Below you will find a list of our favorite professional journals that we read periodically:
From the editor: “…A publication devoted to work by seasoned clinicians, researchers, and students alike, often featuring theoretical debates among pioneers of the field, tBT is an excellent educational tool and archive of the field’s evolution…”
From the editor: “… A publication devoted to work by seasoned clinicians, researchers, and students alike, often featuring theoretical debates among pioneers of the field, BT is an excellent educational tool and archive of the field’s evolution. Received by all ABCT members (8 times a year), the Behavior Therapist is ABCT’s most popular publication.”
From the editor: “… encompasses all of what is commonly referred to as cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT). The focus is on the following: theoretical and experimental analyses of psychopathological processes with direct implications for prevention and treatment; the development and evaluation of empirically-supported interventions; predictors, moderators and mechanisms of behaviour change; and dissemination and implementation of evidence-based treatments to general clinical practice…”
From the editor: “… is a quarterly international journal that serves enduring resource for empirically informed methods of clinical practice. Its mission is to bridge the gap between published research and the actual clinical practice of cognitive behavior therapy…”
From the editor: “Cognitive Therapy and Research publishes experimental studies; theoretical review; technical, and methodological articles; case studies; and brief reports. It is a broadly conceived interdisciplinary journal that stimulates and communicates research and theory on the role of cognitive processes in human adaptation and adjustment…”
From the editor: “…The Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science is the official journal of the Association for Contextual Behavioral Science (ACBS)… We are particularly interested in papers emphasizing the study of core behavioral processes that are relevant to a broad range of human problems, and thus not limited to certain populations…”