期刊名称:EMOTION
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal
Emotion publishes significant contributions to the study of emotion from a wide range of theoretical traditions and research domains. Emotion includes articles that advance knowledge and theory about all aspects of emotional processes, including reports of substantial empirical studies, scholarly reviews, and major theoretical articles. Submissions from all domains of emotion research are encouraged, including studies focusing on cultural, social, temperament and personality, cognitive, development, health, or biological variables that affect or are affected by emotional processes. Studies of psychopathology contributing to the understanding of the role of emotional processes in affective and behavioral disorders are also welcome. Reports of work at the animal and molecular levels will be considered if they help to elucidate fundamental mechanisms of emotion. Most of the articles published in Emotion will be reports of original research, but other types of articles are acceptable. Case studies from either a clinical setting or a laboratory will be considered if they raise or illustrate important questions that go beyond the single case and have heuristic value. Articles that present or discuss theoretical perspectives on the basis of published data, may also be accepted. Comprehensive reviews of the empirical literature in an area of study are acceptable if they contain a meta-analysis and/or present novel theoretical or methodological perspectives. Comments on articles published in the journal will be considered.
Instructions to Authors
Submission. All submissions, electronic and mail, must be accompanied by a cover letter confirming compliance with APA ethical principles as stated below.
Manuscript submission guidelines. New and revised manuscripts may be submitted electronically in Rich Text Format (RTF). All tables and figures should be included in the manuscript file that is submitted.
Mail submission. Manuscripts may be submitted through the mail if Internet access is not available. Please submit one hard copy of the manuscript along with a complete disk copy (text, tables, and figures) to the Co-Editor,
Richard J. Davidson, PhD Emotion Journal Office Department of Psychology and Waisman Center University of Wisconsin—Madison 1500 Highland Avenue Madison, Wisconsin 53705-2280
All copies should be clear, readable, and on paper of good quality. In addition to the hard copy of the manuscript, a complete disk copy (text and tables, and figures if possible) must be provided, with a clear notation of the file names and the word processing and graphics software used. Figures may submitted on a separate disk or on a Zip disk. In addition to addresses and phone numbers, authors should supply electronic mail addresses and fax numbers for use by the editorial office and later by the production office. The majority of correspondence between the editorial office and authors is handled by e-mail, so a valid e-mail address is important to the timely flow of communication during the editorial process. Authors should provide electronic mail addresses in their cover letters and should keep a copy of the manuscript to guard against loss. Manuscripts are not returned.
Brief reports. Emotion also publishes brief reports. Manuscripts submitted as Brief Reports should not exceed 3,400 words, exclusive of references and figure captions. There should be no more than 2 figures or tables and no more than 30 references.
Theoretical notes. Emotion publishes articles that make important theoretical contributions to research areas that are of major importance for the study of emotion and affect. Preference is given to manuscripts that advance theory by integrating prior work and by suggesting concrete avenues for the empirical investigation of the theoretical predictions. Extensive, systematic evaluation of alternative theories is expected. Manuscripts devoted to surveys of the literature are acceptable only if they can be considered as a major contribution to the field, documenting cumulative evidence and highlighting central theoretical and/or methodological issues of scientific debate. Emotion also publishes, as Theoretical Notes, commentary that contributes to progress in a given subfield of emotion or affect. Such notes include, but are not limited to, discussions of alternative theoretical approaches, and metatheoretical commentary on theory testing and related topics. Manuscripts submitted as Theoretical Notes should not exceed 5,000 words (exclusive of references). There should be no more than 50 references.
Masked review policy. Masked reviews are optional, and authors who wish masked reviews must specifically request them when they submit their manuscripts. For masked reviews, the manuscript must include a separate title page with the authors' names and affiliations, and these ought not to appear anywhere else in the manuscript. Footnotes that identify the authors must be typed on a separate page. Authors are to make every effort to see that the manuscript itself contains no clues to their identities.
Manuscripts for Emotion can vary in length; typically they will range from 15 to 40 double-spaced manuscript pages. Manuscripts should be of sufficient length to ensure theoretical and methodological competence. Most of the articles to be published in Emotion will be reports of original research, but other types of articles are acceptable. Case studies from either a clinical setting or a laboratory will be considered if they raise or illustrate important questions that go beyond the single case and have heuristic value. Manuscripts that present or discuss theoretical formulations of emotion and related affective phenomena, or that evaluate competing theoretical perspectives on the basis of published data, may also be accepted. Comprehensive reviews of the empirical literature in an area of study are acceptable if they contain a meta- analysis and/or present novel theoretical or methodological perspectives. Comments on articles published in the journal will be considered.
Manuscript preparation. Authors should prepare manuscripts according to the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (5th ed.). Manuscripts may be copyedited for bias-free language (see chap. 2 of the Publication Manual). Formatting instructions (all copy must be double-spaced) and instructions on the preparation of tables, figures, references, metrics, and abstracts appear in the Manual. See APA's Checklist for Manuscript Submission. Abstract and keywords. All manuscripts must include an abstract containing a maximum of 120 words typed on a separate page. After the abstract, please supply up to five keywords or brief phrases. References. References should be listed in alphabetical order. Each listed reference should be cited in text, and each text citation should be listed in the References. Basic formats are as follows:
Donnay, D.A.C., & Borgen, F.H. (1996). Validity, structure, and content of the 1994 Strong Interest Inventory. Journal of Counseling Psychology, 43, 275?91.
Campbell, D.P. (1974). Manual of the Strong–Campbell Inventory. Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press.
Borgen, F.H. (1986). New approaches to the assessment of interests. In B.W. Walsh & S.H. Osipow (Eds.), Advances in vocational psychology. Vol. 1: The assessment of interests (pp. 83?25). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
Figures. Graphics files are welcome if supplied as Tiff, EPS, or PowerPoint. High-quality printouts or glossies are needed for all figures. The minimum line weight for line art is 0.5 point for optimal printing. When possible, please place symbol legends below the figure image instead of to the side. Original color figures can be printed in color at the editor’s and publisher’s discretion and provided the author agrees to pay half of the associated production costs; an estimate of these costs is available from the APA production office on request.
Permissions. Authors are required to obtain and provide to the editor on final acceptance all necessary permissions to reproduce in print and electronic form any copyrighted work, including, for example, test materials (or portions thereof) and photographs of people.
Preparing files for production. If your manuscript is accepted for publication, please follow the guidelines for file formats and naming provided at Preparing Your Electronic Files for Production. If your manuscript was mask reviewed, please ensure that the final version for production includes a byline and full author note for typesetting.
Supplemental materials. APA can now place supplementary materials online, which will be available via the journal’s Web page as noted above. To submit such materials, please see Supplementing Your Article With Online Material for details.
Publications policies. APA policy prohibits an author from submitting the same manuscript for concurrent consideration by two or more publications. APA's policy regarding posting articles on the Internet may be found at Posting Articles on the Internet. In addition, it is a violation of APA Ethical Principles to publish "as original data, data that have been previously published" (Standard 8.13). As this journal is a primary journal that publishes original material only, APA policy prohibits as well publication of any manuscript that has already been published in whole or substantial part elsewhere.
Authors have an obligation to inform journal editors in their e-mail message or cover letter that the manuscript is not under review elsewhere, that the primary data have not been published previously or accepted for publication, and that the appropriate ethical guidelines were followed in the conduct of the research.
In addition, APA Ethical Principles specify that "after research results are published, psychologists do not withhold the data on which their conclusions are based from other competent professionals who seek to verify the substantive claims through reanalysis and who intend to use such data only for that purpose, provided that the confidentiality of the participants can be protected and unless legal rights concerning proprietary data preclude their release" (Standard 8.14). APA expects authors submitting to this journal to adhere to these standards. Specifically, authors of manuscripts submitted to APA journals are expected to have available their data throughout the editorial review process and for at least 5 years after the date of publication.
Authors will be required to state in writing that they have complied with APA ethical standards in the treatment of their sample, human or animal, or to describe the details of treatment. A copy of the APA Ethical Principles may be obtained electronically or by writing the APA Ethics Office, 750 First Street, NE, Washington, DC 20002-4242.
APA requires authors to reveal any possible conflict of interest in the conduct and reporting of research (e.g., financial interests in a test or procedure, funding by pharmaceutical companies for drug research).
Authors of accepted manuscripts will be required to transfer copyright to APA.
Editorial Board
Richard J. Davidson University of Wisconsin–Madison
Klaus R. Scherer University of Geneva, Switzerland
John A. Bargh Yale University
Beatrice de Gelder Tilburg University, the Netherlands
Gerald Matthews University of Cincinnati
Susan Mineka Northwestern University
Carol Hermann
Ralph Adolphs California Institute of Technology
Lisa Feldman Barrett Boston College
Brendan P. Bradley University of Southampton, England
Linda A. Camras DePaul University
Turhan Canli State University of New York at Stony Brook
Tim Dalgleish Medical Research Council, United Kingdom
Patricia J. Deldin University of Michigan
Michael Eid University of Geneva, Switzerland
Phoebe C. Ellsworth University of Michigan
Mark Fenske Harvard Medical School
Melissa Ferguson Cornell University
Elaine Fox University of Essex
Nico Frijda University of Amsterdam
Eva Gilboa-Schechtman Bar Ilan University
Marcia Grabowecky Northwestern University
Jeremy Gray Yale University
Judith A. Hall Northeastern University
Alfons O. Hamm University of Greifswald, Germany
Paula Hertel Trinity University
Ursula Hess University of Quebec at Montreal, Canada
Dacher Keltner University of California, Berkeley
Shinobu Kitayama University of Michigan
Ann Kring University of California, Berkeley
Randy J. Larsen Washington University, St. Louis
Colin MacLeod University of Western Australia
Antony S. R. Manstead Cardiff University, Wales
Andrew Mathews Medical Research Council, United Kingdom
Batja Mesquita Wake Forest University
Arne Öhman Karolinska Institute
Brian Parkinson Oxford University
Elizabeth A. Phelps New York University
Pierre Philippot Universit Catholique de Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
Seth D. Pollak University of Wisconsin–Madison
Rainer Reisenzein University of Greifswald, Germany
Anne Richards Birbeck University of London
John Roberts State University of New York at Buffalo
Norbert Schwarz University of Michigan
Gerhard Stemmler Philipps-Universität Marburg, Germany
Jeanne L. Tsai Stanford University
Paul Whalen University of Wisconsin–Madison
Carolyn Zahn-Waxler University of Wisconsin–Madison
Moshe Zeidner University of Haifa
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