The aim of ESIS is not only to develop and extend knowledge in all aspects of structural integrity, but also to disseminate this knowledge world-wide by means of scientific publications and to educate young engineers and scientists.

For these purposes, five Elsevier journals – Engineering Fracture Mechanics, Engineering Failure Analysis, Forces in Mechanics, International Journal of Fatigue and Theoretical and Applied Fracture Mechanics  – are published in affiliation with ESIS.
Promoting and intensifying this aim is what we want to achieve through a new blog that ESIS will manage here for discussing some of the papers which appear in Engineering Fracture Mechanics. Its editors fully support this initiative.
ESIS hopes that this blog will achieve the following objectives:

  • To start a scientific discussion on relevant topics through comments by leading scientists (the chief ‘commenter’ will be Prof. Per Stahle);
  • To remind the authors of papers in EFM (and all the fracture community) that perhaps they have forgotten something important which was published in the past (perhaps in old books): the policy of ESIS is to make some of these books available on-line to ESIS members;
  • To promote a real cross-citation of the papers and a substantive discussion of ideas in a scenario where, in spite of the easy on-line access to most journals, there is a serious tendency to restrict the number of ‘external references’ and a snobbish tendency to promote ‘auto-citations’ (to the same group, the same journal, the same country);
  • To focus attention on new ideas that run the serious risk of not emerging from the noise of too much published “stuff”;
  • To induce bloggers to communicate their opinions on a paper, in particular their interpretation of the research results, thus adding new thoughts to that paper. In addition, to promote excellence in publication in a scenario where deficiencies of a paper may not have been detected by the reviewers, simply due to the pressure of time the reviewers have to do their work.

The proposed rules of usage of this blog include:

  1. A group of leading scientists headed by Prof. P. Stahle will post onto this this blog comments and remarks to some of the papers published in EFM;
  2. The authors of the papers will receive a notification of the remarks by prof. P. Stahle and they will be invited to reply through a detailed document that will appear on the ESIS website;
  3. The replies will also be posted onto this blog by ESIS (so that the authors do not have to worry about technical details). Hopefully, we will receive further comments and questions by other scientists/practitioners.

All the comments published in iMechanica (the old platform) are available as direct link to the posts.

ESIS Executive Committee