期刊名称:JOURNAL OF THE HISTORY OF THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES

ISSN:0022-5061
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:WILEY, 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN, USA, NJ, 07030-5774
  出版社网址:http://as.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/index.html
期刊网址:http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/jhome/31970
影响因子: 0.645(2015年) 0.452(2014年) 0.364(2013年) 0.750 (2012年) 0.793(2011年)
主题范畴:HISTORY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

The Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences is a quarterly, peer-reviewed, international journal devoted to the scientific, technical, institutional, and cultural history of the social and behavioral sciences. The journal publishes research articles, book reviews, and news and notes that cover the development of the core disciplines of psychology, anthropology, sociology, psychiatry and psychoanalysis, economics, linguistics, communications, political science, and the neurosciences. The journal also welcomes papers and book reviews in related fields, particularly the history of science and medicine, historical theory, and historiography.


Instructions to Authors

Manuscripts should be submitted electronically (preferably in Word format) to the Editor, Christopher D. Green, at (e-mail: jhbs@yorku.ca). Contributors who have difficulty producing or transmitting electronic versions of their papers may, alternatively, submit hard copies in triplicate to Professor Green at the Department of Psychology, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ON, Canada M3J 1P3. Copies two and three are optional for overseas contributors. An abstract and brief biographical statement of approximately 100 words each should be included, each on separate sheets. Numbered annotations in the form of a list of endnotes and a reference section using the APA's author-date style (described below) should follow the main text. All material should be double-spaced on one side only of the sheet, with right margins left ragged (not justified) to enhance readability. Quotations over five lines should be indented in the text, also double-spaced. Instructions concerning a disk version will be sent at the time an article is accepted for publication. Authors are encouraged to suggest illustrations that substantively augment the material in the text.

Book reviews, for which the same style rules apply, should have a disk version submitted with the hard copy of the review. Book reviewers should be aware that the Journal may offer book authors the opportunity to comment briefly on the reviews. The Journal does not usually publish translations of previously published works, but it does welcome unpublished primary documents, including translations, with commentary, as well as other brief articles that are of compelling interest.

In the service of electronic cross-referencing, the Journal has adopted the stylistic recommendations of the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (5th edition, 2001), supplemented by the Chicago Manual of Style (currently in the 14th edition, 1993). Accordingly:
1. The author-date system -- e.g., "(Smith, 1943, p. 17)" -- is used in the text for documentation, with the authors and dates keyed to a list of references at the end. Substantive annotations to the text should appear as consecutively numbered endnotes. (Such an annotation might read: "A full discussion is found in Dean, 1850, p.3, who corrects Puppy, 1773.") The list of references at the end is in alphabetical order, and under each author by date. If for an author more than one publication appears for a given year, the publications are distinguished by letters in alphabetical order. A normal annotation will therefore appear in text as: (Author, 1888, p. 42). The annotation should follow the statement being documented. If the information occurs as a natural part of the text, no further referencing is included: George Author in 1888 described a set of experiments . . . or George Author in 1888 (chap. 3) described. . . . Two authors are always cited by name (Author & Author, 1898b, pp. 1-10), but three to six auhtors are cited in full only the first time the reference appears in the text, and after that, they will appear as (Author et al., 1908), the same form as when more than six authors are cited the first time. Classical references and other special cases are treated in the APA Manual.

Wiley's Journal Styles Are Now in EndNote
EndNote is a software product that we recommend to our journal authors to help simplify and streamline the research process. Using EndNote's bibliographic management tools, you can search bibliographic databases, build and organize your reference collection, and then instantly output your bibliography in any Wiley journal style.
Download Reference Style for this Journal: If you already use EndNote, you can download the reference style for this journal.
How to Order: To learn more about EndNote, or to purchase your own copy, click here.
Technical Support: If you need assistance using EndNote, contact endnote@isiresearchsoft.com, or visit www.endnote.com/support.

2. At the end of the article, the list of references, double-spaced, appears in alphbetical order, each one indented. Usually only initials are used, not first names. The following are general models:
a. Book: Author, A. A. (1878). History of education sociology (3rd ed.). Middletown CT: Imaginary Press.
b. Article: Author, A., & Author, B., Jr. (1918). Primate cultures in the mountains of Brazil. Journal of Physical Anthropology, 22, 156-166. [Note that journal titles are capitalized.]
c. Chapter on article in edited collection: Author, C. (1928). Diagnosing schizophrenia in historians. In Z. Z. Collaborator, G. Haw, & H. N. Gee (eds.), Roadkill: Conceptual Issues in history (pp. 5-11). London: Bainbridge House.

3.  Additional recommendations: a. In the text, include first names of all persons the first time each appears substantively (this does not include the author-date references, in which only the last name of the author appears). Use initials only if the person is generally known by those initials (e.g., B. F. Skinner).
b. Spell out numerals less than 100, e.g., nineteenth century.
c. Dates should appear as follows: 23 December 1962. Months with years do not take commas (e.g., December 1962).
d. Authors should avoid passive constructions (e.g., Experiments were conducted, and articles were written. There was much discussion.) and other vague and imprecise language.

4. Reprint information will be mailed with page proofs.

Disk Submission Instructions
Please return your final, revised manuscript on disk as well as hard copy.
The hard copy must match the disk.

The Journal strongly encourages authors to deliver the final, revised version of their accepted manuscripts (text, tables, and, if possible, illustrations) on disk. Given the near-universal use of computer word-processing for manuscript preparation, we anticipate that providing a disk will be convenient for you, and it carries the added advantages of maintaining the integrity of your keystrokes and expediting typesetting. Please return the disk submission slip below with your manuscript and labeled disk(s).

Guidelines for Electronic Submission
Text
Storage medium. 3-1/2" high-density disk in IBM MS-DOS, Windows, or Macintosh format.

Software and format. Microsoft Word 6.0 is preferred, although manuscripts prepared with any other microcomputer word processor are acceptable. Refrain from complex formatting; the Publisher will style your manuscript according to the Journal design specifications. Do not use desktop publishing software such as Aldus PageMaker or Quark XPress. If you prepared your manuscript with one of these programs, export the text to a word processing format. Please make sure your word processing program's "fast save" feature is turned off. Please do not deliver files that contain hidden text: for example, do not use your word processor's automated features to create footnotes or reference lists.

File names. Submit the text and tables of each manuscript as a single file. Name each file with your last name (up to eight letters). Text files should be given the three-letter extension that identifies the file format. Macintosh users should maintain the MS-DOS "eight dot three" file-naming convention.

Labels. Label all disks with your name, the file name, and the word processing program and version used.

Illustrations
All print reproduction requires files for full color images to be in a CMYK color space. If possible, ICC or ColorSync profiles of your output device should accompany all digital image submissions.

Storage medium. Submit as separate files from text files, on separate disks or cartridges. If feasible, full color files should be submitted on separate disks from other image files. 3-1/2" high-density disks, CD, and Iomega Zip disks can be submitted. At authors' request, cartridges and disks will be returned after publication.

Software and format. All illustration files should be in TIFF or EPS (with preview) formats. Do not submit native application formats.

Resolution. Journal quality reproduction will require greyscale and color files at resolutions yielding approximately 300 ppi. Bitmapped line art should be submitted at resolutions yielding 600-1200 ppi. These resolutions refer to the output size of the file; if you anticipate that your images will be enlarged or reduced, resolutions should be adjusted accordingly.

File names. Illustration files should be given the 2- or 3-letter extension that identifies the file format used (i.e., .tif, .eps).

Labels. Label all disks and cartridges with your name, the file names, formats, and compression schemes (if any) used. Hard copy output must accompany all files. 


Editorial Board

E d i t o r
Raymond E. Fancher
Professor of Psychology
York University
4700 Keele Street
Toronto, ON Canada M3J 1P3

A s s o c i a t e   E d i t o r
Christopher D. Green

A s s i s t a n t   E d i t o r
Ian A. M. Nicholson

E d i t o r i a l   A s s i s t a n t
Katherine A. Harper

E d i t o r i a l   B o a r d

MITCHELL G. ASH
Max Planck Institute for
History of Science
Universitat Wien
Austria

RUTH BARTON
University of Auckland
New Zealand

REGNA DARNELL
University of Western Ontario
Canada

ALAN C. ELMS
University of California at Davis
USA

THOMAS F. GIERYN
Indiana University
USA

JOHN S. GILKESON
Freie Universitat Berlin
Germany

DONALD LEVINE
The University of Chicago
USA

GEORGE MAKARI
Weil Medical College of
Cornell University
USA
 HENRY L. MINTON
University of Windsor
Canada

JILL G. MORAWSKI
Wesleyan University
USA

SERGE NICOLAS
Universite Rene Descartes
France

ROBERT A. NYE
Oregon State University
USA

JENNIFER PLATT
University of Sussex
United Kingdom

VOLKER ROELKE
Universitat Lubek
Germany

MARLENE SHORE
York University
Canada

ROGER SMITH
Institute for the History of Science and Technology
Russia

LEILA ZENDERLAND
California State University, Fullerton
USA

 C h e i r o n

 Ellen Herman
University of Oregon
USA

 Petteri Pietikainen
University of Helsinki
Finland
 
E S H H S

Trudy Dehue
Groeningen Universiteit
The Netherlands
 Irmingard Staeuble
Freie Universitat, Berlin
Germany
 

F H H S

Sarah E. Igo
University of Pennsylvania
USA

 Richard von Mayrhauser
University of California at Berkeley
USA
 
F o u n d i n g   E d i t o r
Robert I. Watson

E d i t o r  (1975-1996)
Barbara Ross

E d i t o r  (1997-2000)
John C. Burnham

E d i t o r  (2001-2005)
Raymond E. Fancher
 


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