Collection
Psychological Injury and Law: A Retrospective Collection on Psychological Injury and Law Articles, Precedents, and Prospects
- Submission status
- Open
- Open for submission from
- 18 July 2023
- Submission deadline
- Ongoing
Dear Research Community,
Kindly excuse the cross-posting
Psychological Injury and Law (PIAL) is celebrating its 15-year anniversary with a call for submissions for a curated topical collection.
The submitted articles will be peer-reviewed, like all others, but, if accepted will be tagged as part of the collection, gaining visibility for the authors and journal.
We are seeking submissions that place in context scholarship and research in specific domains in the area of psychological injury and law, as per the sections of the journal. Submissions are ongoing without a closing date, unlike for special issues. However, we aim to start publishing online articles that are accepted as they arrive and wish to have submissions arrive in 2024.
Submissions should include historical context, indicating the state of the field 15 years ago. Reviewing articles from those early years onward (e.g., on trauma, TBI, chronic pain, PTSD, assessment, testing, certain tests, PVTs, SVTs, malingering, forensics, disability, law), while adding contemporary developments and directions for research, will serve the collection well. In addition, cutting edge empirical research that speaks to broad issues in the field fit the collection. Finally, we seek concept articles that help move the field forward. Ultimately, a major goal of the collection is that it serves as a resource for researchers, practitioners, and court in this advancing but contested area of psychology and law.
In that this will be an anniversary collection, it could also be interesting to have authors from top cited and downloaded PIAL articles reflect on their contribution to the field, giving updates since the initial publication of their paper, etc. This could be an original way to renew interest in these articles and benefit the journal.
There will be an internal call made to section heads as well as an external call for contributors. Section heads should follow the suggested format for the submissions, but could have broader scope, if required. External contributors might want to contact section heads in their area and offer to co-write.
Please consider contributing to the collection and contacting the Editor-in-Chief with your preliminary ideas.
Towards developing the curated collection in PIAL, we have included top-cited or focused articles from the first 15 years of the journal in the curated collection, per posting on the Springer platform for the journal, most of them being more recent, and hope to add at least 12 more.
We look forward to your response and contributions.
Best,
Gerry Young, gyoung@yorku.ca
Gerald Young, Ph.D., C. Psych.
Psychologist and Full Professor (Glendon College - York University)
Editor in Chief, Psychological Injury and Law (IF=3)
(416) 247-1625 Work
(416) 726-2709 Cell
(416) 247-3463 Fax
gyoung@glendon.yorku.ca
www.springer.com
Articles (14 in this collection)
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-
Assessing Negative Response Bias Using Self-Report Measures: New Articles, New Issues
Authors
- Luciano Giromini
- Gerald Young
- Martin Sellbom
- Content type: ReviewPaper
- Open Access
- Published: 23 February 2022
- Pages: 1 - 21
-
Symptom and Performance Validity Assessment in European Countries: an Update
Authors (first, second and last of 10)
- Thomas Merten
- Brechje Dandachi-FitzGerald
- Giuseppe Di Stefano
- Content type: ReviewPaper
- Published: 24 November 2021
- Pages: 116 - 127
-
Forensic Assessment of PTSD Via DSM-5 Versus ICD-11 Criteria: Implications for Current Practice and Future Research
Authors
- Patricia K. Kerig
- Michaela M. Mozley
- Lucybel Mendez
- Content type: ReviewPaper
- Published: 04 December 2020
- Pages: 383 - 411
-
Civil Forensic Evaluation in Psychological Injury and Law: Legal, Professional, and Ethical Considerations
Authors
- William E. Foote
- Jane Goodman-Delahunty
- Gerald Young
- Content type: ReviewPaper
- Published: 24 November 2020
- Pages: 327 - 353
-
Thirty Complexities and Controversies in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury and Persistent Post-concussion Syndrome: a Roadmap for Research and Practice
Authors
- Gerald Young
- Content type: ReviewPaper
- Published: 18 November 2020
- Pages: 427 - 451
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Ethical and Professional Considerations in the Forensic Assessment of Complex Trauma and Dissociation
Authors
- Lisa M. Rocchio
- Content type: ReviewPaper
- Published: 08 June 2020
- Pages: 124 - 134
-
Strength in Numbers or Quality over Quantity? Examining the Importance of Criterion Measure Selection to Define Validity Groups in Performance Validity Test (PVT) Research
Authors (first, second and last of 11)
- Jason R. Soble
- W. Alexander Alverson
- Janice C. Marceaux
- Content type: OriginalPaper
- Published: 09 January 2020
- Pages: 44 - 56
-
Translated Measures in Forensic Evaluations with Specific Applications to Feigned Mental Disorders
Authors
- Richard Rogers
- John W. Donnelly II
- Amor A. Correa
- Content type: OriginalPaper
- Published: 17 October 2019
- Pages: 191 - 203
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The Myth of High False-Positive Rates on the Word Memory Test in Mild TBI
Authors (first, second and last of 4)
- Laszlo A. Erdodi
- Paul Green
- Christopher A. Abeare
- Content type: OriginalPaper
- Published: 19 June 2019
- Pages: 155 - 169
-
What Attorneys and Factfinders Need to Know About Mild Traumatic Brain Injuries
Authors
- Noah K. Kaufman
- Shane S. Bush
- Mario R. Aguilar
- Content type: EditorialNotes
- Published: 01 June 2019
- Pages: 91 - 112
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A Clinical Comparison, Simulation Study Testing the Validity of SIMS and IOP-29 with an Italian Sample
Authors (first, second and last of 4)
- Luciano Giromini
- Donald J. Viglione
- Alessandro Zennaro
- Content type: OriginalPaper
- Published: 26 March 2018
- Pages: 340 - 350
-
Nondermatomal Somatosensory Deficits (NDSDs) and Pain: State-of-the-Art Review
Authors
- Angela Mailis
- Keith Nicholson
- Content type: OriginalPaper
- Published: 03 November 2017
- Pages: 313 - 329
-
Malingering in Forensic Disability-Related Assessments: Prevalence 15 ± 15 %
Authors
- Gerald Young
- Content type: ReviewPaper
- Published: 21 September 2015
- Pages: 188 - 199