Back to Top
Go Back
Journal Photo for Perspectives on Psychological Science
Peer reviewed only Open Access

Perspectives on Psychological Science (PPS)

Publisher : SAGE Publications Ltd
Psychological Science Psychology
e-ISSN 1745-6924
p-ISSN 1745-6916
Issue Frequency Monthly
Est. Year 2006
Mobile 18008187243
Country United States
Language English
APC YES
Impact Factor Assignee Google Scholar
Email journals@sagepub.com

Journal Descriptions

Perspectives on Psychological Science publishes an eclectic mix of provocative reports and articles, including broad integrative reviews, overviews of research programs, meta-analyses, theoretical statements, book reviews, and articles on topics such as the philosophy of science, opinion pieces about major issues in the field, autobiographical reflections of senior members of the field, and even occasional humorous essays and sketches. Perspectives contains both invited and submitted articles. An article in 2009 investigating correlative analyses commonly used in neuroimaging studies is still reverberating throughout the field, and a recent special issue of Perspectives, featuring prominent researchers writing about what they consider to be “The Next Big Questions in Psychology,” continues to shape the future trajectory of the discipline.

Perspectives on Psychological Science (PPS) is :-

  • International, Peer-Reviewed, Open Access, Refereed, Psychological Science, Psychology , Online or Print , Monthly Journal

  • UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN P-ISSN: 1745-6916, E-ISSN: 1745-6924, Established: 2006,
  • Does Not Provide Crossref DOI
  • Indexed in: Scopus, WoS

  • Not indexed in DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE

Indexing

Publications of PPS

BRUCE J. ELLIS July, 2017
How does repeated or chronic childhood adversity shape social and cognitive abilities? According to the prevailing deficit model, children from high-stress backgrounds are at risk for impair...
BRUCE J. ELLIS September, 2021
We review the three prevailing approaches—specificity, cumulative risk, and dimensional models—to conceptualizing the developmental consequences of early-life adversity and address funda...
Roy F. Baumeister June, 2023
Humans evolved to be hyper-cooperative, particularly when among people who are well known to them, when relationships involve reciprocal helping opportunities, and when the costs to the help...
Roy F. Baumeister May, 2024
We identify points of conflict and consensus regarding (a) controversial empirical claims and (b) normative preferences for how controversial scholarship—and scholars—should be treated. ...
Roy F. Baumeister December, 2007
Psychology calls itself the science of behavior, and the American Psychological Association's current “Decade of Behavior” was intended to increase awareness and appreciation of this asp...
Roy F. Baumeister November, 2022
Multisite (multilab/many-lab) replications have emerged as a popular way of verifying prior research findings, but their record in social psychology has prompted distrust of the field and a ...
Roy F. Baumeister February, 2013
Prospection (Gilbert & Wilson, 2007), the representation of possible futures, is a ubiquitous feature of the human mind. Much psychological theory and practice, in contrast, has understood h...
Roy F. Baumeister January, 2008
Some actions are freer than others, and the difference is palpably important in terms of inner process, subjective perception, and social consequences. Psychology can study the difference be...
Roy F. Baumeister March, 2018
The strength model of self-regulation uses a muscle analogy to explain patterns of ego depletion, conservation of willpower, and improved performance after frequent exercise. Our 2007 overvi...
Roy F. Baumeister July, 2016
In retrospect, the decision to use new, mostly untested procedures1 for a large replication project was foolish. When planning the Registered Replication Report (RRR) on ego depletion (Ha...