medicinal chemistry; clinical neurology; endocrinology and metabolism; medicine, general and internal; nutrition and dietetics; toxicology | |
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Prof. Dr. Michele Nappi, University of Salerno, Italy |
foundations and advancements in multimedia technologies; computational social media analytics; human–AI interaction in social contexts; multimedia understanding and generation for social insight; ethics, fairness, and privacy in multimedia systems | |
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Prof. Dr. Philippe Gorce, Toulon University, France |
ergonomic design and evaluation of workspaces, tools, and equipment; biomechanical analysis and ergonomic interventions for musculoskeletal health; cognitive workload assessment and management; human-computer interaction (HCI) and user experience (UX) research; ergonomic wearables; AI-driven ergonomic assessment tools; neuroergonomics | |
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Prof. Dr. Ronald Charles Sims, Utah State University, USA |
bioresources; bioproducts; bioenergy and biofuels; environmental protection; public health protection; biological waste treatment; biomass transformation; circular bioeconomy; bio-based materials and chemicals; bioresidues | |
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Prof. Dr. M. Jamal Deen, McMaster University, Canada |
device design and engineering; circuit design and system integration; applications and emerging technologies; materials and fabrication innovations; testing, reliability, and standards | |
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).
15 October 2025
Global Media and Information Literacy Week—“Minds over AI - MIL in Digital Spaces”, 24–31 October 2025
Global Media and Information Literacy (MIL) Week 2025 will be observed from 24 to 31 October, underscoring the importance of MIL in today’s digital age. The MIL week unites governments, educators, media professionals, youth, and civil society to advance the skills needed to critically access, evaluate, and use information and media. As a key competency, MIL helps address urgent challenges such as misinformation, disinformation, hate speech, declining trust in media, and the rapid growth of AI-driven digital transformations. By empowering people to think critically, act ethically, and understand their digital rights, MIL contributes to freedom of expression, diversity, peace, gender equality, and sustainable development.
At MDPI, we are proud to support this important initiative. Through our open access journals and events, we aim to provide a platform for researchers and practitioners to share knowledge, innovations, and best practices that strengthen media and information literacy worldwide. By fostering global collaboration and promoting scientific insights, we contribute to building a more informed, inclusive, and resilient society.

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Invited Speakers:
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Dr. Sara Pereira, |
Dr. Abu Kamruzzaman, |
Dr. Inês Amaral, |
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Prof. Dr. Rashid Mehmood Islamic University of Madinah, Saudi Arabia |
Dr. Mathias-Felipe de-Lima-Santos, |
Free to register for this webinar here!

“Who Really Leads? A Qualitative Exploration of Gender Equity in Leadership of Australian Newsrooms”
by Diana Bossio and Andrea Carson
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(5), 311; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14050311
“Deepfake-Driven Social Engineering: Threats, Detection Techniques, and Defensive Strategies in Corporate Environments”
by Kristoffer Torngaard Pedersen, Lauritz Pepke, Tobias Stærmose, Maria Papaioannou, Gaurav Choudhary and Nicola Dragoni
J. Cybersecur. Priv. 2025, 5(2), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcp5020018
“Deepfake Image Forensics for Privacy Protection and Authenticity Using Deep Learning”
by Saud Sohail, Syed Muhammad Sajjad, Adeel Zafar, Zafar Iqbal, Zia Muhammad and Muhammad Kazim
Information 2025, 16(4), 270; https://doi.org/10.3390/info16040270
“Australian Value or Political Rhetoric? The Media’s Use of the Fair Go in Australia”
by Ashleigh Marie Pantaleo, Matthew James Phillips, Antonia Hendrick and Brian Bishop
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(4), 198; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14040198
“Together against “the Truth Gap”: A Proposal to Fight Invisibility and Misinformation Affecting Women”
by Beatriz Martínez Rodríguez
Journal. Media 2024, 5(1), 298-310; https://doi.org/10.3390/journalmedia5010020
“Incidental Data: A Survey towards Awareness on Privacy-Compromising Data Incidentally Shared on Social Media”
by Stefan Kutschera, Wolfgang Slany, Patrick Ratschiller, Sarina Gursch, Patrick Deininger and Håvard Dagenborg
J. Cybersecur. Priv.2024, 4(1), 105-125; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcp4010006

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“Social Media Effects on Political Participation” |
“Visual Media Literacy in the Age of AI-Generated Content” |
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13 October 2025
MDPI’s Journal Cluster of Information Systems and Technology
Information systems rely on computer technology to collect, store, and transmit information throughout a network. As businesses and institutions become larger, the need for effective and reliable information systems increases. To address the demand for more sophisticated information systems, researchers from a multitude of disciplines work together to develop novel technologies and processes. Information science researchers apply knowledge from various academic areas such as computer science, data science, engineering, management and organization science.
This cluster of MDPI journals offers both broad and multidisciplinary journals as well as narrower and more specialized journals for scientists to disseminate their research.
The oldest journal in the cluster is Information, which is a broad journal covering many theoretical and applied aspects of information systems. MDPI also offers more specialized journals such as Cryptography and the Journal of Cybersecurity and Privacy. As security threats to information systems are constantly evolving, these open access journals allow scientists to keep up with the rapid rate of research. From informatics to multimedia, there will be an MDPI journal that is suitable to display research from any subdiscipline of information science.
The member journals of this cluster include the following:
- Analytics (ISSN: 2813-2203) focuses on theoretical, methodological, and technological aspects of systematic computational data analysis and aims to contribute to consolidating the discipline of data analytics from data analytics science and data analytics engineering. Analytics is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Carson K. Leung (University of Manitoba);
- Applied System Innovation (ISSN: 2571-5577) focuses on research which often combines concepts and methods spanning mechanics, mathematics, electrical engineering, control engineering, biomedical engineering, and other disciplines, and integrates theoretical models with numerical simulations to design innovative solutions that are applicable to industry and ordinary people’s lives. ASI is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Christos Douligeris (University of Piraeus);
- Cryptography (ISSN: 2410-387X) focuses on all areas of modern cryptography, including secret-key cryptography, public-key cryptography, hash functions, cryptanalysis, cryptographic protocols, and quantum safe cryptography as well as their practice, implementation, application, and related standards. Cryptography is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Josef Pieprzyk (CSIRO (The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation); Polish Academy of Science);
- Data (ISSN: 2306-5729) focuses on ‘data in science’ and covers a wide range of disciplines in which data is generated so that published data is discoverable and available for wider re-use. Data is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Jamal Jokar Arsanjani (Aalborg University, Denmark);
- Digital (ISSN: 2673-6470) focuses on digital technologies and digitization initiatives, digital transformation, digital innovations and digital applications in all areas. Digital is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Yannis Manolopoulos (University of York, Europe Campus);
- Informatics (ISSN: 2227-9709) focuses on the science of informatics and its application in multiple fields and includes technologies of information and communication as well as the biological, social, linguistic and cultural changes that initiate, accompany and complicate their development. Informatic is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Antony Bryant (Leeds Beckett University);
- Information (ISSN: 2078-2489) focuses on information science and technology, data, knowledge and communication. The journal is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Willy Susilo (University of Wollongong);
- Journal of Cybersecurity and Privacy (ISSN: 2624-800X) focuses on information, computer and network security, cryptography, cyber–physical system security, digital forensics, etc. The Journal of Cybersecurity and Privacy is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Danda B. Rawat (Howard University of Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science);
- Multimedia (ISSN: 3042-6308) is an open access journal dedicated to scientific research on the diverse applications and implications of multimedia across various domains, including communication, education, culture, psychology, and technology. Multimedia is led by Editor-in-Chief Prof. Dr. Michele Nappi (University of Salerno, Italy).
MDPI’s mission and values:
As a pioneer of academic open access publishing, MDPI has served the scientific community since 1996. We aim to foster scientific exchange in all forms across all disciplines. MDPI's guidelines for disseminating open science are based on the following values and guiding principles:
- Open Access—All of our content is published in open access and distributed under a Creative Commons License, providing free access to science and the latest research, allowing articles to be freely shared and content to be re-used with proper attribution;
- Timeliness and Efficiency—Publishing the latest research through thorough editorial work, ensuring a first decision is provided to authors in under 32 days and papers are published within 7-10 days upon acceptance;
- Simplicity—Offering user-friendly tools and services in one place to enhance the efficiency of our editorial process;
- High-Quality Service—Supporting scholars and their work by providing a range of options, such as journal publication at mdpi.com, early publication at preprints.org, and conferences on sciforum.net to positively impact research;
- Flexibility—Adapting and developing new tools and services to meet the research community's changing needs, driven by feedback from authors, editors, and readers;
- Rooted in Sustainability—Ensuring the long-term preservation of published papers and supporting the future of science through partnerships, sponsorships, and awards.
By adhering to these values and principles, MDPI remains committed to advancing scientific knowledge and promoting open science practices.
Selected Topics:
- “Decision Science Applications and Models (DSAM)”;
- “Recent Developments and Applications of Image Watermarking”.
Selected Articles:
Analytics
“A Parallel Implementation of the Differential Evolution Method”
by Vasileios Charilogis and Ioannis G. Tsoulos
Analytics 2023, 2(1), 17–30; https://doi.org/10.3390/analytics2010002
ASI
“Individual Environmental Risk Assessment and Management in Industry 4.0: An IoT-Based Model”
by Janaína Lemos, Pedro D. Gaspar and Tânia M. Lima
Appl. Syst. Innov. 2022, 5(5), 88; https://doi.org/10.3390/asi5050088
Cryptography
“A Practical Performance Benchmark of Post-Quantum Cryptography Across Heterogeneous Computing Environments”
by Maryam Abbasi, Filipe Cardoso, Paulo Váz, José Silva and Pedro Martins
Cryptography 2025, 9(2), 32; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryptography9020032
Data
“Computing the Commonalities of Clusters in Resource Description Framework: Computational Aspects”
by Simona Colucci, Francesco Maria Donini and Eugenio Di Sciascio
Data 2024, 9(10), 121; https://doi.org/10.3390/data9100121
Digital
“Unlocking the Power of Digital Commons: Data Cooperatives as a Pathway for Data Sovereign, Innovative and Equitable Digital Communities”
by Michael Max Bühler, Igor Calzada, Isabel Cane, Thorsten Jelinek, Astha Kapoor, Morshed Mannan, Sameer Mehta, Vijay Mookerje, Konrad Nübel, Alex Pentland et al.
Digital 2023, 3(3), 146–171; https://doi.org/10.3390/digital3030011
Informatics
“Large Language Models in Healthcare and Medical Domain: A Review”
by Zabir Al Nazi and Wei Peng
Informatics 2024, 11(3), 57; https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics11030057
Information
“A Comparative Analysis of Supervised and Unsupervised Models for Detecting Attacks on the Intrusion Detection Systems”
by Tala Talaei Khoei and Naima Kaabouch
Information 2023, 14(2), 103; https://doi.org/10.3390/info14020103
JCP
“Partial Fake Speech Attacks in the Real World Using Deepfake Audio”
by Abdulazeez Alali and George Theodorakopoulos
J. Cybersecur. Priv. 2025, 5(1), 6; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcp5010006
Multimedia
“Uses of Metaverse Recordings in Multimedia Information Retrieval”
by Patrick Steinert, Stefan Wagenpfeil, Ingo Frommholz and Matthias L. Hemmje
Multimedia 2025, 1(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/multimedia1010002
10 October 2025
Meet Us at the 1st Online Conference on Technologies, 11–13 November 2026
Date: 11–13 November 2026, CET, Online
Conference website: https://sciforum.net/event/IOCTe2026
We invite you to attend this event organized by MDPI’s Technologies (ISSN: 2227-7080, Impact Factor 3.6, CITESCORE:8.5), in collaboration with our Co-Organizer, the Department of Mechanical Engineering, National University of Singapore (NUS). It will take place virtually from 11 to 13 November 2026, CET.
Conference Chair:
- Prof. Dr. Manoj Gupta, National University of Singapore, Singapore.
Topics of Interest:
S1. Information and Communication Technologies
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Sotirios K. Goudos, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece;
S2. Assistive Technologies
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Jeffrey W. Jutai, University of Ottawa, Canada;
S3. Innovations in Materials Technologies
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Manoj Gupta, National University of Singapore, Singapore;
S4. Manufacturing Technologies
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Eugene Wong, Singapore Institute of Technology, Singapore;
S5. Environmental Technologies
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Miklas Scholz, University of Johannesburg, South Africa;
S6. Electrical Technologies
Session Chair: Prof. Dr. Joshua M. Pearce, Western University, Canada.
Conference Awards:
Best Oral Presentation Award and Best Poster Award
Number of winners: 6.
Prize: CHF 200 each.
Guide for Authors:
To submit your abstract, please click on the following link: https://sciforum.net/user/submission/create/1568.
To register for the event, please click on the following link: https://sciforum.net/event/IOCTe2026?section=#registration.
For details regarding Abstract Submission, Poster and Slide Submission, and Publication Opportunities, you may refer to the “Instructions for Authors” section.
Important dates:
Deadline for abstract submission: 13 July 2026;
Notification of acceptance: 11 August 2026;
Deadline for registration: 5 November 2026.
For any enquiries regarding the event, please contact: iocte2026@mdpi.com.
We look forward to seeing you at IOCTe 2026.
2 October 2025
MDPI INSIGHTS: The CEO's Letter #27 - OASPA 2025, COUNTER 5.1, UK Summit in London, MDPI at the Italian Senate
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 OASPA 2025: Embracing the Complexity of Open Access
From 22 to 24 September, I joined the OASPA 2025 Annual Conference in Leuven, Belgium, where the theme, “Embracing the Complexity – How do we get to 100% Open Access?” tackled the hard questions about the future of scholarly communication.
With MDPI a longstanding member of the Open Access Scholarly Publishing Association (OASPA) and Platinum sponsor of the conference, I was invited to present and participate in important discussions on how we can continue to move the needle in Open Access (OA) publishing.
From 50% to 100% Open Access
Last year’s OASPA conference celebrated a major milestone – reaching 50% of global research outputs published as OA. But, as noted during the conference, this was the “easy” part. The challenge ahead is much tougher: how do we take OA from 50% to 100%? For many academics and institutions, OA is still relatively new, and thus it is essential for us to continue educating people as to what OA is, how it works, and why it matters.

Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI) presenting at OASPA’s 2025 Annual Conference in Leuven, Belgium.
MDPI’s perspective
At MDPI, we are fully committed to this. As a 100% OA publisher, our growth is inseparable from the success of OA itself. In many ways, MDPI is a byproduct of the global adoption of OA, and we play an important role in helping to advance it further.
I had the opportunity to share MDPI’s perspective in the panel discussion entitled: "Hello from the other side: views from fully Open Access journals using APCs," alongside industry colleagues from PLOS, eLife, AOSIS, and Frontiers.
Instead of giving a standard presentation, I highlighted aspects of MDPI that the audience might not be aware of. I also presented on the opportunities and challenges facing publishers that are already fully OA, the importance of diverse models in achieving 100% OA, and why OA is the baseline while Open Science is the future.
Recognizing Gold OA
As part of the panel, I had undertaken to make some bold and provocative statements. I therefore emphasized a point that is sometimes overlooked: we didn’t reach 50% OA without Gold OA – it accounts for more than half of all OA publications today. And we certainly won’t reach 100% OA without it.
“By educating the community and working together, we can continue to take Open Science to the next level”

“When people speak about Gold OA and MDPI, they should ‘put some respek on our name.”
MDPI is a leader in Gold OA and has been a driver of this progress at scale.
While Gold OA and MDPI are sometimes slighted, both deserve recognition for their contributions to advancing Open Science globally.
I closed my presentation with a reminder that the good we do is sometimes overlooked, and that when people speak about Gold OA and MDPI, they should "put some respek on our name."
I’m pleased to have seen attendees sharing positive experiences with MDPI, reminding us that we bring real value to the OA movement and deserve a stronger reputation. We also engaged in constructive conversations about various topics, including cost transparency.
A few themes that I took away from the conference:
- Quality and integrity matter as much as access. OA publishers must not lose sight of research integrity, inclusivity, and sustainability while pursuing 100% OA.
- Global collaboration is essential. Policies, funding models, and infrastructure differ around the world, and we will need cross-border collaboration to make OA a truly global reality.
- Open Science is the bigger story. OA is just the first step – the future lies in open data, open peer review, research reproducibility, etc.
“MDPI’s scale allows us to better support authors, reinvest in communities, and push Open Science forward”
How we communicate MDPI’s role
For us at MDPI, this is also a reminder of how we communicate externally. When we tell our story, we shouldn’t forget to start with the bigger picture – Open Science and Open Access. Then we connect it to MDPI, our journals, services, and initiatives, exemplifying the fact that we are part of a mission larger than ourselves.

MDPI colleagues Clàudia Aunós (Society Partnerships), Marta Colomer (External Affairs), Stefan Tochev (CEO), and Nikola Paunovic (Scilit), at OASPA’s 2025 Annual Conference in Leuven, Belgium.
The journey to 100% OA will not be simple. But by educating the community and working together, we can continue to take Open Science to the next level.
Impactful Research

MDPI becomes COUNTER 5.1 compliant across 480+ Journals
I’m pleased to share that MDPI has officially become COUNTER 5.1 compliant and has joined the COUNTER Registry.
For those who might not be familiar with it, COUNTER provides international standards for tracking and reporting how research is being used. By becoming COUNTER 5.1 compliant, MDPI can now deliver credible, comparable, and transparent usage reports across our entire journal portfolio.
“MDPI is showing that they want to be measured against the same yardstick as other publishers”
Why is this important?
Because usage statistics aren’t just numbers: they’re powerful tools that help our authors, institutions, and consortia understand the real impact of their research. With COUNTER compliant reports, our institutional partners can now make more informed decisions about publishing agreements, funding allocations, and the long-term value of Open Access.
In practical terms, MDPI will now provide Platform, Title, and Item Reports, with standardized usage views available at the institute and consortium level. These reports cover usage from January 2024 onwards and will be updated monthly. Institutions will be able to access them via SuSy, or automatically through the COUNTER API.

I’d like to highlight and thank Becky Castellon, our Institutional Partnerships Manager, who has played a key role in driving this project forward. Becky captured it perfectly when she said: "Through these usage reports, our global research community can access trustworthy data about how their work is being used and accessed
This information is often vital for reviewing publishing partnership agreements and for making informed decisions about future funding allocations."
We also received encouraging feedback from Tasha Mellins-Cohen, Executive Director at COUNTER Metrics:
"We’re delighted to see born-OA publishers engaging with COUNTER. Our normalised usage metrics are relied on as the basis for credible return-on-investment calculations by libraries worldwide. By adopting the COUNTER standard, MDPI is showing that they want to be measured against the same yardstick as other publishers."
For MDPI, this milestone is another step in our commitment to transparency, trust, and impact. By adopting COUNTER’s standards, we’re not just aligning with best practice; we’re ensuring that Open Access publishing is measured on the same terms as traditional publishing, proving its value in concrete and globally recognized ways.
This is an important milestone for MDPI, but more importantly for the researchers, librarians, and institutions we serve. Transparency builds trust, and COUNTER compliance helps us show the global reach and influence of Open Access publishing in the clearest way possible.
Inside Research

Lin Li (Publisher, MDPI), Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI, Prof. Chengkuo Lee (Editor-in-Chief, AI Sensors), and Constanze Schelhorn (Head of Indexing) at restaurant in Basel, Switzerland.
Welcoming Prof. Lee (EiC of AI Sensors) to Basel
On 11 September, we welcomed Prof. Dr. Chengkuo Lee, Editor-in-Chief of our new journal AI Sensors, to our Basel office. Prof. Lee is a high profiled researcher (h-index 104, 37,000+ citations), a longtime collaborator with MDPI (25 published articles), and has already chaired several AI Sensors (AIS)-related conferences with us, including the recent event in Kuala Lumpur, where AI Sensors held its first editorial board meeting.

Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI) showing Special Issue reprint books as part of a tour of MDPI’s Basel office.
Every journal has a story
During his visit, we exchanged ideas on how to build the journal’s identity and impact. A key takeaway that I shared was that every journal has a story: its vision, its purpose, and the community it brings together.
That story is what connects with readers and authors, beyond metrics alone.
I encouraged everyone working on journals to reflect: What is the story of your journal? And how can you bring that story to the forefront in how you communicate about it?
How MDPI supports new journals

Constanze Schelhorn (Head of Indexing, MDPI) presenting on the MDPI indexing process at the company’s headquarters in Basel.
We also shared with Prof. Lee how MDPI supports journals through our Institutional Open Access Program, indexing expertise, and the work of our Journal Relationship Specialists.
Launching a new journal is ambitious, but with our strong track record (93% Scopus and 87% Web of Science acceptance rates in 2024), Prof. Lee felt confident that AI Sensors will find its place in the scholarly landscape.
Having spent some hours together, it’s clear that Prof. Lee is not only an Editor-in-Chief but also an ambassador for MDPI. His leadership and collaboration reflect the mission MDPI by which MDPI lives: accelerating Open Access and advancing Open Science.
Special thanks to Constanze Schelhorn (Head of Indexing), Ting Leng (JRS, Managing Editor, AI Sensors), Lin Li (Publisher, AI Sensors), Aimar Xiong (Publisher), and Christian Eberhard (Office Administrator, Basel), for organizing and hosting the meeting.
Coming Together for Science

Highlights from the MDPI UK Summit in London
I was pleased to be back in the UK in September, supporting our Manchester team in hosting their first MDPI Summit in London. This day-and-a-half private event brought together 25 Chief Editors and Associate Editors to exchange knowledge, learn about latest developments at MDPI, and engage in discussions on advancing Open Science. The program included MDPI and guest presentations, and Q&A sessions.
Why these summits matter
Our Summits provide a platform to:
- Share updates on the latest developments at MDPI, our editorial processes, research integrity practices, and indexing.
- Highlight collaborations with institutions and societies in the region.
- Offer external perspectives from guest speakers.
- Create space for Chief Editors to share their insights, ask questions, network, and help shape MDPI’s path forward.
These gatherings are more than updates: they improve our relationships with Chief Editors, who serve not only as leaders of their journals but also as ambassadors for MDPI within the research community. We often hear that this type of event is unique, something many other publishers do not provide. It shows that we care and are willing to go the extra mile to recognize and engage our key collaborators.
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MDPI and the UK: Key facts
- With over 80,000 publications, the UK is MDPI’s eighth-largest contributor.
- MDPI is the fourth-largest publisher in the UK, accounting for 11% of the country’s 89,526 Open Access publications in 2024.
- We collaborate with more than 4,000 active UK Editorial Board Members, 48% of whom have an H-index above 26. This includes 49 Editors-in-Chief and 74 Section Editors-in-Chief.
- MDPI maintains over 1,000 IOAP agreements worldwide, with 63 from the UK.
“We are willing to go the extra mile to recognize and engage our key collaborators”
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Agenda highlights:
- MDPI Overview, Open Access, and UK Collaboration – Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI)
- MDPI Editorial Process – Dr. Michael O’Sullivan (Scientific Quality Advisor Lead, MDPI)
- Research Integrity and Publication Ethics – Daisy Fenton (Research Integrity Specialist, MDPI)
- Institutional Partnerships – Becky Castellon (Institutional Partnerships Manager, MDPI)
- Promoting and Developing Your Journal – Prof. Fabio Tosti (Editor-in-Chief of NDT)
- Indexing to Impact – Dr. Michael O’Sullivan (Scientific Quality Advisor Lead, MDPI)
- Engaging our Academic Community – Jaime Anderson Anderson (UK Operations Manager, MDPI)
- Closing Remarks – Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI)

MDPI colleagues Stefan Tochev (CEO), Jaime Anderson Anderson (UK Operations Manager), Dr. Michael O’Sullivan (Scientific Quality Advisor Lead), Becky Castellon (Institutional Partnerships Manager), Daisy Fenton (Research Integrity Specialist) at the MDPI UK 2025 Summit in London.
Thank you!
A special thank-you to the Manchester team and all colleagues behind the scenes who made this Summit a success. Your efforts are greatly appreciated. We look forward to building on this momentum with future Summits in Europe and beyond.
Closing Thoughts

Dr. Giulia Stefenelli (Scientific Communications Lead, MDPI) and Stefan Tochev (CEO, MDPI) participating in a press conference at the Italiane Senate in Rome to promote the 2nd International Conference on Environmental Medicine (ICEM)
MDPI at the Italian Senate: Promoting Environmental Medicine and Open Science
On 16 September, Dr. Giulia Stefenelli (Scientific Communications Lead) and I had the honour of participating in a press conference at the Italian Senate in Rome, organized by the Italian Society of Environmental Medicine (SIMA) to promote the upcoming 2nd International Conference on Environmental Medicine (ICEM) (20–21 November 2025).
This is an important event for MDPI, as we are the exclusive publishing partner for ICEM and have recently launched a new journal with SIMA, further building our presence both in Italy and within this important field of research.
Why this matters
- The promotion of ICEM has received extensive national media coverage (more than 15 mentions in major Italian outlets; see links below).
- The press conference brought together leading policymakers, academics, and Nobel Laureates to emphasize the impact of environmental exposures and epigenetics on human health.
- We were introduced to government ministries, university rectors, and influential stakeholders, which helps us bolster MDPI’s visibility and reputation in Italy.
Highlights
Nobel Laureate Sir Richard Roberts joined the discussion, underlining the importance of environmental medicine in shaping future health outcomes. Nobel Laureate Prof. Dr. Tong Zhu (Peking University) will also speak at the November conference.
Institutional representatives included the Italian Minister of the Environment and Energy Security, the Italian Undersecretary for Health, and senior officials from the World Health Organization.
In my closing remarks, I highlighted that:
“Over the past five years, about 65% of research published in Italy has been Open Access, compared to an average of 55% worldwide.”
Italian research ranked seventh among the top 20 countries in average citations during this period, reflecting its strong international influence. Not only is Italy producing a high volume of research; it is also producing research of outstanding quality.
MDPI’s role
This event was not only about promoting ICEM but also about showcasing MDPI’s commitment to Open Access and our ability to connect scientific publishing with leading academic, medical, and policy institutions.
As Giulia Stefenelli noted:
“This event was highly relevant for MDPI, as it not only showcased our strong commitment to OA but also emphasized our role in advancing important fields such as Environmental Medicine.”
Learn more
- Watch the full press conference (Radio Radicale)
- Giulia’s speech: 33:20 (in Italian)
- Stefan’s speech: 57:50 (in English)
- ICEM 2025 Conference Program
- Selected media coverage:
This moment at the Italian Senate shows how MDPI can connect publishing with science, policy, and society to help advance both Open Science and environmental health research on a global stage.
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In Rome with Sir Richard Roberts (photo left) and Prof. Giuseppe Novelli (EiC of MDPI journal COVID).
Chief Executive Officer
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