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Judgment and Decision Making 2006-2022This is the journal of the Society for Judgment and Decision Making (SJDM) and the European Association for Decision Making (EADM). It is open access, published on the World Wide Web. As of 2023, the journal is published by Cambridge University Press, and the new site of the journal is here. The full contents of the journal, including papers appearing before 2023 and after 2022, are here. The present site, however, retains the original layout, including data, supplements, tables of contents, and annual reports. Links to articles before 2023 will still work. Aims and scopeThe study of judgment and decision making (JDM) concerns normative, descriptive and prescriptive analysis of human judgments and decisions. These topics may be studied from theoretical or applied perspectives, with the use of experiments, surveys, analysis of existing data, and other necessary approaches. Contributions to the journal will fall within these bounds and reflect issues central to JDM, including, but not limited to those in this list. The field of JDM is inter-disciplinary, so the journal covers relevant content from several fields, including cognitive psychology, experimental economics, and experimental philosophy. We expect contributions to be accessible to readers in at least these fields.What we publishTypes of articles: We publish articles of any length, including new empirical contributions, adversarial collaborations, informative replies to relevant articles, meta-analyses, theoretical articles, historical overviews, and potential target articles designed for published comments. Replications: We publish replications, so long as they have a compelling rationale, e.g., the original results were surprising. Registered reports: We will review the Introduction and Method section of proposed studies (plus something like a power analysis, if relevant). If these are accepted, then we promise to publish the results. The idea is to encourage risky but important studies (including replications) by removing the fear that a negative or ambiguous result will not be publishable. See the note2 for further details. Theory specification papers (pilot phase): We publish manuscripts in which important (e.g., well researched and cited) and still underspecified theories of (mainly) other authors are specified. Papers should objectify theories by fully specifying and operationally defining all concepts included in the antecedence and the consequence parts of a theory and their interrelations. Such papers should foster debates that converge on a common understanding. Please contact the responsible editor (Andreas Glöckner) with a short proposal prior to writing the paper. What we do not publish
Article processing
As of Jaunary 2023, the journal is published by CambridgeUniversity Press. All major features of the journal, as well as its contents, will be preserved. The current editors and board will remain. To submit an article for consideration, go to the Cambridge University Press site: https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/jdm. Please also include a Word or TeX version of your paper somewhere (probably a supplementary file). Make sure that you look at the statistical guidelines. And do not be discouraged by the (somewhat incomplete) section on waivers of processing charges. We expect very few authors to be subject to these, regardless of read-and-publish agreements. But make sure to read the question in the submission page about "the Gold open access payment options". The last option refers to a waiver on the basis of inability to pay, and, for that, you must follow the links until you get to to this page, which has a link to request a waiver request, which should be here. Please send any questions to journal@sjdm.org, and we will try to answer them. Editorial BoardEditorsJonathan Baron, University of Pennsylvania Mandeep Dhami, Middlesex UniversityAndreas Glöckner, University of Cologne Associate EditorsShahar Ayal, Reichman UniversityMaya Bar-Hillel, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Arndt Bröder, Universität Mannheim Cynthia Cryder, Washington University Junyi Dai, Zhejiang University Adele Diederich, Jacobs University Kimmo Eriksson, Stockholm University Arvid Erlandsson, Linkögping University Enrique Fatas, University of Pennsylvania Yaniv Hanoch, Convntry University Adam Harris, University College London Bettina von Helversen, University of Bremen Ben Hilbig, University of Koblenz-Landau Konstantinos Katsikopoulos, University of Southampton and Harding Centre for Risk Literacy Erin Krupka, University of Michigan Richard John, University of Southern California Joseph G. Johnson, Miami University of Ohio Michael Lee, University of California, Irvine David R. Mandel, Defence Research and Development Canada Nina Mazar, Boston University Barbara Mellers, University of Pennsylvania Ganna Pogrebna, University of Sydney Business School Ilana Ritov, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Ulrich Schmidt, Kiel Institute for the World Economy Sandra Schneider, University of South Florida Shaul Shalvi, University of Amsterdam Joseph Simmons, University of PennsylvaniaK Barbara Summers, University of Leeds Isabel Thielmann, Max Planck Institude Consulting EditorsHal Arkes, Ohio State UniversityNetta Barak-Corren, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Tilmann Betsch, University of Erfurt Nicolao Bonini, University of Trento Valerio Capraro, University of Middlesex Clintin Davis-Stober, University of Missouri Catherine Eckel, Texas A&M University Ido Erev, Technion, Israel Institute of Technology Susann Fiedler, Vienna University of Economics and Business Gregory Fischer, Duke University Craig Fox, University of California, Los Angeles Andrew Gelman, Columbia University Thomas Gilovich, Cornell University Daniel Goldstein, Microsoft Research Ulrich Hoffrage, University of Lausanne Julie Irwin, University of Oregon Esther Kaufmann, Universität Konstanz Simon Kemp, University of Canterbury, N.Z. Gideon Keren, Tilburg University Kris Kirby, Williams College Derek Koehler, University of Waterloo Michal Król, University of Agder, Norway Shu Li, Chinese Academy of Sciences Rui Mata,University of Basel Don Moore, University of California, Berkeley Jeryl Mumpower, Texas A & M University Ben Newell, University of New South Wales Gordon Pennycook, University of Regina Ellen Peters, University of Oregon Antonio Rangel, California Institute of Technology Adil Saribay, Kadir Has University Alan Schwartz, University of Illinois at Chicago Miroslav Sirota, University of Essex Cass Sunstein, Harvard Law School Eldad Yechiam, Technion, Israel Institute of Technology Onurcan Yılmaz, Kadir Has University Liane Young, Boston College Supervisory committeeDerek Koehler, University of Waterloo (SJDM)Christopher Hsee, University of Chicago (SJDM) Bernd Figner, Radboud University (EADM) Eldad Yechiam, Technion, Israel Institute of Technology (EADM) 1An article cannot be previously published in a refereed journal. It can, however, be published in a conference proceedings, a personal web site, a working-paper series, or a pre-print server. 2A registered report is not the same as pre-registration, although that may be useful for many papers, including registered reports. See As Predicted. When submitting a registered report, please also include a separate explanation of why you are doing the study and why you want acceptance in advance. Following initial (pre-study) acceptance, authors are typically required by the action editor to register the approved protocol (e.g., on the Open Science Framework https://osf.io/rr/ or other recognised repository), either publicly or under private embargo until submission of the full manuscript with results. The full manuscript will then also contain the URL of the approved protocol. Web page maintained by Jonathan Baron; image by Gaëlle Vallée-Tourangeau; additional software by Adam Kramer, Alan Schwartz, and Xiaohua Du. |