Announcement & Call for Papers
Announcing a new journal in cognitive science:
C S Q
COGNITIVE SCIENCE QUARTERLY
An International Journal of Basic and Applied Research
Aims and Scope
The Cognitive Science Quarterly (CSQ) will publish original work in
cognitive science, including basic as well as applied research and
spanning the whole field of - empirical analysis (for example, experiments
in psychology and neurobiology), - formal theory and analysis (as used in
logic, linguistics, philosophy, etc.), - computational synthesis
(mechanisms and implemented models, employing symbol structures, neural
networks, or other means of modelling), and - applications of cognitive
science (in industry, education, and other domains).
Special emphasis will be given, however, to articles that attempt an
integration of methodologies and disciplines. Articles from the
traditional disciplines are also welcome if they are relevant to cognitive
science in general, or have implications that t ranscend disciplinary
boundaries. The bottom line is that CSQ wants to publish original work of
relevance to cognitive science as a whole.
CSQ recognises the full scope of cognitive science, comprising parts of
psychology and neuroscience, linguistics and philosophy, computer science
(AI), and real-world applications.
Analysis and synthesis of cognitive systems is another way to describe the
aim and scope of CSQ: - Analysis of cognition in people and animals,
including cognitive neuroscience - Synthesis of cognition in agents and
robots, as well as - Analysis and synthesis of cognition in workgroups and
human-computer systems.
Articles may address any topic in cognitive science, e.g.,
- learning and adaptation,
- perception and action control,
- knowledge representation and acquisition,
- thinking, reasoning, and problem solving,
- language and communication,
- cognitive ergonomics, and many others.
Articles may focus on any level of analysis, be it individual agents (or
subsystems of these), groups, or even cultural or evolutionary units, or
be it cognitive tools, natural language and other media of communication.
We welcome work that is crossing le vels of abstraction (e.g.,
symbolic-subsymbolic, individual-group, functional level-implementation,
theory-application).
CSQ recognises that the success of cognitive science as a scientific
endeavour is complemented by successful applications of our theories to
real-world problems. Applications to real problems also generate important
data, and requirements, for theoretical
development.
Therefore, CSQ will also address applied research in all fields:
- training and instruction,
- knowledge management and decision support,
- work organisation and human-computer interaction, groupware, etc.,
- and especially encourage reports on innovative applications.
CSQ will accept submissions from all over the world and hopes to find its
readers everywhere. Being based in Europe, it also attempts to bring
European research together and integrate it into the international
cognitive science community.
CSQ will be published by Hermes Science Publications, Paris and Oxford,
starting in January, 2000, comprising four issues per year. All texts will
be in English language. Electronic versions of abstracts will be publicly
available as soon as articles have
been accepted; the articles of the first issue will be made freely
accessible to everyone.
Editorial Structure
Editor: Gerhard Strube, Universität Freiburg, Germany
Editorial Board
Joost Breuker, Universiteit van Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Cristiano Castelfranchi, Italian National Research Council, Rome, Italy
Daniel Kayser, Université de Paris XIII, France
Walter Kintsch, University of Colorado at Boulder, USA
Christoph von der Malsburg, Ruhr-Univ. Bochum, Germany / USC, Los Angeles, USA
Keith Stenning, Human Communication Research Centre, Edinburgh, UK
Advisory board
Agnar Aamodt, Norwegian University of Science and Technology,Trondheim, Norway
Christian Balkenius, Lund University, Sweden
Johan van Benthem, Universiteit van Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Alain Berthoz, Collčge de France, Paris, France
Margaret Boden, University of Sussex, Brighton, Great Britain
Ruth Byrne, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland
Andy Clark, Washington University, St. Louis, USA
Michel Denis, LIMSI, Paris, France
Georg Dorffner, Universität Wien, Austria
Jeff Elman, University of California at San Diego, USA
Angela Friederici, Max Planck Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, Leipzig, Germany
Cathérine Fuchs, Ecole Normale Superieure, Paris, France
Dov Gabbay, Imperial College, London, Great Britain
Peter Gärdenfors, Lund University, Sweden
Jean-Michel Hoc, Université de Valenciennes, France
Erik Hollnagel, Linköping University, Sweden
Bonnie John, Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh USA
Philip N. Johnson-Laird, Princeton University, USA
Hans Kamp, Universität Stuttgart, Germany
Yasuhiro Katagiri, ATR Research Laboratories, Kyoto, Japan
Mark Keane, University College, Dublin, Ireland
Gerard Kempen, Universiteit Leiden, The Netherlands
Boicho Kokinov, New Bulgarian University, Sofia, Bulgaria
Janet Kolodner, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, USA
Jesus M. E. Larrazabal, Universidad de País Vasco, San Sebastian, Spain
William Marslen-Wilson, MRC Cognition & Brain Unit, Cambridge, Great Britain
Stellan Ohlsson, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
Klaus Opwis, Universität Basel, Switzerland
Csaba Pleh, University of Budapest, Hungary
Tim Shallice, University College, London, Great Britain
Robert S. Siegler, Carnegie-Mellon University, Pittsburgh, USA
Hans Spada, Universität Freiburg, Germany
Luc Steels, Vrije Universiteit Brussels, Belgium, and Sony, Paris, France
Oliveiro Stock, ITC-IRST, Trento, Italy
Paul Thagard, University of Waterloo, Canada
Michael Tomasello, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, Germany
André Vandierendonck, Universiteit Ghent , Belgium
Stella Vosniadou, University of Athens, Greece
Wolfgang Wahlster, Universität des Saarlandes, Saarbrücken, Germany
Richard Young, University of Hertfordshire, Great Britain
Information for Authors
CSQ is dedicated to publish original work from all fields of cognitive
science, including applied research, in English language. The work
submitted to CSQ must not have been published elsewhere, nor should it
currently be under consideration for another j ournal, book, or conference
publishing full papers. Note that distribution of a prepublication draft
in electronic or paper form is not considered as prior publication,
provided that the distributed work is clearly identified as a
prepublication draft. Fo llowing publication in CSQ, authors may use, with
proper citation, all or part of their article for their own classroom
teaching, for internal distribution within their institution, and in a
collection of their own work (e.g., on their homepage).
Review Process
Each manuscript will be thoroughly reviewed for originality and for
relevance to cognitive science, for soundness and significance, and
presentation (the copy editor at the editor's office will, however, help
you with language problems if necessary).All m anuscripts submitted to CSQ
will be reviewed by at least two reviewers. The authors may suggest
possible reviewers from the editorial board of CSQ, but the editor is free
to decide who will review the manuscript. We will attempt to make as much
use of ele ctronic communication as possible in order to speed up the
review process.
If you would like to have your work reviewed anonymously, please state
this wish clearly and unmistakably in your message accompanying the
submitted manuscript. Reviewers will then receive your manuscript purged
of authors' names, affiliations and address es.
Format of Articles
The usual article published in CSQ will have a length of 20 to 25 printed
pages (in the same format as used here), including figures, tables,
references, and the like. This amounts to around 8,000 to 10,000 words per
article. There may be exceptions, whic h should discussed with the editor
before submission. CSQ will occasionally publish short articles (up to
3,000 words) as well, if the need arises (e.g., a significant comment, or
rejoinder, or a book review).
Generally, CSQ observes the spelling rules either of British English
according to the Oxford English Dictionary or of American English
according to Webster.
CSQ favours submission in electronic formats (Word, Postscript, or PDF),
and the final manuscript prepared with MS Word, using the Guidelines for
Authors (CSQformat.DOC) and the style sheet (CSQ.DOT) available at the web
address:
http://www.iig.uni-freiburg.de/cognition/csq or at the
Publisher's web site:
http://www.hermes-science.com
How to Submit
Send your manuscript to the editor's office either on disk or CD-ROM (PC
compatible formats: MS Word 6 or later, Postscript, or PDF; the final
manuscript must be in Word format; do not use any compression except ZIP),
or you may send it as an e-mail attac hment if it is less than 3 MB. The
title of the article and the abstract must also be contained in the email
which accompanies the article (this email is always necessary, even if the
article is not sent as an attachment). Please do not forget to complete
the Copyright Transfer Form from Hermes Science Publications (also
available at the web address given above) and send it to the editor's
office either by mail, or by fax.
E-mail address of the editor's office:
csq(a)cognition.iig.uni-freiburg.de
The fax number of the editorial office is (+49 761) 203-4938.
Editor's postal address:
Prof. Dr. Gerhard Strube
IIG, Abt.3 (CSQ)
Friedrichstr. 50
D-79098 Freiburg, Germany.
Csaba Pleh
Department of Psychology
Attila Jozsef University, Szeged
Petofi sgt 30-34, 6722 Hungary
Phone: (36)(62) 454000, extension 3273
Home: Budakeszi Zichy P. u. 4 2092 Hungary, (36)(23) 453932 or 933
Editor, Hungarian Review of Psychology