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Journal of Personality (JOP)

Publisher :

John Wiley & Sons Ltd

Scopus Profile
Peer reviewed only
Scopus Profile
Open Access
  • Personality
  • Psychology
  • Behavioural
  • +7

e-ISSN :

1467-6494

Issue Frequency :

Bi-Monthly

Est. Year :

1930

Mobile :

8606795466

Country :

United Kingdom

Language :

English

APC :

YES

Impact Factor Assignee :

Google Scholar

Email :

jopyeditorial@wiley.com

Role In Research Journal

Howard Tennen
Stephen G. West

Editorial Board Member

Howard Tennen
Stephen G. West

Editorial Board Member

Howard Tennen
Stephen G. West

Associate Editor

Journal Descriptions

Journal of Personality publishes scientific investigations in the field of personality. We focus particularly on personality and behavior dynamics, personality development, and individual differences in the cognitive, affective, and interpersonal domains. This social psychology journal reflects and stimulates interest in the growth of new theoretical and methodological approaches in personality psychology. To support authors we now offer free format submission for a simplified and streamlined submission process.


Journal of Personality (JOP) is :

International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Personality, Psychology, Behavioural, Development, Affective, Neuroscience, Research, Child, Therapy, Empirical , Online Bi-Monthly Journal

UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN , E-ISSN - 1467-6494, Established in - 1930, Impact Factor

Not Provide Crossref DOI

Not indexed in Scopus, WoS, DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE

Publications of JOP

  • dott image December, 2001

Love and Anger in Romantic Relationships: A Discrete Systems Model

In a study of 124 dating couples, we tested a discrete systems model of the functions of two emotion systems in romantic relationships: love and anger/upset. This model posits that the opera...

  • dott image March, 1972

Risky shift in a naturalistic setting

The "risky shift" phenomenon has aroused considerable mterest among social psychologists in recent years The label "nsky shift" refers to the widely rephcated findmg that groups are wilhng...

High Self-Control Predicts Good Adjustment, Less Pathology, Better Grades, and Interpersonal Success

What good is self-control? We incorporated a new measure of individual differences in self-control into two large investigations of a broad spectrum of behaviors. The new scale showed good i...

  • dott image September, 1989

Self-Presentational Motivations and Personality Differences in Self-Esteem

This article discusses the interpersonal motivations associated with different levels of self-esteem. Although self-esteem literally refers to an intrapsychic attitude, we propose that self-...

  • dott image December, 2006

Self-Regulation and Personality: How Interventions Increase Regulatory Success, and How Depletion Moderates the Effects of Traits on Behavior

Self-regulation is a highly adaptive, distinctively human trait that enables people to override and alter their responses, including changing themselves so as to live up to social and other ...

  • dott image February, 1998

Empathy, Shame, Guilt, and Narratives of Interpersonal Conflicts: Guilt-Prone People Are Better at Perspective Taking

Both guilt and empathic perspective taking have been linked to prosocial, relationship-enhancing effects. Study 1 found that shame was linked to personal distress, whereas guilt was linked t...

  • dott image December, 1998

Freudian Defense Mechanisms and Empirical Findings in Modern Social Psychology: Reaction Formation, Projection, Displacement, Undoing, Isolation, Subl...

Recent studies in social psychology are reviewed for evidence relevant to seven Freudian defense mechanisms. This work emphasizes normal populations, moderate rather than extreme forms of de...

  • dott image December, 2001

Virtue, Personality, and Social Relations: Self-Control as the Moral Muscle

Morality is a set of rules that enable people to live together in harmony, and virtue involves internalizing those rules. Insofar as virtue depends on overcoming selfish or antisocial impuls...

Yes, But Are They Happy? Effects of Trait Self-Control on Affective Well-Being and Life Satisfaction

Does trait self-control (TSC) predict affective well-being and life satisfaction—positively, negatively, or not? We conducted three studies (Study 1: N = 414, 64% female, Mage = 35...

  • dott image September, 1985

Self-esteem and responses to success and failure: Subsequent performance and intrinsic motivation

A model is proposed in which the goal of people with high self-esteem is to cultivate personal strengths in order to excel, whereas the goal of people with low self-esteem is to remedy perso...

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