Yes, this is a widely used, open-source program by NIH and as such data produced in ImageJ is publishable. As for presentation of data, that depends on what you are measuring and how much. Typically these data can be turned into a figure/table like any other (with the accompanying stats).
Methods descriptions of how this program is used varies widely and are often dependent on how complicated the analysis becomes. For anything beyond simple measurements, especially if you are generating a long code, I would suggest including the code as supplementary material.
Citation information is given on their website (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/docs/faqs.html#cite) and individual plugins/macros created by second parties should be cited separately.
Yes, this is a widely used, open-source program by NIH and as such data produced in ImageJ is publishable. As for presentation of data, that depends on what you are measuring and how much. Typically these data can be turned into a figure/table like any other (with the accompanying stats).
Methods descriptions of how this program is used varies widely and are often dependent on how complicated the analysis becomes. For anything beyond simple measurements, especially if you are generating a long code, I would suggest including the code as supplementary material.
Citation information is given on their website (http://rsb.info.nih.gov/ij/docs/faqs.html#cite) and individual plugins/macros created by second parties should be cited separately.