Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science
In 2021, Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science will be converted to an open access journal. Please see the official announcement and FAQ for more information.
Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science publishes innovative developments in research methods, practices and conduct across the full range of areas and topics within psychological science. AMPPS publishes new types of empirical work that reflect the various approaches to research across the field. AMPPS encourages integration of methodological and analytical questions and brings the latest methodological advances to non-methodology experts across all areas of the field.
AMPPS seeks submissions that are accessible to readers with varying research interests and are representative of the broad research interests in the field, including:
- Articles that communicate advances in methods, practices, and metascience
- Empirical scientific best practices
- Tutorials, commentaries, and simulation studies on new techniques and research tools
- Papers that bring advances from a specialized subfield to a broader audience
- Registered Replication Reports
www.psychologicalscience.org
This journal is a member of the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE).
Submit your manuscript today at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/AMPPS.
Articles in AMPPS will not compete with those in other APS journals. For example, empirical articles in AMPPS may involve contributions from multiple research teams or be of larger scale than those published in traditional empirical journals. Other AMPPS articles will cover current practices and considerations relevant to open science in psychology, and these will be unique to the journal. In addition, AMPPS publishes Registered Replication Reports (RRRs; see below) and multi-lab collaborative studies (e.g., adversarial collaborations, consortium studies, team efforts at replication). AMPPS welcomes metascience contributions that examine research practices in the field. All articles in AMPPS will strive to adhere to best practices for open and transparent research, with de-identified data, code, and materials publicly available to the fullest extent possible. Empirical submissions to AMPPS are expected to be eligible for all three open-science badges available in APS journals (Open Data, Open Materials, Preregistration; see the APS Open Practice Badges page). Authors are encouraged to provide video recordings of their testing settings and experimental procedures. Not all analyses must be confirmatory for an article to earn a Preregistration badge. However, all confirmatory hypothesis tests are expected to be preregistered in submissions to AMPPS (e.g., articles might include a study reporting exploratory tests, accompanied by a preregistered replication). AMPPS also publishes analyses of preexisting data sets, not all of which can be preregistered. Authors should indicate clearly which hypotheses and analyses were preregistered and which were not. Authors with questions about preregistration should read this discussion written by the editors of APS’s three empirical journals. The online versions of articles on the AMPPS website can include interactive content such as videos, Shiny applications, and working code snippets; the print and PDF versions of articles with interactive content will contain a link to it. AMPPS encourages the use of interactive content, particularly in tutorials. AMPPS authors may deposit materials in a permanent repository of their choice. Manuscripts must be submitted through the AMPPS submission website. If, after reviewing these guidelines, authors have questions about the appropriateness of a manuscript for AMPPS, they are encouraged to email the editor at ampps.editor@gmail.com to inquire.
David A. Sbarra | University of Arizona, Department of Psychology, USA |
Pamela Davis-Kean | University of Michigan, Department of Psychology, USA |
Katie Corker | Grand Valley State University, Department of Psychology, USA |
Jessica Kay Flake | McGill University, Department of Psychology, Canada |
Rogier A. Kievit | Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Netherlands |
Yasemin Kisbu | Koç University, Department of Psychology, Turkey |
Aishwarya Rajesh | Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, USA |
Kongmeng Liew | University of Canterbury, School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing, New Zealand |
Becca G. White | Association for Psychological Science |
Samantha F. Anderson | Arizona State University, Department of Psychology, USA |
Adriene M. Beltz | University of Michigan, Department of Psychology, USA |
Wiebke Bleidorn | University of Zurich, Department of Psychology, Switzerland |
Mark Brandt | Tilburg University, Netherlands |
Evan C. Carter | U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Human Research and Engineering Directorate, USA |
Dakota W. Cintron | Cornell University, Department of Psychology, USA |
Rodica Damian | University of Houston, Department of Psychology, USA |
Alexander Danvers | U.S. Army Research Laboratory, Human Research and Engineering Directorate, USA |
Morteza Dehghani | University of Southern California, Departments of Psychology and Computer Science, USA |
Malte Elson | University of Bern, Institute of Psychology, Switzerland |
Alexander Etz | University of Texas at Austin, Department of Psychology, USA |
Vithor Franco | University of San Francisco, Department of Psychology, Brazil |
Michael C. Frank | Stanford University, Department of Psychology, USA |
Joseph E. Gonzalez | University of Massachusetts Lowell, Department of Psychology, USA |
Saida Heshmati | Claremont Graduate University, Department of Psychology |
Chuan-Peng Hu | Nanjing Normal University, Department of Psychology, People’s Republic of China |
Hans IJzerman | Université Grenoble Alpes, LIP/PC2S, France |
Kevin M. King | University of Washington, Department of Psychology, USA |
Daniël Lakens | Eindhoven University of Technology, Department of Industrial Engineering and Innovation Sciences, Netherlands |
Richard Lucas | Michigan State University, Department of Psychology, USA |
Blakeley McShane | Northwestern University, Department of Marketing, USA |
Michelle N. Meyer | Geisinger Health System, Center for Translational Bioethics and Health Care Policy, USA |
Amanda Montoya | University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Psychology, USA |
Zita Oravecz | Pennsylvania State University, Department of Human Development and Family Studies, USA |
Elizabeth Page-Gould | University of Toronto, Department of Psychology, Canada |
Daniel S. Quintana | University of Oslo, Department of Psychology, Norway |
Julia M. Rohrer | Universität Leipzig, Germany |
Victoria Savalei | University of British Columbia, Department of Psychology, Canada |
Anne Scheel | Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Department of Philosophy, and Leiden University, Centre for Science and Technology Studies, Netherlands |
Joseph Simmons | University of Pennsylvania, Department of Operations, Information, and Decisions, USA |
Marcel van Assen | Tilburg University, Department of Methodology and Statistics, Netherlands |
Simine Vazire | University of Melbourne, Department of Psychology, Australia |
Eric-Jan Wagenmakers | University of Amsterdam, Department of Psychology, Netherlands |
Jelte Wicherts | Tilburg University, Department of Methodology and Statistics, Netherlands |
Matt Williams | Massey University, New Zealand |
Manuscript submission guidelines can be accessed on Sage Journals.