Announcements

The latest Impact Factors have been released and are updated in our site!

Not a Current Subscriber?

Subscribe Now

5642 Journals
4484 Congresses
10100+ Unique Records

British Journal of Mathematical and Statistical Psychology


Title Abbreviation
Br J Math Stat Psychol
ISSN
0007-1102
Electronic ISSN
2044-8317
Therapeutic Area
Readership
Psychologists, Statisticians
Scope
The British Journal of Mathematical and Statistical Psychology publishes articles relating to areas of psychology which have a greater mathematical or statistical aspect of their argument than is usually acceptable to other journals including: • mathematical psychology • statistics • psychometrics • decision making • psychophysics • classification • relevant areas of mathematics, computing and computer software. These include articles that address substantitive psychological issues or that develop and extend techniques useful to psychologists. New models for psychological processes, new approaches to existing data, critiques of existing models and improved algorithms for estimating the parameters of a model are examples of articles which may be favoured.
Sponsoring Association(s)
British Psychological Society (BPS)
Publisher Name
Wiley-Blackwell
To see more details about British Journal of Mathematical and Statistical Psychology, Subscribe Now!
Impact Factor Electronic Circulation Submission to Acceptance Acceptance to Online Publication Acceptance to Print Publication Rejection Rate Frequency Journal Contact Author Submission Guidelines

Testimonials

"PubsHub [Journals & Congresses] is an indispensable tool when trying to find the perfect home for a manuscript. It is an unbeatable aid when it comes to wise and efficient journal selection."
 
– Kait G
Editorial-Project Editor
"It’s useful for establishing publication timelines, communicating them to management and setting expectations accordingly"
– Michael K.
Medical Communications Leader
"…a gold mine of information for clinicians and scientists who are trying to determine where to publish their research."
- Weill Cornell Medical Library