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Searching for the structure of early American psychology: Networking Psychological Review, 1909–1923.
23
Citations
9
References
2015
Year
CulturomicsEarly American PsychologySocial PsychologyEducationBibliometricsSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologyContent AnalysisHistory Of PsychologyCommunity PsychologySociology Of KnowledgePsychological StructureApplied Social PsychologyIntellectual StructureResearch CommunitiesPsychosocial StudiesSociologyNetworking Psychological ReviewScholarly CommunicationCultural Psychology
This study continues a previous investigation of the intellectual structure of early American psychology by presenting and analyzing 3 networks that collectively include every substantive article published in Psychological Review during the 15-year period from 1909 to 1923. The networks were laid out such that articles (represented by the network's nodes) that possessed strongly correlated vocabularies were positioned closer to each other spatially than articles with weakly correlated vocabularies. We identified distinct research communities within the networks by locating and interpreting the clusters of lexically similar articles. We found that the Psychological Review was in some turmoil during this period compared with its first 15 years attributable, first, to Baldwin's unexpected departure in 1910; second, to the pressures placed on the discipline by United States entry into World War I; and, third, to the emergence of specialty psychology journals catering to research communities that had once published in the Review. The journal emerged from these challenges, however, with a better-defined mission: to serve as the chief repository of theoretical psychology in the United States.
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