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Judgment and Decision MakingThis 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, at least every two months. We have no author fees so far.What we publish (and do not publish)Submitted articles should be original1 and relevant to the tradition of research in the field represented by SJDM and EADM. Relevant articles deal with normative, descriptive, and/or prescriptive analyses of human judgments and decisions. These include, but are not limited to: experimental studies of judgments of hypothetical scenarios; experimental economic approaches to individual and group behavior; use of physiological methods to understand human judgments and decisions; discussion of normative models such as utility theory; and applications of relevant theory to medicine, law, consumer behavior, business, public choice, and public economics. Types of articles: We publish short articles, adversarial collaborations, informative replies to articles we have published, meta-analyses, new empirical contributions, and theoretical articles. Replications: We publish replications, so long as they have a compelling rationale, e.g., the results were surprising. Pre-registration: We will also 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. What we do not publish: We do not publish literature reviews unless they feature a theoretical contribution or represent a special point of view. We are not interested in applications of a decision analytic method to particular problems in commerce or other fields. Data and materialsWe strongly encourage the submission of raw data and stimulus materials at the time of the initial submission and will usually request these if they are not already submitted. Publications should, insofar as possible, include all key information necessary to understand (and replicate) the study and data analysis. Feel free to use footnotes, appendices, or supplements. We include the data of accepted articles with the articles (unless this is for some reason difficult). We will also include stimuli, questionnaires, and code, when these are necessary to understand exactly what was done (again, unless this is difficult for some reason, such as questionnares with copyright restrictions). Article processingSubmitted articles will be examined by the Editor and possibly by an Associate Editor before they are sent for review. Usually the review will involve one Consulting Editor and another reviewer. This process is designed to insure speedy rejection when rejection seems warranted. Authors may remove their names if they wish, and reviewers may reveal theirs. Submission instructionsSend submissions, comments, or questions by email to the Editor, Jonathan Baron, at baron@psych.upenn.edu. If you do not get an acknowledgement or response within 2 days, please try again. Proposals for special issues will not be accepted for the time being. Make sure that the details of your method (if any) are clear. You can use supplements for this if necessary. Send the data with your submission if possible. If the paper is published you will have to submit them eventually. If you send Word files, please also send You do not need to include a fancy cover letter. An email message is sufficient. Submitted articles must be readable by reviewers in some electronic form. Reviewers prefer tables, figures, and footnotes in the text, not at the end. Accepted articles should meet these technical requirements. If you plan to submit an article, it helps to look at the technical requirements before you write it. Editorial BoardEditorJonathan Baron, University of PennsylvaniaAssociate EditorsMaya Bar-Hillel, Hebrew University of JerusalemEdward Cokely, University of Oklahoma Michael DeKay, Ohio State University Enrique Fatas, University of East Anglia Andreas Glöckner, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen Robin Hogarth, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain Joseph G. Johnson, Miami University of Ohio Michael Lee, University of California, Irvine Barbara Mellers, University of Pennsylvania Leif Nelson, University of California, Berkeley Ilana Ritov, Hebrew University of Jerusalem Consulting EditorsHal Arkes, Ohio State UniversityMax Bazerman, Harvard University Nicolao Bonini, University of Trento Arndt Bröder, Universität Mannheim Clintin Davis-Stober, University of Missouri Mandeep Dhami, University of Surrey Paul Dolan, London School of Economics and Political Science Catherine Eckel, Texas A&M University Ido Erev, Technion, Israel Institute of Technology Gregory Fischer, Duke University Craig Fox, University of California, Los Angeles Shane Frederick, Yale University Thomas Gilovich, Cornell University Daniel Goldstein, Microsoft Research Ulrich Hoffrage, University of Lausanne Konstantinos Katsikopoulos, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Berlin Simon Kemp, University of Canterbury, N.Z. Gideon Keren, Tilburg University Kris Kirby, Williams College Derek Koehler, University of Waterloo Jonathan Jay Koehler, Northwestern University David H. Krantz, Columbia University Irwin Levin, University of Iowa Shu Li, Chinese Academy of Sciences Don Moore, University of California, Berkeley Jeryl Mumpower, Texas A & M University Ben Newell, University of New South Wales Lisa Ordóñez, University of Arizona Ellen Peters, Ohio State University Antonio Rangel, California Institute of Technology Alan Schwartz, University of Illinois at Chicago Barry Schwartz, Swarthmore College Cass Sunstein, Harvard Law School Peter Ubel, Duke University Elke Weber, Columbia University Eldad Yechiam, Technion, Israel Institute of Technology Liane Young, Boston College Supervisory committeeDerek Koehler, University of Waterloo (SJDM)Uri Simonsohn, University of Pennsylvania (SJDM) Barbara Summers, Leeds University (EADM) Michel Handgraaf, Wageningen UR (EADM) 1An article cannot be previously published in a refereed journal. It can, however, be published in a conference proceedings, a personal web site, or a working-paper series. Web page maintained by Jonathan Baron; image by Gaëlle Villejoubert; additional software by Adam Kramer, Alan Schwartz, and Xiaohua Du. Main site hosted by the School of Arts and Sciences, University of Pennsylvania. |