A highly useful Cumulative Subject Index covering volumes 61 through 86 all the issues
published in 1994 through 2007 appeared in the November 2007
issue (Vol. 88, No. 3). Entries in this index may sugggest to you appropriate search terms.
Examine and print out, if you wish the
PDF version of this
46-page index.
|
|
For 2009, the rates are $16 for full-time students and retirees,
$32 for other individuals, and $162
for institutions (multiple users). Individual issues cost $10.
Postage is paid within the U. S. Other subscribers should add $15 for postage (Air
service). Subscriptions may be entered at any time during the year; subscribers
will receive all the issues published so far.
These rates include online access
to all articles immediately upon publication. However, the database system
we use permits online access only if the institution uses IP addresses that are configured
with DNS names, as reverse lookups for the numbers. See the
Wikipedia description of this convention.
All our back issues, from 1958 to the
present but excluding those published during the past six months are available at the
National Library of Medicines
PubMed Central.
These most recent articles are available to subscribers from
our own Web site.
A special joint subscription rate is available to personal use subscribers
interested in receiving both JEAB (6 issues/yr) and JABA (4 issues/yr).
Individuals: $50 per year (only $5 per issue)
Students and retirees: $25 per year (only $2.50 per issue)
Subscribers outside the U.S. must add $22 for postage (Air service),
which will pay for all ten issues. Sorry!
|
Subscription orders, changes of address,
and other business correspondence should be sent to:
Monica Bonner, JEAB
Department of Psychology
Indiana University
Bloomington, IN 47405-1301
Telephone: 812-336-1257.
e-mail:
mbonner@indiana.edu
|
|
The
Back Pages Links to Web sites of
laboratory equipment suppliers and publishers who advertise in JABA and
JEAB, thereby contributing to the financial health of the journals. |

GOOGLE Reveals Search Technology: PigeonRank
Building upon the breakthrough work of
B. F. Skinner, Page and Brin reasoned that low cost pigeon clusters
(PCs) could be used to compute the relative value of web pages faster
than human editors or machine-based algorithms....
The failure of MentalPlex, a
search technique based upon cognitive psychology, led them to adopt
this behavioral approach. [Dont miss their FAQ and Illustrations.]
Report broken links, errors in abstracts, suggestions, ideas, etc., to:
victor_laties@urmc.rochester.edu
geoff_inglis@urmc.rochester.edu
Copyright 19942008, Society for the
Experimental Analysis of Behavior,
Inc. All rights reserved.
http://seab.envmed.rochester.edu/jeab/jeabindx.asp
Revised November 2 1995 (rap); October 8 1995 (gbi);
August 24 1996 (rlp), June 15 2009 (gbi & vgl)
|