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But there are lots of methods for ranking journals -- the Impact Factor, the Eigenfactor, the h-index, just to name a few. And with the proliferation of journals in forensic psychology, it gets hard to keep track. Which journals have the best reputations? Which are the most cited? Which provide the broadest coverage of forensic psychology topics?
One popular way to rank-order journals is based on reference counts. How many times a journal is cited is an indicator of its reputation. In forensic psychology, according to an unpublished study by S. Black, the top-referenced journals are (in rank order):
- Law and Human Behavior
- Behavioral Sciences and the Law
- British Journal of Psychiatry
- Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology
- American Journal of Psychiatry
- Criminal Justice and Behavior
Chris Piotrowski started by screening several texts in the field and choosing terms that are popular both in research and practice. The 16 terms were: eyewitness testimony, competency to stand trial, alcoholic blackouts, infanticide, sentencing, forensic evaluations, polygraph, malingering, jury selection, homicide, diminished capacity, insanity defense, child abuse, Daubert standard, child custody and expert witness.
Next he used PsycNET, "the recognized major bibliographic resource in the social and behavioral sciences that indexes scholarly and professional journals," to run keyword searches on his 16 terms. For each search term, he rank-ordered journals based on the frequency of hits; a journal's total ranking was obtained by summing across all 16 terms.
The winners were (in rank order):
- Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and Law
- PsycCRITIQUES (formerly, Contemporary Psychology)
- Law and Human Behavior
- Behavioral Sciences and the Law
- American Journal of Forensic Psychology
- Journal of Psychiatry and Law
- Bulletin of the American Academy of Psychiatry and Law
- Mental & Physical Disability Law Reporter
- American Journal of Psychiatry
- American Psychologist
- Journal of Forensic Psychology Practice
- International Journal of Psychiatry and Law
- Journal of Criminal Justice
- Professional Psychology: Research and Practice
- Journal of Applied Psychology
- Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
- Psychological Reports
- British Journal of Psychology
- Psychology, Public Policy, and Law
For more information on the method and the exact scores for each journal, feel free to contact Dr. Piotrowski (HERE); I'm sure he will be happy to share a copy of the article, which is published in the current issue of the American Journal of Forensic Psychology.
Oh, in case you were wondering, that journal is number five on his list.
The article is: Top cited journals in forensic psychology: An analysis of the psychological literature (2012), American Journal of Forensic Psychology 30 (2), 29-38.
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