Changes at JoEP

There are a few changes in the horizon at the Journal of Economic Psychology.

First, effective January 1st, we are giving up double-blind reviewing. This method has become quite ineffective in a time when working papers can be found online at a keystroke. It is also a source of errors, delays, and incompatibilities of all types. So we are switching to single-blind reviewing (anonymous reviewers but known author identities), as most journals in our broad area. As soon as this change is implemented, we will be able to move forward on different fronts. Continue reading

“Return to author” at JoEP

As I have written before, roughly three quarters of all submissions to the Journal of Economic Psychology are currently desk-rejected. Roughly half or more of those which are not desk-rejected, however, are returned to author(s). Wait, what? Continue reading

New Co-Editor at JoEP

I am happy to report that Eldad Yechiam, from Technion university, has now become a Co-Editor of the Journal of Economic Psychology. After the transition phase where I managed the journal as sole Editor in Chief, we are now back to normal with a team of two Co-Editors sharing the responsibilities. Eldad hails from psychology, but we both share an interest on decision making, which I am sure will percolate to the journal’s effective scope. Welcome, Eldad! Continue reading

Confusingly irritating (German mistakes in English)

Have you ever had a German/Austrian/Swiss apparently get angry at you because he did not understand something you said, and then act like he was surprised when you (naturally) got on the defensive?

Well, it might all be a (widespread) translation mistake. Continue reading

Avoiding “out of scope” at JoEP

In a previous post, I discussed desk rejections at the Journal of Economic Psychology, which I have been editing since January 1st, 2019. Here I want to pay special attention to a particular type of those: “out of scope,” that is, desk rejections indicating that “I regret to inform you that your paper is not appropriate for our audience.” The Journal of Economic Psychology publishes research which is generally at the intersection of economics and psychology. As a declaration of intentions, we are interested in the psychological foundations of and mechanisms underlying economic decisions. That covers a lot of ground, including (obviously) all of economic psychology, generally all of behavioral economics, and also nascent fields as neuroeconomics and behavioral economic theory.

Still, as the Editor in Chief, I regularly reject papers with an “out of scope” notice. Continue reading

Avoiding desk rejections at JoEP

In the four months and change in which I have been (sole) Editor in Chief of the Journal of Economic Psychology, I have handled over 200 new submissions.

Around 75% have been desk-rejected.

Harsh? Not necessarily. The journal typically publishes less than a hundred papers per year, but receives around 700 submissions and growing. Also, the published papers include a variable number of special issues which are handled by guest editors. That is, far more than 75% of all regular submissions will be ultimately rejected. This is not different in other journals.

The reasoning for desk-rejections is simple. Continue reading

Editor in Chief of the Journal of Economic Psychology

Editor in Chief of the Journal of Economic Psychology

On January 1st, 2019, I became the Editor in Chief of the Journal of Economic Psychology (JoEP), an interdisciplinary journal which publishes research both on Economic Psychology and on Behavioral Economics. I have succeeded Martin Kocher and Stefan Schulz-Hardt, who in turn succeeded Erik Hoelzl and Eric Kirchler a couple of years ago. There will eventually be a second Co-Editor, but for the moment being I am alone at the helm, and I have committed to be a Co-Editor until at least end of 2022. I know the journal well, as I have been in the board as an Associate Editor for some years now (since the times of Erik and Eric). Continue reading