Indexing
The Journal of Psychology is indexed in the following databases:
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Scopus is the most comprehensive database consisting of abstracts and scientific literature. It contains 16,500 research journals, patents, and other prestigious web references. Scopus is also an important research tool, providing access to various indicators (e.g. number of citations, rankings, etc.) that are necessary for the analysis of the scientific production of an institution. |
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The Emerging Sources Citation Index is a citation index produced since 2015 by Thomson Reuters, and now by Clarivate Analytics. According to the publisher, the index includes "peer-reviewed publications of regional importance and in emerging scientific fields". |
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PsycINFO is a database published by APA, nearly 3 million articles are indexed. It is the most important resource world-wide for the field of Psychology. |
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SciELO Peru is a virtual library that contains select literature from Peruvian scholarly journals. SciELO is a regional project created by FAPESP and BIREME. |
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PSICODOC is an international database that contains a search engine for references and contains the complete text for publications in the field of Psychology as well as other related disciplines. |
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DOAJ is an online directory that indexes and provides access to journals that are open-access, peer-reviewed, and recognized as high quality material in academia. |
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ERIH PLUS (European Reference Index for the Humanities and Social Sciences) es un índice europeo de revistas académicas de humanidades y ciencias sociales. |
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Qualis It is a system used to classify the scientific production of postgraduate programs with respect to articles published in scientific journals. La Revista de Psicología está clasificada en el Nivel A2. |
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Redalyc is an open access initiative in Latin America that contains scientific contributions from around the world in journals contemplating all of the areas of knowledge. It includes a library that allows users to read, download, and share full-text scientific articles at no cost, in order to support the academic efforts of investigators and students. |
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Dialnet is a platform designed by the Dialnet Foundation and publishes the scientific literature of various Latin American universities. |
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Latindex is a product of the partnership of a network of institutions that collects and disseminates bibliographic information about scholarly publications in the region. |
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Electronic Periodicals in Psychology (PePSIC) is an initiative sponsored by the Virtual Library of Health (BVS), BIREME, and other Brazilian educational institutions. |
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EBSCO HOST: a database published by Ebsco Information Services. |
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CLASE is a bibliographic database created by the University Nacional Auónoma de México (UNAM) and contains approximately 330,000 bibliographic entries of publications in countries of Latin America. |
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Google Scholar provides a simple way to broadly search for scholarly literature. From one place, you can search across many disciplines and sources: articles, theses, books, abstracts and court opinions, from academic publishers, professional societies, online repositories, universities and other web sites. Google Scholar helps you find relevant work across the world of scholarly research. |
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BASE is one of the most potent search engines world-wide; it specializes in open access content. BASE is operated by Bielefeld University Library. |
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Journal TOCs is the largest collection of scholarly journal table of contents. It contains the metadata of over 21,000 journals. |
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ExLibris Primo Central: an index of metadata from Ex Libris, which serves as a source for the Primo Discovery and Ofivery solution utilized by hundreds of institutions world-wide. |
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WorldCat is the world´s largest library catalog. It includes 1.5 billion bibliographic entries pertaining to thousands of libraries and library consortia. |
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LA Referencia gives visibility to the scientific production of higher education and research institutions in Latin America, promotes open and free access to the full text, with special emphasis on publicly financed results. |
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The National Digital Repository of Science, Technology and Innovation, called ALICIA (Free Access to Scientific Information) offers open access to intellectual heritage resulting from the production of science, technology and innovation carried out in public sector entities or with State financing . |
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