ISSN: 1871-1340
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The Mental Lexicon Q1 Unclaimed
The Mental Lexicon is a journal indexed in SJR in Cognitive Neuroscience and Language and Linguistics with an H index of 31. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,399 and it has a best quartile of Q1. It has an SJR impact factor of 0,399.
Type: Journal
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Open Access Policy:
Type of publications:
Publication frecuency: -
- €
Inmediate OANPD
Embargoed OA- €
Non OAMetrics
0,399
SJR Impact factor31
H Index5
Total Docs (Last Year)48
Total Docs (3 years)326
Total Refs38
Total Cites (3 years)44
Citable Docs (3 years)0.59
Cites/Doc (2 years)65.2
Ref/DocOther journals with similar parameters
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Aims and Scope
Best articles by citations
Ratings gathered online vs. in person: Different stimulus sets and different statistical conclusions
View morePhonemic representations in morphological segmentation of written English words
View moreFunctionalism in the lexicon
View moreLearning is not decline
View moreThe locus of the masked onset priming effect
View moreAssessing language impairment in aphasia
View moreAcquisition of deverbal compounds by French-speaking preschoolers
View moreWhy are Noun-Verb-ercompounds so difficult for English-speaking children?
View moreMeta-megastudies
View moreNonlinear analyses of self-paced reading
View moreEffects of the relationships between forms within and across paradigms on lexical processing and representation
View moreMetameric
View moreGood and bad opposites: Using textual and experimental techniques to measure antonym canonicity
View moreAccessing Morphosyntax in L1 and L2 Word Recognition: A Priming Study of Inflected German Adjectives
View morePhonological reduction in the first part of noun compounds
View moreWhy we need to investigate casual speech to truly understand language production, processing and the mental lexicon
View moreWhat the Networks Tell us about Serial and Parallel Processing: An MEG Study of Language Networks and N-gram Frequency Effects in Overt Picture
View moreStimulus norming
View moreChinese as a natural experiment
View moreUsing a maze task to track lexical and sentence processing
View moreAre word meanings corresponding to different grammatical categories organised differently within lexical semantic memory?
View moreAsymmetric lexical access and fuzzy lexical representations in second language learners
View morePay no attention to that man behind the curtain
View morePhysical metaphors for the mental lexicon
View more
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