The stats are in for last year: JEP:HPP had a 72% rejection rate in 2025, a time to decision of less than 2 weeks, a total time from submissions to online publication of ~3 months.
Consider JEPHPP for your best work!
#Perception #CognitivePsychology
Posts by JEP: Human Perception and Performance
Semantic Network of OECS articles.
Reminder! The Open Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science (OECS) hosts summaries of what we know vs don't about a host of fascinating issues. All freely available.
What a terrific alternative to doomscrolling: learning about (e.g.) The Mind-Body problem, Delusion, or Free Will.
oecs.mit.edu
Humans Persistently Devalue AI-Generated Creative Writing
psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/202...
do you think disclosing AI use for scientific writing will have the same effect?
Recent research published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance examined how image memorability and emotional valence influence visual statistical learning across three experiments. Read the Editor’s Choice article: https://bit.ly/4siB2wA @jephpp.bsky.social
📣 New in @jephpp.bsky.social: Xu et al. found humans incidentally learn and adapt to temporal patterns of events, enhancing perception and adaptive reactions in real-world scenarios! 📖 Read the full study: psycnet.apa.org/doi/10.1037/...
"These findings highlight that the negative feeling of being rushed is a key reason why performance efficiency suffers under pressure", doi.org/10.1037/xhp0...
6-panel plot showing adoption of Bayesian analyses for 6 psychology journals from different fields. Histograms show historical data from 2004 to 2024. Predictions from five-parameter logistic growth curve model with forecasts till 2044 are overlaid. Sample size for journals vary from 2009 to 3686. Use of Bayesian analyses is increasing in all journals and projected to level of at varying levels between 25% and 75%.
Probably a rhetorical questions, but I'll add the data anyway: We recently estimated—among other things—adoption of Bayesian analyses across different areas of psychology. The plots show the last 20 years and (rather simple) projections for the next 20 years.
osf.io/preprints/ps...
Saad, L., Hemmer, P., & Musolino, J. (2025). Evidence for individual differences in the temporal binding effect. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance. Advance online publication. doi.org/10.1037/xhp0...
Independent effects of valence and memorability in visual statistical learning.
Friedman-Oskar, Meital; Sahar, Tomer; Makovski, Tal; Okon-Singer, Hadas.
psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/202...
Thank you to the 2025 IJE cohort who helped improve manuscripts this year via our pre-external review process!
Matthew O'Donohue: scholar.google.com.au/citations?us...
Marcell Székely: scholar.google.com/citations?hl...
Zekun Sun: zekun-sun.github.io
Finally, the 12th issue of the 50th anniversary series (tinyurl.com/ayb66xvs) reviews the JEP:HPP’s policies on research transparency and looks back at all the 27 articles in this series. Thanks everyone for reading and contributing!
In October, our anniversary articles (tinyurl.com/4k642p5x) feature a review by Shapiro and Raymond following on their 1992 original Attentional Blink paper and readers’ perspectives on links between action and perception and drift diffusion modeling. Happy Canadian Thanksgiving!
As of 2026, JEP:HPP will require authors to explicitly report how they detect or prevent AI contamination.
We won’t prescribe the solution - this evolves too fast. Instead, we’ll emphasize transparency and rely on peer review, as for all methodological choices.
Questions? Contact the Editor. (2/2)
Online studies have transformed psychology—bringing speed, scale, and diversity. But a growing challenge is bots and AI-generated responses that can threaten the integrity of our science.
That's why in 2026, JEP:HPP is making a change to raise awareness about this problem. (1/2)
Our Anniversary series continues! September issue features an invited review from Gordon Logan and readers’ perspectives on ambulatory locomotion and attentional control. Read them all here tinyurl.com/bddz5rmw.
A critical weakness of many great manuscripts is in explaining their theoretical impact. It isn't sufficient to explain what hasn't yet been explored; it needs to be clear what model/hypothesis/theory hinges upon your results! JEP:HPP requires strong tests of important theoretical hypotheses. (2/2)
Author tips! 😍
We thought we would start posting tips for increasing the chances of your manuscript satisfying editors and reviewers, starting with one of the most important: theoretical motivation! (1/2)
The collated special 50th anniversary JEP:HPP edition is now available on the journal’s website tinyurl.com/yc2vxx3t.
All 50th anniversary articles (so far) are here: www.apa.org/pubs/journal...
The July 50th Anniversary issue includes a paper about rhythm and another bout music listening - enjoy!
psycnet.apa.org/PsycARTICLES...
It’s all about attention in June's 50th anniversary articles tinyurl.com/3ywt8zec!
@chris-olivers.bsky.social
@sauter.bsky.social
In May, our 50th Anniversary series features an invited review from Valenza et al, who trace the legacy of their seminal 1996 article, "Face preference at birth” and a readers’ perspective on perception of relations.
tinyurl.com/k2jmtbhw
… a second readers’ perspective in April:
Is beauty in the eye of a beholder? Grzywacz writes about how research from JEP:HPP has helped resolve this millennia old question.
(psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/202...).
April brings us two more 50th anniversary celebratory readers’ perspectives!
First, Oswald reflects on how work published in JEP:HPP helped to diversify the study of human perception and improve outcomes for marginalized groups
(psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/202....
Also in March, in the 50th anniversary series:
A readers perspective by Martarelli @corimartarelli.bsky.social and Mast: The long-lasting legacy of early experimental studies in visual mental imagery (psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?d...).
Our 50th Anniversary article series continues!
Our March issue features an in-depth authoritative literature review from Zhang @hanzhang.bsky.social, York, and Jonides, Attentional capture by abrupt onsets: Foundations and emerging issues (psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?d...).
“… the currently available evidence for a perception–action dissociation from Garner interference is insufficient to support a ventral–dorsal dissociation.”
Open access article in our February issue: psycnet.apa.org/record/2025-...
1st Readers Perspective in the 50th Anniversary Series! Bernhard Hommel (psycnet.apa.org/record/2025-...) highlights how Coles, Gratton, Bashore, Eriksen, & Donchin (1985) (psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?d...) influenced our understanding of human information processing.
50th Anniversary series: February issue features a review from Baruch Fischhoff (psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/202...) on the legacy of his seminal 1975 JEP:HPP paper "Hindsight is not equal to foresight: The effect of outcome knowledge on judgment under uncertainty" (psycnet.apa.org/doiLanding?d...).