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Journal Photo for Psychological Science
Peer reviewed only Open Access

Psychological Science (PS)

Publisher : SAGE Publications
Psychological Science
e-ISSN 1467-9280
p-ISSN 0956-7976
Issue Frequency Monthly
Est. Year 1990
Mobile 4402073248500
Country United Kingdom
Language English
APC YES
Impact Factor Assignee Google Scholar
Email psci@psychologicalscience.org

Journal Descriptions

Psychological Science, the flagship journal of the Association for Psychological Science, is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology and is truly a leader in the field. The journal publishes cutting-edge research articles and short reports, spanning the entire spectrum of the science of psychology. This journal is the source for the latest findings in cognitive, social, developmental, and health psychology, as well as behavioral neuroscience and biopsychology. Psychological Science routinely features studies employing novel research methodologies and the newest, most innovative techniques of analysis.

Psychological Science (PS) is :-

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

  • UGC Approved, ISSN Approved: P-ISSN P-ISSN: 0956-7976, E-ISSN: 1467-9280, Established: 1990,
  • Does Not Provide Crossref DOI
  • Not indexed in Scopus, WoS, DOAJ, PubMed, UGC CARE

Indexing

Publications of PS

Peter B Jones August, 2017
One of the most replicable findings in psychology is the positive manifold: the observation that individual differences in cognitive abilities are universally positively correlated. Investig...
Roy F. Baumeister November, 1997
Procrastination is variously described as harmful, innocuous, or even beneficial Two longitudinal studies examined procrastination among students Procrastinators reported lower stress and le...
Roy F. Baumeister June, 2010
Pain, whether caused by physical injury or social rejection, is an inevitable part of life. These two types of pain—physical and social—may rely on some of the same behavioral and neural...
Roy F. Baumeister April, 2012
In the present study, we used experience sampling to measure desires and desire regulation in everyday life. Our analysis included data from 205 adults, who furnished a total of 7,827 report...
Roy F. Baumeister June, 2009
People often get what they want from the social system, and that process is aided by social popularity or by having money. Money can thus possibly substitute for social acceptance in conferr...
Roy F. Baumeister March, 2008
This experiment used the attraction effect to test the hypothesis that ingestion of sugar can reduce reliance on intuitive, heuristic-based decision making. In the attraction effect, a diffi...
Roy F. Baumeister June, 2014
If free-will beliefs support attributions of moral responsibility, then reducing these beliefs should make people less retributive in their attitudes about punishment. Four studies tested th...