Single letters and numbers were shown at different angular orientations in the frontal plane, in both forward and backward (mirror-image) versions. In three separate conditions, subjects were required to discriminate the stimuli on the basis of version, category (letter, number, and name (G, 2, etc.). There was a pronounced effect of orientation on version judgments but none at all on category and name judgments, indicating that the identification of a tilted character requires neither the assignment of a cognitive up-down axis nor mental rotation to the upright. Nevertheless, reaction times for backward versions were slower than reaction times for forward versions in both category and name conditions, implicating some sort of interhemispheric transfer process. No support was obtained for the so-called "conceptual category" effect in that reaction times for category judgments were consistently slower than reaction times for name judgments.
A citation analysis was conducted for 57 psychology journals. Total citations to articles published in each journal in 1972 and 1973 were counted from a sample of pages (10%) in the Social Science Citation Index. Journals were rank ordered according to citation frequency per articles published in each journal during the 2-year period. Mean citation rate per published article was .9. Spearman rank correlations between the rank order based on citations per article and the rank orders of the same journals determined by subjective evaluation in two previous studies by Koulack and Keselman and Mace and Warner were .39 and .56, respectively.
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