Cognition is one of the few psychology journals of the 20th century that developed outside of the United States.[1] The journal, founded by Jacques Mehler and Thomas Bever in 1972, was initially published quarterly, then every other month from 1982, and finally on a monthly basis since 1985.[2]
Work in the journal is considered "highly cited," and is noted to adequately represent research on an international level.[1] In terms of representing topics within the cognitive sciences, a 2005 meta-analysis demonstrated that the journal primarily publishes work in psychology, with a small proportion of publications in linguistics and neuroscience.[3] The analysis concluded that for several reasons, including the explicit editorial policy of the journal and efforts to create special issues for specific disciplines, the disparity could not be well explained by editorial bias.[3]
^ abSchunn, C.D.; Crowley, K.; Okada, T. (2005). "Cognitive science: Interdisciplinarity now and then". In Derry, S.J.; Gernsbacher, M.A. (eds.). Problems and promises of interdisciplinary collaboration: Perspectives from cognitive science. Mahwah, NJ.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)