Template for Judgment and Decision Making Journal
Author
Jonathan Baron
Last Updated
4 years ago
License
Creative Commons CC BY 4.0
Abstract
For submission of articles to Judgment and Decision Making
For submission of articles to Judgment and Decision Making
\documentclass[12pt]{article}
\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
\usepackage[T1]{fontenc}
\usepackage[english]{babel}
\usepackage{ifpdf,newtxtext,newtxmath}
\usepackage{array,graphicx,dcolumn,multirow,hevea,abstract,hanging,fancyhdr,float}
% change next 3 lines each issue
\newcommand{\jref}{http://journal.sjdm.org/vol16.1.html}
\newcommand{\jhead}{Judgment and Decision Making, Vol.~16, No.~1}
\newcommand{\jdate}{January 2021}
\topmargin=-.3in \oddsidemargin=.3in \evensidemargin=.3in \textheight=9in \textwidth=6in
\pagestyle{fancy}
\fancyhead[L]{\protect\small \href{\jref}{\jhead}, \jdate}
\fancyhead[R]{\protect\small SHORT TITLE} % replace with running head
\fancypagestyle{firstpage}{%
\lhead{\protect\small \href{\jref}{\jhead}, \jdate}
\rhead{}
}
\usepackage[labelfont=sc,textfont=sf]{caption}
\usepackage[hyperfootnotes=false,breaklinks=true]{hyperref} % was dvipdfmx
% \usepackage[hyperfootnotes=false,breaklinks=true,linkbordercolor={1 1 1},citebordercolor={1 1 1}]{hyperref}
% \usepackage{natbib} % must come afer hyperfootnotes, use 2nd version for bibtex
% \setlength{\bibsep}{0pt}
\urlstyle{rm}
\usepackage[hyphenbreaks]{breakurl}
% DO NOT USE ADDITIONAL PACKAGES unless you make sure they work with Hevea.
% You may define new commands, but these may cause other troubles, so try to avoid it.
% FOR BIBTEX USERS (Bibtex is not recommended, but we can use it):
% \usepackage{natbib} % must come afer hypperref
% in references: \bibliographystyle{apalike3} \setlength{\bibsep}{0pt} \bibliography{WHATEVER}
% download http://journal.sjdm.org/apalike3.bst
\usepackage{booktabs} % \toprule \midrule \bottomrule \cmidrule(lr){a-b}
% define centered and ragged columns:
\newcolumntype{L}[1]{>{\raggedright\arraybackslash }p{#1}} % can use m{}
\newcolumntype{C}[1]{>{\centering\arraybackslash }p{#1}}
\newcolumntype{R}[1]{>{\raggedleft\arraybackslash }p{#1}}
\newcolumntype{d}[1]{D{.}{.}{#1}} % d{3.2} for 3 places on l, 2 on r
\newcommand{\mc}{\multicolumn}
\setlength\tabcolsep{1mm}
\setlength\columnsep{5mm}
\setlength\abovecaptionskip{1ex}
\setlength\belowcaptionskip{.5ex}
\setlength\belowbottomsep{.3ex}
\setlength\lightrulewidth{.04em}
\renewcommand\arraystretch{1.2}
\renewcommand{\topfraction}{1}
\renewcommand{\textfraction}{0}
\renewcommand{\floatpagefraction}{.9}
% \renewcommand{\baselinestretch}{1.00} \large\normalsize % for fixing spaces
\widowpenalty=1000
\clubpenalty=1000
\setlength{\parskip}{0ex}
\let\tempone\itemize
\let\temptwo\enditemize
\let\tempthree\enumerate
\let\tempfour\endenumerate
\renewenvironment{itemize}{\tempone\setlength{\itemsep}{0pt}}{\temptwo}
\renewenvironment{enumerate}{\tempthree\setlength{\itemsep}{0pt}}{\tempfour}
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
\setcounter{page}{1} % start with first page
\title{How to use this template (and other stuff)}
\author{
Jonathan Baron\thanks{Department of Psychology, University of
Pennsylvania. Email: baron@upenn.edu.}\;\,\thanks{Some other address.}
\and
Some O. Person\thanks{Yet another place.}
\and
Y. Another Author\footnotemark[2] % indicates same as 2nd thanks
}
\date{} % leave empty
\begin{document} % goes here
\begin{htmlonly}
\href{\jref}{\jhead}, \jdate, pp.\
\end{htmlonly}
\maketitle
\thispagestyle{firstpage}
\begin{abstract}
The abstract is a brief (usually one paragraph) summary
of the whole paper, including the problem, the method for solving
it (when not obvious), the results, and the conclusions suggested
or drawn. Do not write the abstract as a hasty
afterthought. Look at it as a real exercise in cramming the most
information in one paragraph. The reader should not have to read
any of the rest of the paper in order to understand the abstract
fully. Many readers will read only the abstract. Other readers
will use it to decide what to look for in the paper, or to decide
whether to read the whole thing. Remember
\href{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Elements_of_Style}{Strunk \&
White's} admonition, ``Omit needless words.''
\smallskip
\noindent
Keywords: journal, template, latex
\end{abstract}
{\renewcommand{\thefootnote}{}
\footnotetext{ % note blank lines above and below acknowledgment
Portions of this template are shamelessly stolen from other
documents lying around on the author's computer. He is grateful to
Lenovo, Inc.
Copyright: \copyright\ 2021.
The authors license this article under the terms of the
\href{http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/}{Creative Commons
Attribution 3.0 License.}
}}
\saythanks
\setlength{\baselineskip}{16pt plus.2pt}
\section{Introduction}
To use this file, click ``Open as template''. Here is some meaningless
text as an example. Delete all the text that is not part of your paper.
Einstein said that $E = MC^2$.
Many authors (Jones, 2016; Smith, 2017) have trouble replicating this
result.
Our hypothesis is that $E = MC^3$.
\section{Method} % example of a heading
Here is an example of a one-column table using new column definitions.
%Table 1
\begin{table}[h]\centering
\caption{Experiment 3: Mean (SD) willingness to contribute to identified
and unidentified victims, for self and for the average student.}
\begin{tabular}{L{.7in}C{.7in}C{.7in}C{.7in}}\toprule
& Self & Average student & Total\\\midrule
Identified victim & 68.28 (55.77) & 45.30 (66.17) & 56.79 (61.89)\\
Unidentified victim & 54.06 (61.89) & 38.63 (67.20) & 46.35 (60.63)\\\midrule
Total & 61.17 (58.81) & 41.97 (66.51) & \\\bottomrule
\mc{4}{p{2.8in}}{Here is a meaningless note about this table.}\\
\end{tabular}
\end{table}
Here is another example of a table (hspace not needed but can be
used).\footnote{Footnotes at the end of sentences should go after the
period.}
%Table 2
\begin{table}[h]\centering
\caption{This table is a very fancy table with a lot of small
corrections in it, like the tildes in brackets. You don't need to do
this sort of stuff with your own tables. But it may be useful to look
at how notes are done, and how extra space is inserted between columns.}
\begin{tabular}{llrc@{\quad}rc@{\quad}rc@{\quad}rc}\toprule
& & \mc{2}{C{1in}}{Accuracy of first response (\%) {\ }} &
\mc{2}{C{1in}}{Accuracy of final response (\%) {\ }} &
\mc{2}{C{1in}}{Change of mind (\%) {\ }} & \mc{2}{C{1in}}{Response time (ms) {\ }}\\
\cmidrule(lr){3-4}\cmidrule(lr){5-6}\cmidrule(lr){7-8}\cmidrule(lr){9-10}
& & { ~ } \itshape M & \itshape SD & { ~ } \itshape M & \itshape SD & { ~ } \itshape M &
\itshape SD & { ~ ~ } \itshape M {\ } & \itshape SD\\\midrule
Experiment 1 & Congruent & 73 & 44 & 85 & 36 & 20 & 40 & 1479 & 495\\
& Incongruent & 45 & 50 & 84 & 37 & 45 & 50 & 1625 & 498\\
Experiment 2 & Congruent & 69 & 46 & 85 & 36 & 26 & 44 & 1567 & 477\\
& Incongruent & 43 & 50 & 85 & 35 & 49 & 50 & 1695 & 469\\\bottomrule
\mc{10}{p{6in}}{Note. Means and standard deviations are calculated based on the
trial level values (ignoring participants).}
\end{tabular}
\end{table}
\section{Results}
Use subsections and subsubsections etc. freely.
The following is an example of a figure. The caption can be
long, and fully describe the figure, even if it is redundant with the text.
\begin{figure}[H]
\includegraphics[width=\textwidth]{dut11.eps}
\caption{The caption goes under the figure like this. Note that
textwidth is the width of the text. But you can use any units,
e.g., ``3in'' or ``50mm''.}
\end{figure}
\section{Discussion}
It turns out that $E = MC^2$. Specifically,
\begin{equation}
E = \frac { \sum_{i=1}^n ( M_i C )^2 }{ \alpha + \beta }
\end{equation}
Equation 1 is true.
\subsection{How to write Mathematics}
\LaTeX{} is great at typesetting mathematics. Let $X_1, X_2, \ldots,
X_n$ be a sequence of independent and identically distributed random
variables with $\text{E}[X_i] = \mu$ and $\text{Var}[X_i] = \sigma^2 <
\infty$, and let
\[S_n = \frac{X_1 + X_2 + \cdots + X_n}{n}
= \frac{1}{n}\sum_{i}^{n} X_i\]
denote their mean. Then as $n$ approaches infinity, the random
variables $\sqrt{n}(S_n - \mu)$ converge in distribution to a normal
$\mathcal{N}(0, \sigma^2)$.
\subsection{How to add Lists}
You can make lists with automatic numbering \dots
\begin{enumerate}
\item Like this,
\item and like this.
\end{enumerate}
\dots or bullet points \dots
\begin{itemize}
\item Like this,
\item and like this.
\end{itemize}
References should be in APA style. Examples are below.
% FOR BIBTEX USERS INSTEAD OF REFERENCES SECTION
%\bibliographystyle{apalike3}
%\bibliography{bibliography.bib}
% OR CAN ALSO INCLUDE THE BBL FILE AFTER THE NEXT LINE, INSTEAD OF THE LAST LINE
\section*{References}
\begin{hangparas}{1em}{1}
Aarts, H., \& Dijksterhuis, A. (1999). How often did I do it?
Experienced ease of retrieval and frequency estimates of past
behavior. \textit{Acta Psychologica, 103}(3), 77--89. \url{http://someurl.html}.
Barberis, N. \& Thaler, R. (2003). A survey of behavioral finance.
In G. M. Constantinides, M. Harris \& R. Stultz (Eds.),
\textit{Handbook of the Economics of Finance,} pp.\ 1053--1123.
Elsevier Science, North Holland, Amsterdam
\vfill % use this for column breaks
\break
Grice, H. P. (1975). Logic and conversation. In P. Cole \& J.
L. Morgan, (Eds.), \textit{Speech Acts}, pp.\ 41--58. London: Academic
Press. \url{http://dx.doi.org/3.14159--1x}.
\end{hangparas}
\bigskip
\section*{Appendix}
The asterisk means that these divisions are not numbered.
\subsection*{How to write Mathematics}
This section is completely redundant with the text. Do not do
that. This is just an example.
\LaTeX{} is great at typesetting mathematics. Let $X_1, X_2, \ldots, X_n$ be a sequence of independent and identically distributed random variables with $\text{E}[X_i] = \mu$ and $\text{Var}[X_i] = \sigma^2 < \infty$, and let
\[S_n = \frac{X_1 + X_2 + \cdots + X_n}{n}
= \frac{1}{n}\sum_{i}^{n} X_i\]
denote their mean. Then as $n$ approaches infinity, the random variables $\sqrt{n}(S_n - \mu)$ converge in distribution to a normal $\mathcal{N}(0, \sigma^2)$.
\subsection*{How to create Sections and Subsections}
Use section and subsections to organize your document. Simply use the section and subsection buttons in the toolbar to create them, and we'll handle all the formatting and numbering automatically.
\end{document}