期刊名称:PSYCHOLOGICAL METHODS
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ISSN: | 1082-989X
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出版频率: | Quarterly
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出版社: | AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC, 750 FIRST ST NE, WASHINGTON, USA, DC, 20002-4242
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出版社网址: | http://www.apa.org
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期刊网址: | http://www.apa.org/journals/met/
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影响因子: |
5(2015年)
7.338(2014年)
5.708(2013年)
4.315 (2012年)
4.449(2011年)
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| 主题范畴: | PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY |
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal

Psychological Methods is devoted to the development and dissemination of methods for collecting, analyzing, understanding, and interpreting psychological data. Its purpose is the dissemination of innovations in research design, measurement, methodology, and quantitative and qualitative analysis to the psychological community; its further purpose is to promote effective communication about related substantive and methodological issues. The audience is expected to be diverse and to include those who develop new procedures, those who are responsible for undergraduate and graduate training in design, measurement, and statistics, as well as those who employ those procedures in research. The journal solicits original theoretical, quantitative, empirical, and methodological articles; reviews of important methodological issues; tutorials; articles illustrating innovative applications of new procedures to psychological problems; articles on the teaching of quantitative methods; and reviews of statistical software. Submissions will be judged on their relevance to understanding psychological data, methodological correctness, and accessibility to a wide audience. Where appropriate, submissions should illustrate through concrete example how the procedures described or developed can enhance the quality of psychological research. The journal welcomes submissions that show the relevance to psychology of procedures developed in other fields. Empirical and theoretical articles on specific tests or test construction should have a broad thrust; otherwise, they may be more appropriate for Psychological Assessment.
Instructions to Authors
Psychological Methods is devoted to the development and dissemination of methods for collecting, analyzing, understanding, and interpreting psychological data. Its purpose is the dissemination of innovations in research design, measurement, methodology, and quantitative and qualitative analysis to the psychological community; its further purpose is to promote effective communication about related substantive and methodological issues. The audience is expected to be diverse and to include those who develop new procedures, those who are responsible for undergraduate and graduate training in design, measurement, and statistics, as well as those who employ those procedures in research. The journal solicits original theoretical, quantitative, empirical, and methodological articles; reviews of important methodological issues; tutorials; articles illustrating innovative applications of new procedures to psychological problems; articles on the teaching of quantitative methods; and reviews of statistical software. Submissions will be judged on their relevance to understanding psychological data, methodological correctness, and accessibility to a wide audience. Where appropriate, submissions should illustrate through concrete example how the procedures described or developed can enhance the quality of psychological research. The journal welcomes submissions that show the relevance to psychology of procedures developed in other fields. Empirical and theoretical articles on specific tests or test construction should have a broad thrust; otherwise, they may be more appropriate for Psychological Assessment.
Editorial Board
Editor
Stephen G. West Arizona State University
Associate Editor
Betsy J. Becker Florida State University
Patrick J. Curran University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Michael R. Harwell University of Minnesota
Scott E. Maxwell University of Notre Dome
Editorial Assistant
Sally G. Carney
Editorial Board
Leona Aiken Arizona State University
James Algina University of Florida
Carolyn Anderson University of Illinois at Urbana¨CChampaign
Deborah Bandalos University of Georgia
Daniel J. Bauer University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Theodore P. Beauchaine University of Washington
Jeremy Biesanz University of British Columbia
Shelley A. Blozis University of California, Davis
Robert Boik Montana State University
Michael W. Browne Ohio State University
Jose Cortina George Mason University
Richard Darlington Cornell University
Richard DeShon Michigan State University
Conor Dolan University of Amsterdam
Samuel B. Green Arizona State University
David C. Howell University of Vermont
William T. Hoyt University of Wisconsin¡ªMadison
Helena Kraemer Stanford University
Fuzhong Li Oregon Research Institute
Robert MacCallum University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Keith A. Markus City University of New York
Kathryn E. Masyn University of California, Davis
Gary McClelland University of Colorado
Paras Mehta University of Houston
Rob R. Meijer University of Twente
Theresa Pigott Loyola University of Chicago
Tenko Raykov Michigan State University
Steven Reise University of California, Los Angeles
Frank L. Schmidt University of Iowa
Ronald Serlin University of Wisconsin—Madison
William Shadish University of California, Merced
Juliet Shaffer University of California, Berkeley
James H. Steiger Vanderbilt University
Jack L. Vevea University of California, Santa Cruz
Keith Widaman University of California, Davis
Rand Wilcox University of Southern California
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