ARRS Roentgen Fund Announces 2025 Figley,
Rogers Fellows in Radiology Journalism: Erin Alaia and Domen Plut
Leesburg,
VA | November 14, 2024—The
American Roentgen Ray Society (ARRS) is pleased to announce Erin Alaia, MD, of NYU Langone Health
in New York City as the 2025 Melvin M. Figley Fellow in Radiology Journalism.
ARRS also recognizes Domen Plut, MD, PhD, from Slovenia’s University
Medical Centre Ljubljana as the 2025 Lee F. Rogers International Fellow in
Radiology Journalism.
Supported
by The Roentgen Fund® and named for two distinguished Editors
Emeriti of ARRS’ own American Journal of
Roentgenology (AJR), the Melvin
Figley and Lee Rogers Fellowships offer practicing radiologists an unparalleled
opportunity to learn the tenets of medical publishing via “the yellow
journal”—the world’s longest continuously published radiology journal. Through
hands-on experience with ARRS staff and AJR personnel—as well as personal apprenticeship with AJR’s 13th Editor of Chief, Andrew
B. Rosenkrantz—Drs. Alaia and Plut will receive expert instruction in
scientific writing and communication, manuscript preparation and editing, peer
review processes, journalism ethics, and digital publication.
Additionally,
Drs. Alaia and Plut will attend the 2025 ARRS Annual Meeting in San Diego, CA,
where they will co-present the AJR Year in Review Sunday Session and participate in the Editor’s Forum.
Founded
in 1907, AJR is one of the
specialty’s leading peer-reviewed journals, publishing clinically oriented
content across all imaging subspecialties and modalities relevant to
radiologists’ daily practice. Publishing hundreds of articles annually in a
diverse range of formats, including original research, reviews, clinical
perspectives, editorials, and other short reports, AJR further engages its audience through a spectrum of social media
and digital communication activities. In 2023, the journal garnered 32,133
citations and received an impact factor of 4.7, placing AJR at the 89.5th percentile in the
radiology, nuclear medicine, and medical imaging category (as reported by
Clarivate Analytics).
Since
1990, The Roentgen Fund has granted millions of dollars to hundreds of imaging
professionals for both research pursuits and professional development. Today,
through six vital scholarship and fellowship programs, the generosity of The
Roentgen Fund’s donors is channeled to every corner of the globe—establishing
dual foundations in innovation and leadership for a true diversity of
radiology’s next generation.
Erin F. Alaia, MD, is an associate professor of radiology and orthopedic surgery at NYU
Langone Health in New York, NY. Chair of ARRS’ Radiology Review Track
Musculoskeletal Imaging Section, her research, clinical interests, and areas of
expertise include sports imaging, postoperative sports imaging, and
musculoskeletal infection. As the recipient of a 2022 Research Seed Grant from
the Radiological Society of North America, Dr. Alaia focused on the utility and
cost-effectiveness of MRI in older patients with hip and knee pain. Prior chair
of the Society of Skeletal Radiology Research Committee, presently, she serves
on the consulting editorial board of Skeletal
Radiology, having received certificates of distinction for her
contributions as a reviewer from 2021-2023. Guest editor for an upcoming issue
of Seminars in Musculoskeletal Radiology focused on post-operative imaging, Dr. Alaia is also a member of the American
College of Radiology’s Committee on Body Imaging, Musculoskeletal Section.
Domen
Plut, MD, PhD, completed his medical studies and
radiology residency at the University of Ljubljana’s Faculty of Medicine and
University Medical Centre Ljubljana in Slovenia. In 2021, he received the
European diploma in pediatric radiology, marking him among the first generation
in this subspecialty on the continent. In 2022, Dr. Plut was appointed
assistant editor at AJR. An assistant
professor at the Medical Faculty of Ljubljana, chief of University Medical
Centre Ljubljana’s pediatric radiology department, and recipient of the 2023
Lavrič “Best Teacher” Award, teaching is his passion. Dr. Plut is extensively
involved in research, having published 45 articles in reputable journals—28 as
first or lead author—and serving as a reviewer for many other publications.
General Secretary of the Slovenian Association of Radiology and a member of
both the European Society of Radiology and European Society of Paediatric
Radiology (ESPR), he is a part of ESPR’s Musculoskeletal and Cardiothoracic
Taskforce. Dr. Plut’s primary work and research interests include imaging of
neonates and contrast-enhanced ultrasound, and he has presented his findings at
numerous international radiology conferences, including several annual meetings
of the ESPR and Radiological Society of North America.
North
America’s first radiological society, the American Roentgen Ray
Society (ARRS) remains dedicated to the advancement of medicine through
the profession of medical imaging and its allied sciences. An international
forum for progress in radiology since the discovery of the x-ray, ARRS
maintains its mission of improving health through a community committed to
advancing knowledge and skills with the ARRS
Annual Meeting,
the world’s longest continuously published radiology journal—American
Journal of Roentgenology (AJR)—InPractice magazine, ARRS Symposia, free-access multimedia from
our Global Partner Societies, as well as awarding
scholarships via The
Roentgen Fund®.
PIO
CONTACT:
Logan
K. Young
[email protected]
44211
Slatestone Court
Leesburg,
VA 20176