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Buena Vista University

PSYC210 Developmental Psychology

This guide will guide students in this course to sources for peer-reviewed psychology articles. It also explains the concept of "peer review" and gives students strategies for reading scholarly journal articles.

What are peer-reviewed articles?

Identify peer-reviewed articles

Peer-reviewed publications (sometimes called scholarly, academic, or refereed) have gone through a review process by experts in the field before being published. Library databases are good places to locate peer-reviewed articles, though not all sources found in those resources are peer-reviewed.

These strategies can help you determine if an article is peer-reviewed.   

Learn more about the journal your article was published in.

  • If you found the article in a database: 
    • there may be an icon on the left side of the source description that indicates the source  type (e.g., scholarly article, magazine article, scholarly book). Peer-reviewed articles articles are usually published in scholarly journals and sometimes in scholarly books.
    • clicking on the journal title may give you more information about the journal and whether it is is peer-reviewed.
       
  • Google the title of the journal and locate the publisher's website for the journal. Then look for an editorial policy page or a page for authors. This page should also indicate whether articles go through a peer review process.
     
  • WARNING: Peer-reviewed journals publish some articles that are not peer-reviewed. For example, book reviews, theatre reviews, obituaries, and editorials are published in peer-reviewed journals but the individual article does not go through the peer-review process. You need to look at the article in the peer-reviewed journal and determine if it is an opinion-based article (like a review) or if it is a research-based article. A peer-reviewed article should be longer than just a couple of pages and should include a bibliography.

In many databases you can limit your search to only peer-reviewed articles. 

  • Look for a checkbox that limits a search to scholarly (peer-reviewed) articles (either on the initial search page or on the results page),
  • Search in a database or journal that only contains peer-reviewed articles. (Read about the database or journal to identify the nature of its publications.)