American Journal of Psychology

The American Journal of Psychology was the first English-language journal devoted primarily to experimental psychology (though Mind, founded in 1876, published some experimental psychology earlier). AJP was founded by the Johns Hopkins University psychologist Granville Stanley Hall in 1887. The journal has distributed some of the greatest groundbreaking and informative papers in psychology. The ‘AGP’ investigates the science of behavior and the mind, releasing reports of original research based on experimental psychology, theoretical presentations, combined theoretical and experimental analyses, historical commentaries along with detailed reviews of well known books.The Journal has published some of the most innovative and formative papers in psychology throughout its history. AJP explores the science of the mind and behavior, publishing reports of original research in experimental psychology, theoretical presentations, combined theoretical and experimental analyses, historical commentaries, and in-depth reviews of significant books. Frequency: Quarterly ISSN: 0002-9556 eISSN: 1939-8298


References

http://www.press.uillinois.edu/journals/ajp.html

Psychology
  • History
  • Portal
  • Psychologist
Basic psychology
  • Abnormal
  • Affective science
  • Affective neuroscience
  • Behaviorism
  • Behavioral neuroscience
  • Cognitive
  • Cognitive neuroscience
  • Comparative
  • Cultural
  • Developmental
  • Differential
  • Evolutionary
  • Experimental
  • Intelligence
  • Mathematical
  • Neuropsychology
  • Personality
  • Positive
  • Psycholinguistics
  • Psychophysics
  • Psychophysiology
  • Social
  • Theoretical
Applied psychology
  • Applied behavior analysis
  • Assessment
  • Clinical
  • Community psychology
  • Consumer
  • Counseling
  • Educational
  • Forensic
  • Health
  • Industrial and organizational
  • Legal
  • Media
  • Military
  • Occupational health
  • Pastoral
  • Political
  • Psychometrics
  • School
  • Sport and exercise
  • Suicidology
  • Systems
  • Traffic
Methodologies
  • Animal testing
  • Archival research
  • Behavior genetics
  • Behavior epigenetics
  • Case study
  • Content analysis
  • Experiments
  • Human subject research
  • Interviews
  • Neuroimaging
  • Observation
  • Qualitative research
  • Quantitative research
  • Self-report inventory
  • Statistical surveys
Orientations
  • Adlerian
  • Analytical
  • Behaviorism
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy
  • Cognitivism
  • Descriptive
  • Ecological systems theory
  • Existential therapy
  • Family therapy
  • Feminist therapy
  • Gestalt psychology
  • Humanistic
  • Narrative therapy
  • Philosophy
  • Psychoanalysis
  • Psychodynamic psychotherapy
  • Rational emotive behavior therapy
  • Transpersonal
Eminent
psychologists
  • Alfred Adler
  • Gordon Allport
  • Albert Bandura
  • Aaron Beck
  • John Bowlby
  • Raymond Cattell
  • Kenneth and Mamie Clark
  • Albert Ellis
  • Erik Erikson
  • Hans Eysenck
  • Leon Festinger
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Harry Harlow
  • Donald O. Hebb
  • Clark L. Hull
  • William James
  • Carl Jung
  • Jerome Kagan
  • Kurt Lewin
  • Ivar Lovaas
  • Abraham Maslow
  • David McClelland
  • George A. Miller
  • Neal E. Miller
  • Walter Mischel
  • Ivan Pavlov
  • Jean Piaget
  • Carl Rogers
  • Stanley Schachter
  • B. F. Skinner
  • Edward Thorndike
  • John B. Watson
  • Wilhelm Wundt
Lists
  • Counseling topics
  • Disciplines
  • Important publications
  • Organizations
  • Outline
  • Psychologists
  • Psychotherapies
  • Research methods
  • Schools of thought
  • Timeline
  • Topics
See also
Wiktionary definition
Wiktionary category
Wikisource
Wikimedia Commons
Wikiquote
Wikinews
Wikibooks

Famous quotes containing the words american, journal and/or psychology:

    ... though it is by no means requisite that the American women should emulate the men in the pursuit of the whale, the felling of the forest, or the shooting of wild turkeys, they might, with advantage, be taught in early youth to excel in the race, to hit a mark, to swim, and in short to use every exercise which could impart vigor to their frames and independence to their minds.
    Frances Wright (1795–1852)

    The writer in me can look as far as an African-American woman and stop. Often that writer looks through the African-American woman. Race is a layer of being, but not a culmination.
    Thylias Moss, African American poet. As quoted in the Wall Street Journal (May 12, 1994)

    Fundamentally the male artist approximates more to the psychology of woman, who, biologically speaking, is a purely creative being and whose personality has been as mysterious and unfathomable to the man as the artist has been to the average person.
    Beatrice Hinkle (1874–1953)