Editorial assistant
Swasti Arora
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience
Faculty of Science
Dalhousie University
1355 Oxford St.
Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4R2
Canada
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As its name implies, Experimental Psychology publishes innovative, original, high-quality experimental research in psychology.
Why is Experimental Psychology a quality journal?
To get more detailed information, read the Editorial by Andreas B. Eder and Christian Frings.
What makes Experimental Psychology special?
*Provided there are no delays in approving proofs for release.
Peer Review Week: Recognition For Reviewers
Hogrefe journals collaborate with the Web of Science Reviewer Recognition Service to support reviewers and ensure they receive the recognition they deserve for their peer review contributions. The Reviewer Recognition Service enables contributors to track, verify, and showcase their work for promotion and use in funding applications. It is seamlessly integrated into each journal’s Editorial Manager system so reviewers can opt-in to have their completed reviews automatically added to the Web of Science Researcher Profile. Read more on Hogrefe’s recognition for reviewers and find out how to create a Web of Science Researcher profile here.
Open Access for UK authors publishing in APA PsycArticles
Hogrefe is participating in the open access publishing pilot for the APA PsycArticles database in 2023-2026 – this includes eligible articles accepted in Experimental Psychology.
Learn more
Announcing a New Submission Category: Replication Reports
The Editors are proud to announce a new article category, which gives you as authors the opportunity to present results of studies conducted as either exact or conceptual replications of already published research. For more information, please click here.
Announcing the Peer Community in Registered Reports
Experimental Psychology is proud to be a founding participant journal in the recently launched Peer Community in Registered Reports (PCI-RR). After a preprint is posted on a server and submitted for review at PCI, it follows the usual rounds of reviews and revisions. Once authors have their Registered Report recommended by PCI-RR, they have the option to publish their article in a growing list of “PCI-RR-friendly” journals that have committed to accepting PCI-RR recommendations without further peer review – one of them is Experimental Psychology.
Click here for more information.
We are looking forward to receiving your manuscript for Experimental Psychology. Please read and take note of the instructions to authors before submitting your manuscript. All manuscripts should be submitted via Editorial Manager. Thank you!
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Editing and translation services
Hogrefe has negotiated a 20% discount for authors who wish to have their manuscript professionally edited or translated into English by the experts at Enago before submission.
Please note that the service is independent of Hogrefe and use of it has no bearing on acceptance decisions made by individual journals.
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Experimental Psychology wants to encourage researchers to carry out replication research using its Registered Report format.
Recent Editorial
Message From Your New Editor
Raymond M. Klein
Experimental Psychology, Vol. 68, No. 4, pp. 173-174
Editor’s Picks
(A)symmetries in Memory and Directed Forgetting of Political Stimuli
Andrew Franks, Hajime Otani, and Gavin T. Roupe
Experimental Psychology, Vol. 70, No. 2, pp. 68-80
Probing the Dual-Route Model of the SNARC Effect by Orthogonalizing Processing Speed and Depth
Daniele Didino, Matthias Brandtner, Maria Glaser, and André Knops
Experimental Psychology, Vol. 70, No. 1, pp. 1–13
Editor-in-chief
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience
Faculty of Science
Dalhousie University
1355 Oxford St.
B3H 4R2 HalifaxSwasti Arora
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience
Faculty of Science
Dalhousie University
1355 Oxford St.
Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4R2
Canada
Send email
Ullrich Ecker
School of Psychological Science
University of Western Australia
Perth 6009
Australia
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Associate Professor at the University of Western Australia. His main interests lie in episodic memory, working memory, feature binding, memory updating, as well as the processing of misinformation and its effects on memory and reasoning. He uses mainly behavioural experimentation, augmented by neuroimaging methods (event-related potentials, fMRI) and computational modelling.
Gesa Hartwigsen
Lise Meitner Research Group
Cognition and Plasticity
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences
Stephanstraße 1a
04103 Leipzig
Germany
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Lise Meitner Research Group Leader at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences in Leipzig (Germany). Her main interest is the potential for adaptive systems plasticity in neural networks for cognitive functions, with a focus on the healthy and lesioned language network. Her group combines neurostimulation and neuroimaging techniques to probe interactions between domain-specific and domain-general networks.
Manuel Perea
University of València
Av. Blasco Ibáñez, 21
46010 Valencia
Spain
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Professor of Psychology at the University of Valencia (Spain). His main fields of interest are psychology of language, lexical-semantic memory, and cognitive neuroscience.
James R. Schmidt
Université de Bourgogne
LEAD-CNRS UMR 5022
Pole AAFE
11 Esplanade Erasme
21000 Dijon
France
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Full Professor at the Université de Bourgogne, working in the Laboratoire d'Etude de l'Apprentissage et du Développement (LEAD; Laboratory for Research on Learning and Development). His main research interests are implicit learning, music learning, cognitive control, and neural networks.
Alexander Schütz
University of Marburg
Department of Psychology
Gutenbergstr. 18
35032 Marburg
Germany
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Professor of Experimental Psychology at the University of Marburg (Germany). His main research interests are visual perception, eye movements and their interaction in active perception.
The expertise of the international editorial board covers a broad range of subject areas. All papers submitted to the journal are subject to full peer-review by members of the board and external reviewers.
Hartmut Blank, University of Portsmouth, UK
(memory (misinformation and social influence), hindsight bias and meta-analysis)
Arndt Bröder, University of Mannheim, Germany
(memory and metamemory, judgment and decision making)
Roberto Dell'Acqua, Università degli Studi di Padova, Italy
(visual attention, visual working memory, attentional blink)
Edgar Erdfelder, Universität Mannheim, Germany
(episodic memory, judgment/reasoning, cognitive modeling, design/power analysis)
Christian Frings, University of Würzburg, Germany
(action control, perception-action Integration, inhibition (negative priming), multisensory perception)
Morris Goldsmith, University of Haifa, Israel
(object-based attention, memory accuracy, and metamemory-metacognition)
Dirk Kerzel, Université de Genève, Switzerland
(visual search, visual working memory, and motion perception)
Andrea Kiesel, University of Freiburg, Germany
(cognitive control, multitasking, cognitive-motor interference)
Iring Koch, RWTH Aachen, Germany
(attention & cognitive control (task switching specifically), bilingualism, sequence learning)
Joachim I. Krueger, Brown University, RI, USA
(social cognition, JDM, free will)
Dominique Lamy, Tel Aviv University, Israel
(visual search, visual attention, conscious vs. unconscious visual perception)
Stephen Lindsay, University of Victoria, Canada
(memory, eyewitness memory, response bias)
Ben Newell, University of New South Wales, Australia
(judgment, decision making, choice)
Klaus Oberauer, Universität Zürich, Switzerland
(working memory, executive functions, episodic memory)
Michel Regenwetter, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, IL, USA
(order-constrained Inference, decision making, probabilistic choice)
Rainer Reisenzein, Universität Greifswald, Germany
(emotion, surprise, motivation, temporal order)
Jeffrey N. Rouder, University of Missouri, MO, USA
(methods (Bayesian in particular), individual differences, attention)
David Shanks, University College London, UK
(learning, memory, and unconscious processes)
Christoph Stahl, University of Cologne, Germany
(evaluative conditioning, implicit/unconscious learning, false memory)
Sarah Teige-Mocigemba, University of Marburg, Germany
(social cognition, implicit measures, priming)
Sebastien Tremblay, Université Laval, Canada
(cognitive limitations, human performance, problem solving, decision making)
Christian Unkelbach, Universität zu Köln, Germany
(social cognition, person perception, evaluative learning & conditioning, sport psychology)
Eva Walther, Universität Trier, Germany
(evaluative learning, conditioning, contingency memory)
Peter A. White, Cardiff University, UK
(causal judgment, causal perception, temporal aspects of perception)
The Experimental Psychology is published bimonthly, online. Subscriptions generally run from January to December.
Further information on our subscription conditions can be found in the Information for subscribers or in our current journals catalog.
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Further information and prices for journal subscriptions can be found in our journals catalog – or contact us via email for a price quote.
Tier 1 | Tier 2 | Tier 3 | Tier 4 | |
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$ | 531.00 | 627.00 | 724.00 | 820.00 |
Tier 1 | Tier 2 | Tier 3 | Tier 4 | |
---|---|---|---|---|
FTEs / Users | < 250 | < 5,000 | 5,000 - 15,000 | > 15,000 |
RPs | < 10 | < 100 | 100 - 200 | > 200 |
Beds | < 50 | 50 - 150 | 150 - 300 | > 300 |