期刊名称:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AEROSPACE PSYCHOLOGY
期刊简介(About the journal)
投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)
编辑部信息(Editorial Board)
About the journal

Publication history
Currently known as:
- The International Journal of Aerospace Psychology (2017 - current)
Formerly known as
- The International Journal of Aviation Psychology (1900 - 2016)
Aims and scope
© 2016 Thomson Reuters, Journal Citation Reports® for 2015 ranks International Journal of Aerospace Psychology in Psychology, Applied.
The primary goal of this journal is the publication of scholarly papers developed within this increasingly important field of study--the development and management of safe, effective aerospace systems from the standpoint of the human operators and occupants. Several divergent academic disciplines contribute heavily to its contents, making it truly interdisciplinary in nature and scope. These fields include, to name a few, engineering and computer science, psychology, education, and physiology.
Peer Review Policy: All papers published in this journal have undergone editorial screening and anonymous double-blind review.
Publication office: Taylor & Francis, Inc., 530 Walnut Street, Suite 850, Philadelphia, PA 19106 .
Engineers, computer scientists, psychologists, educational researchers, and physiologists.
Instructions to Authors
This journal uses ScholarOne Manuscripts (previously Manuscript Central) to peer review manuscript submissions. Please read the guide for ScholarOne authors before making a submission. Complete guidelines for preparing and submitting your manuscript to this journal are provided below.
Contents
About the Journal
The International Journal of Aerospace Psychology is an international, peer-reviewed journal publishing high-quality, original research. Please see the journal's Aims & Scopefor information about its focus and peer-review policy.
Please note that this journal only publishes manuscripts in English.
The International Journal of Aerospace Psychology accepts the following types of article:
- Original Empirical Research, Review Papers, Practitioner Papers, Research Notes
Peer Review and Ethics
Taylor & Francis is committed to peer-review integrity and upholding the highest standards of review. Once your paper has been assessed for suitability by the editor, it will then be double blind peer reviewed by independent, anonymous expert referees. Find out more about what to expect during peer review and read our guidance on publishing ethics.
Preparing Your Paper
Original Empirical Research, Review Papers, Practitioner Papers, Research Notes
- Should be written with the following elements in the following order: title page; abstract; main text introduction, materials and methods, results, discussion; acknowledgments; declaration of interest statement; references; appendices (as appropriate); table(s) with caption(s) (on individual pages); figures; figure captions (as a list)
- Should contain a structured abstract of 225 words. This summary of your article is normally no longer than 225 words, including section titles. You should divide your structured abstract into the following sections: Objective (What was the research question?) Background (How does this study extend previous research?) Method (How was the work executed?) Results (What were the findings?) Conclusion (How do the results answer the research question?) Each section of the abstract should feature an appropriate heading. The structured abstract is optional for practitioner papers, which may be submitted with an abstract of not more than 100 words.
- Should contain between 3 and 5 keywords. Read making your article more discoverable, including information on choosing a title and search engine optimization.
- Original Empirical Research, Standard Paper. The first is original empirical research reporting the results of true experiments. A single-experiment manuscript should be no longer than 5000 words excluding abstract, tables, and references. Papers describing multiple experiments are desired, and 2500 words can be added to the manuscript for each additional experiment (up to a total of three for a total of 10,000 words).
- Review Paper. Review papers present a comprehensive review of the literature in the selected area and whatever conclusions may be drawn as a result. They do not present new empirical findings. The allowable length of a review paper will be determined by the editors according to the breadth of the review attempted and the magnitude of the contribution. Authors may target between 5000 and 6500 words as a maximum length for the first draft, but shorter papers are welcome.
- Practitioner Paper. These are considered to be papers coming from industry or the government that 1) demonstrate issues with existing procedures or methodologies or 2) provide empirical data from field applications to augment or compare and contrast with laboratory findings. For example, selection tests may be developed in a laboratory environment. When they are applied in the operational setting, the results may be quite different from what was found in the laboratory environment, sometimes as a function of the type/class of participants used in each evaluation (age, experience, training, etc). The practitioner paper often presents an end-of-process view/validation of how field applications actually worked out. (5000 word limit)
- Research Note. A research note is generally a shorter paper that provides insights into experimental findings that can be presented in a smaller space and that have a narrower focus than the longer manuscripts. These should generally be in the vicinity of 2000 to 2500 words and have no more than three graphics (inclusive of figures and tables), unless the inclusion of a graphic can replace text and can stand independently of supporting text. Notes can be used to comment on research and analytical techniques or to present very focused research findings that do not require a longer exposition.
- Papers may be submitted in any standard file format, including Word and LaTeX. Figures should be saved separately from the text. [Page formatting instructions] The main document should be double-spaced, with one-inch margins on all sides, and all pages should be numbered consecutively. Text should appear in 12-point Times New Roman or other common 12-point font. Submit two sets of files: MSWord file, complete document, with all of the tables and figures inserted in their proper places, and a separate file or files of figures, depending upon storage required by each graphic, containing high resolution versions of all figures. Set all text left justified for ease of reading, without line numbers, as Scholarone will generate line numbers as part of its processing of the manuscript
Style Guidelines
Please refer to these quick style guidelines when preparing your paper, rather than any published articles or a sample copy.
Please use American spelling style consistently throughout your manuscript.
Please use double quotation marks, except where “a quotation is ‘within’ a quotation”. Please note that long quotations should be indented without quotation marks.
Papers may be submitted in Word or LaTeX formats. Figures should be saved separately from the text. To assist you in preparing your paper, we provide formatting template(s).
Word templates are available for this journal. Please save the template to your hard drive, ready for use.
A LaTeX template is available for this journal. Please save the LaTeX template to your hard drive and open it, ready for use, by clicking on the icon in Windows Explorer.
If you are not able to use the template via the links (or if you have any other template queries) please contact us here.
References
Please use this reference guide when preparing your paper. An EndNote output style is also available to assist you.
Taylor & Francis Editing Services
To help you improve your manuscript and prepare it for submission, Taylor & Francis provides a range of editing services. Choose from options such as English Language Editing, which will ensure that your article is free of spelling and grammar errors, Translation, and Artwork Preparation. For more information, including pricing, visit this website.
Checklist: What to Include
- Author details. All authors of a manuscript should include their full name and affiliation on the cover page of the manuscript. Where available, please also include ORCiDs and social media handles (Facebook, Twitter or LinkedIn). One author will need to be identified as the corresponding author, with their email address normally displayed in the article PDF (depending on the journal) and the online article. Authors’ affiliations are the affiliations where the research was conducted. If any of the named co-authors moves affiliation during the peer-review process, the new affiliation can be given as a footnote. Please note that no changes to affiliation can be made after your paper is accepted. Read more on authorship.
- You can opt to include a video abstract with your article. Find out how these can help your work reach a wider audience, and what to think about when filming.
- Funding details. Please supply all details required by your funding and grant-awarding bodies as follows:
For single agency grants This work was supported by the [Funding Agency] under Grant [number xxxx]. For multiple agency grants This work was supported by the [Funding Agency #1] under Grant [number xxxx]; [Funding Agency #2] under Grant [number xxxx]; and [Funding Agency #3] under Grant [number xxxx].
- Disclosure statement. This is to acknowledge any financial interest or benefit that has arisen from the direct applications of your research. Further guidance on what is a conflict of interest and how to disclose it.
- Data availability statement. If there is a data set associated with the paper, please provide information about where the data supporting the results or analyses presented in the paper can be found. Where applicable, this should include the hyperlink, DOI or other persistent identifier associated with the data set(s). Templates are also available to support authors.
- Data deposition. If you choose to share or make the data underlying the study open, please deposit your data in a recognized data repository prior to or at the time of submission. You will be asked to provide the DOI, pre-reserved DOI, or other persistent identifier for the data set.
- Supplemental online material. Supplemental material can be a video, dataset, fileset, sound file or anything which supports (and is pertinent to) your paper. We publish supplemental material online via Figshare. Find out more about supplemental material and how to submit it with your article.
- Figures. Figures should be high quality (1200 dpi for line art, 600 dpi for grayscale and 300 dpi for color, at the correct size). Figures should be supplied in one of our preferred file formats: EPS, PDF, PS, JPEG, TIFF, or Microsoft Word (DOC or DOCX) files are acceptable for figures that have been drawn in Word. For information relating to other file types, please consult our Submission of electronic artwork document.
- Tables. Tables should present new information rather than duplicating what is in the text. Readers should be able to interpret the table without reference to the text. Please supply editable files.
- Equations. If you are submitting your manuscript as a Word document, please ensure that equations are editable. More information about mathematical symbols and equations.
- Units. Please use SI units (non-italicized).
Using Third-Party Material in your Paper
You must obtain the necessary permission to reuse third-party material in your article. The use of short extracts of text and some other types of material is usually permitted, on a limited basis, for the purposes of criticism and review without securing formal permission. If you wish to include any material in your paper for which you do not hold copyright, and which is not covered by this informal agreement, you will need to obtain written permission from the copyright owner prior to submission. More information on requesting permission to reproduce work(s) under copyright.
Submitting Your Paper
This journal uses ScholarOne Manuscripts to manage the peer-review process. If you haven't submitted a paper to this journal before, you will need to create an account in ScholarOne. Please read the guidelines above and then submit your paper in the relevant Author Center, where you will find user guides and a helpdesk.
If you are submitting in LaTeX, please convert the files to PDF beforehand (you will also need to upload your LaTeX source files with the PDF).
Please note that The International Journal of Aerospace Psychology uses Crossref™ to screen papers for unoriginal material. By submitting your paper to The International Journal of Aerospace Psychology you are agreeing to originality checks during the peer-review and production processes.
On acceptance, we recommend that you keep a copy of your Accepted Manuscript. Find out more about sharing your work.
Data Sharing Policy
This journal applies the Taylor & Francis Basic Data Sharing Policy. Authors are encouraged to share or make open the data supporting the results or analyses presented in their paper where this does not violate the protection of human subjects or other valid privacy or security concerns.
Authors are encouraged to deposit the dataset(s) in a recognized data repository that can mint a persistent digital identifier, preferably a digital object identifier (DOI) and recognizes a long-term preservation plan. If you are uncertain about where to deposit your data, please see this information regarding repositories.
Authors are further encouraged to cite any data sets referenced in the article and provide a Data Availability Statement.
At the point of submission, you will be asked if there is a data set associated with the paper. If you reply yes, you will be asked to provide the DOI, pre-registered DOI, hyperlink, or other persistent identifier associated with the data set(s). If you have selected to provide a pre-registered DOI, please be prepared to share the reviewer URL associated with your data deposit, upon request by reviewers.
Where one or multiple data sets are associated with a manuscript, these are not formally peer reviewed as a part of the journal submission process. It is the author’s responsibility to ensure the soundness of data. Any errors in the data rest solely with the producers of the data set(s).
Publication Charges
There are no submission fees, publication fees or page charges for this journal.
Color figures will be reproduced in color in your online article free of charge. If it is necessary for the figures to be reproduced in color in the print version, a charge will apply.
Charges for color figures in print are $400 per figure (£300; $500 Australian Dollars; €350). For more than 4 color figures, figures 5 and above will be charged at $75 per figure (£50; $100 Australian Dollars; €65). Depending on your location, these charges may be subject to local taxes.
Copyright Options
Copyright allows you to protect your original material, and stop others from using your work without your permission. Taylor & Francis offers a number of different license and reuse options, including Creative Commons licenses when publishing open access. Read more on publishing agreements.
Complying with Funding Agencies
We will deposit all National Institutes of Health or Wellcome Trust-funded papers into PubMedCentral on behalf of authors, meeting the requirements of their respective open access policies. If this applies to you, please tell our production team when you receive your article proofs, so we can do this for you. Check funders’ open access policy mandates here. Find out more about sharing your work.
Open Access
This journal gives authors the option to publish open access via our Open Select publishing program, making it free to access online immediately on publication. Many funders mandate publishing your research open access; you can check open access funder policies and mandates here.
Taylor & Francis Open Select gives you, your institution or funder the option of paying an article publishing charge (APC) to make an article open access. Please contact openaccess@tandf.co.uk if you would like to find out more, or go to our Author Services website.
For more information on license options, embargo periods and APCs for this journal please go here.
My Authored Works
On publication, you will be able to view, download and check your article’s metrics (downloads, citations and Altmetric data) via My Authored Works on Taylor & Francis Online. This is where you can access every article you have published with us, as well as your free eprints link, so you can quickly and easily share your work with friends and colleagues.
We are committed to promoting and increasing the visibility of your article. Here are some tips and ideas on how you can work with us to promote your research.
Article Reprints
You will be sent a link to order article reprints via your account in our production system. For enquiries about reprints, please contact Taylor & Francis at reprints@taylorandfrancis.com. You can also order print copies of the journal issue in which your article appears.
Queries
Should you have any queries, please visit our Author Services website or contact us here.
Updated 17-01-2019
Editorial Board
OUTGOING EDITOR Dennis Beringer - FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Institute, Oklahoma City, OK
INCOMING EDITOR (for 2019) Manoj Patankar - Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
DOMAIN EDITORS
Valerie J. Gawron - The MITRE Corporation Center for Advanced System Development, McClean, VA
Hans-Juergen Hoermann - German Aerospace Center (DLR), Hamburg, Germany
David O’Hare, Book Review Editor - University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand
Christopher D. Wickens - Alion Space & Technology Corp., Boulder, CO
EDITORIAL BOARD Dee Andrews - Army Research Institute for the Behavioral and Social Sciences, Gilbert, AZ
Justin S. Campbell - U.S. Navy, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Worldwide, Arlington, VA
Sheryl L. Chappell - NTSB, Washington, DC
Thomas R. Chidester - FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Institute, Oklahoma City, OK
Gerald Chubb - The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH
Mary Cummings - Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
Alan Hobbs - San Jose State University Foundation, Moffett Field, CA David R. Hunter - Artis LLC, Reston, VA
Barbara Kanki - NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA
Michael Karim - Al Masaood & Sons, Abu Dhabi, UAE
Ray King - FAA Civil Aerospace Medical Institute, Oklahoma City, OK
Janeen Kochan - Aviation Research, Training, and Services, Inc., Winter Haven, FL
Ioana Koglbauer - Technische Universitaet Graz, Graz, Austria
Kristen Ligget - Wright Patterson AFB, OH
Gaven Lintern - Cognitive Systems Design, Melbourne, Australia
Dahai Liu - Embry Riddle Aeronautical University, Daytona Beach, FL
Elizabeth Lyall - Research Integrations, Inc., Tempe, AZ
Kathleen Mosier - San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA
Max Mulder - Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands
Neelam Naikar - Defence Science and Technology Organisation, Melbourne, Australia
Ashley Nunes - CSSI, Inc, Washington, DC
Paul O'Connor - Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, CA
Esa M. Rantanen - Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY
Malcolm James Ree - Air Force Research Laboratory, Brooks Air Force Base, TX
Victor Riley - Boeing Commercial Airlines, Seattle, WA
Eduardo Salas - University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL
Nadine B. Sarter - University of Michigan, Ann Harbor, MI
Scott Shappell - Clemson University, Clemson, SC
Rik Warren - Air Force Research Laboratory, Wright Patterson, AFB, OH
Douglas Wiegmann - University of Illinois Aviation Research Laboratory, Savoy, IL
Mark Wiggins - Macquiarie University, Sydney, Australia
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