Thank you so much Chris! I really appreciate it.

Nina

From: Christopher D. Green [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 4:56 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Tier or Prestige of Journals


You might also want to look at my reply to the Adair & Vohra article: "On (Not) 
Trimming One's Toenails with a Bazooka" at 
http://www.yorku.ca/christo/papers/adair-reply.htm

I think that your question implies that there is a single status hierarchy in 
psychology, but there are, of course, many status hierarchies. Psych. Rev. and 
Psych. Bull. are still at the top, but soon after that, it breaks down along 
subdisciplinary lines: Cog journals, Perception journals, Child/development 
journals, animal behavior journals, social journals, personality journals, 
clinical, counseling, a whole whack of applied psychologies, etc. Impact factor 
might give you a VERY rough idea of the relative status of journals but, as a 
statistic, impact factor is highly contaminated by the raw size of the 
subdiscipline. For instance, history of psychology journals have TINY impact 
factors because the area itself is so small - there just aren't that many 
reference to go around. But everyone in history of psych knows that the best 
journals, even though they may have impact factors smaller than many 3rd-rung 
cognitive journals.

Regards,
Chris Green
York U.
Toronto
=============

Tarner, Prof. Nina L. wrote:

Thank you for responding.  I guess I was thinking there would be a site, 
perhaps by the APA, with a list of the Psychological journals and their rank 
amongst the others listed. And since there are so many journals now handled 
electronically that perhaps there would be something more recent than 2004.  
Perhaps I'll check on the APA website. Anything else helpful or suggestions?

Thank you
Nina

From: Blaine Peden [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 1:53 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Tier or Prestige of Journals


following Paul's suggestion I looked at 
http://psychology.wikia.com/wiki/Impact_factor and found these

References of relevance to psychologists

 *   Adair, J. G., & Vohra, N. (2003). The explosion of knowledge, references, 
and citations: Psychology's unique response to a crisis. American 
Psychologist<http://psychology.wikia.com/wiki/American_Psychologist>, 58, 15-23.
 *   Anseel,F., Duyck,W.,De Baene,W., and Brysbaert, M. (2004) Journal Impact 
Factors and Self-Citations: Implications for Psychology Journals. American 
Psychologist<http://psychology.wikia.com/wiki/American_Psychologist>, ,49-51 
Full 
text<http://www.pc.rhul.ac.uk/staff/M.Brysbaert/marcbrysPDF/24_Anseel_Duyck_De_Baene_%20Brysbaert_%282004%29.pdf>
 *   Boor, M. (1982). The citation impact factor:Another dubious index of 
journal quality.American Psychologist, 37, 975-977.
 *   Gottfredson, S. D. (1978). Evaluating psychological research reports: 
Dimensions, reliability, and correlates of quality judgments. American 
Psychologist, 33, 920-934.
 *   McGarty, C. (2000). The citation impact factor in social psychology: A bad 
statistic that encourages bad science? Current Research in Social 
Psychology<http://psychology.wikia.com/wiki/Current_Research_in_Social_Psychology>,
 5(1), 1-16.
----- Original Message -----
From: Paul C Bernhardt<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences 
(TIPS)<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 12:39 PM
Subject: Re: [tips] Tier or Prestige of Journals


A search on 'impact factor' and a journal name or discipline will get you 
there. Also, acceptance rates of journals can be found. Depending on your 
perspective, either can be considered measures of prestige of a journal.

--
Paul Bernhardt
Frostburg State University
Frostburg, MD, USA



On 11/18/08 1:13 PM, "Tarner, Prof. Nina L." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL 
PROTECTED]>> wrote:







Hi all,

Does anyone know if there is a tier or hierarchy of journals in Psychology? For 
example, are there some journals that are rated as better or more prestigious 
than others?  I am pretty sure there are, but does anyone know what that tier 
is or where it is located?

Thank you,
Nina

Nina L. Tarner, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor in Psychology
HC 219
Department of Psychology
Sacred Heart University
Fairfield, CT. 06825
(203) 371-7915
(203) 371-7995 Fax


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