ISSN: 2211-3681
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Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition Q1 Unclaimed
Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition is a journal indexed in SJR in Experimental and Cognitive Psychology and Clinical Psychology with an H index of 55. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,993 and it has a best quartile of Q1. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,993.
Type: Journal
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Open Access Policy:
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Publication frecuency: -
- €
Inmediate OANPD
Embargoed OA- €
Non OAMetrics
0,993
SJR Impact factor55
H Index56
Total Docs (Last Year)232
Total Docs (3 years)2656
Total Refs574
Total Cites (3 years)208
Citable Docs (3 years)2.09
Cites/Doc (2 years)47.43
Ref/DocOther journals with similar parameters
Nature Human Behaviour Q1
Trends in Cognitive Sciences Q1
Developmental Review Q1
Multivariate Behavioral Research Q1
Behavior Research Methods Q1
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Aims and Scope
Best articles by citations
"There Were Spooks in the Park": Children's Reminiscing with Parents and Siblings Following a Staged Halloween Event
View moreStandards to avoid bias in fingerprint examination? Are such standards doomed to be based on fiscal expediency?
View moreContaminated Confessions: How Source and Consistency of Confession Details Influence Memory and Attributions
View moreThe Effect of Question Placement on Learning from Textbook Chapters
View moreDo the clothes make the criminal? The influence of clothing match on identification accuracy in showups
View moreEliciting Information from People Who Pose a Threat: Counter-Interview Strategies Examined
View moreForgetting Fixation with Context Change
View moreThe culture of science: Bias and forensic evidence
View moreLie-detection by Strategy Manipulation: Developing an Asymmetric Information Management (AIM) Technique
View moreIs working memory necessary for implementation intentions to enhance prospective memory in older adults with cognitive problems?
View moreShould You Use Frequent Quizzing in Your College Course? Giving up 20 Minutes of Lecture Time May Pay Off
View moreAcademic Forgetting
View moreCombining the Strengths of Naturalistic and Laboratory Decision-Making Research to Create Integrative Theories of Choice
View morePsychological contamination in forensic decisions
View moreUnderstanding Cognition from Individual Variation: Current State and Future Directions
View moreHuman Lie-Detection Performance: Does Random Assignment versus Self-Selection of Liars and Truth-Tellers Matter?
View moreImplementing counter-measures against confirmation bias in forensic science
View moreContamination or Natural Variation? A Comparison of Contradictions from Suggested Contagion and Intrinsic Variation in Repeated Autobiographical Accounts
View moreI Forgot to Remember to Forget
View moreForensic confirmation bias: The case of facial image comparison
View moreRemembering Versus Imagining: When Does Episodic Retrospection and Episodic Prospection Aid Decision Making?
View moreMetamemory and memory efficiency: Implications for student learning
View morePunishing the Crime of Forgetting
View moreDecision science as a by-product of decision-aiding: A practitioner's perspective
View more
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