Generated by GPT-5-mini| Cognitive Psychology (journal) | |
|---|---|
| Title | Cognitive Psychology |
| Abbreviation | Cogn. Psychol. |
| Discipline | Cognitive psychology |
| Language | English |
| Editor | Ulrich Mayr |
| Publisher | Elsevier |
| History | 1970–present |
| Frequency | Bimonthly |
| Issn | 0010-0285 |
Cognitive Psychology (journal) is a peer-reviewed academic journal publishing empirical and theoretical work on human cognition. Established in 1970, the journal has been a leading venue for research on perception, memory, language, reasoning, attention, and cognitive development. It is published by Elsevier and is widely cited across psychology, neuroscience, linguistics, and artificial intelligence communities.
The journal was founded during the rise of the cognitive revolution, a period associated with figures and institutions such as Ulric Neisser, George A. Miller, Noam Chomsky, MIT, and Harvard University. Early volumes showcased work that intersected with research traditions from Columbia University, Stanford University, and University of Michigan, reflecting methodological influences from experimental paradigms established at Bell Labs, RAND Corporation, and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research. Over subsequent decades the journal published contributions from scholars affiliated with Princeton University, University of California, Berkeley, Yale University, University College London, Max Planck Society, and University of Toronto, incorporating advances linked to developments at IBM Research, Bell Labs, and the emergence of computational models from Carnegie Mellon University and University of Edinburgh. Editorial leadership has included prominent editors drawn from institutions such as University of Oregon, University of Virginia, and University of Colorado Boulder, each guiding transitions in the journal's emphasis mirroring shifts in grants and priorities from funding bodies like the National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, and the Air Force Office of Scientific Research.
The journal emphasizes rigorous empirical studies and formal theoretical analyses that advance understanding of cognitive processes. Typical topics encompass work on perception influenced by laboratories at MIT and University of California, San Diego, memory research linked to University of Pennsylvania and Harvard University, language studies related to Stanford University and University of Cambridge, attention research associated with University College London and University of Oxford, and problem solving and decision making connected to Columbia University and University of Chicago. It routinely publishes articles employing methodologies rooted in traditions from Bell Labs, Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, and computational frameworks developed at Carnegie Mellon University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Google DeepMind. The scope explicitly welcomes cross-disciplinary submissions that interface with work from Allen Institute for Brain Science, Salk Institute, Broad Institute, and researchers affiliated with institutions such as Princeton University, University of Michigan, and Yale University.
The editorial board comprises scholars from leading universities and research institutes including representatives from University of Virginia, University of Colorado Boulder, University of Cambridge, McGill University, University of Toronto, University College London, and University of Oxford. Editors solicit reviewers with expertise drawn from networks at Stanford University, MIT, Carnegie Mellon University, Columbia University, and Harvard University. Peer review follows double-blind or single-blind procedures depending on editorial policy, and decisions are informed by standards adopted by societies and publishers such as the Association for Psychological Science, American Psychological Association, and Elsevier. The journal has instituted editorial policies addressing reproducibility and data sharing consistent with initiatives from Center for Open Science, National Institutes of Health, and funders like the National Science Foundation.
Cognitive Psychology has been cited as a high-impact outlet within cognitive sciences, consistently appearing in citation analyses alongside journals such as Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, Psychological Review, Nature Neuroscience, and Trends in Cognitive Sciences. Its influence is reflected in landmark citations that shaped research agendas at institutions including MIT, Carnegie Mellon University, Stanford University, Princeton University, and Harvard University. The journal has played a role in debates engaging scholars associated with Noam Chomsky, Herbert A. Simon, Daniel Kahneman, and Elizabeth Loftus, and in exchanges hosted at conferences organized by Society for Neuroscience, Cognitive Science Society, and Association for Psychological Science.
Notable articles published in the journal span empirical demonstrations and theoretical syntheses that influenced subsequent work at University of Pennsylvania, Yale University, University of California, Berkeley, University College London, and Max Planck Society. Special issues have been guest-edited by scholars linked to Carnegie Mellon University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, University of Cambridge, and University of Oxford, addressing themes such as computational modeling, memory systems, language processing, and attention networks. Several issues prompted follow-up symposia at venues including Society for Neuroscience meetings, workshops at Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, and colloquia at Santa Fe Institute.
The journal is abstracted and indexed in major databases and services including Web of Science, Scopus, PsycINFO, and MEDLINE. It is listed in citation indices maintained by organizations such as Clarivate Analytics and appears in bibliographic listings used by libraries at Library of Congress and university consortia including Association of Research Libraries. The journal's presence in indexing services facilitates discoverability for researchers at institutions including Harvard University, Princeton University, University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, and Stanford University.
Category:Cognitive psychology journals