1994
DOI: 10.1111/j.1752-0606.1994.tb01026.x
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Published Scholarship on Marital Therapy

Abstract: This article is a content analysis of 10 prominent marital and family therapy journals during a 6-year period. Marital therapy articles were the focus of the analysis . ProliJic authors, institutions, types of articles being published, andpublication outlet were described. The aim is to survey the field and facilitate future scholarship.

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Cited by 14 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…. such as papers presented at professional meetings, books, and workshops" (p. 86; see also Shortz, Worthington, McCollough, DeVries, & Morrow, 1994;Shortz, Worthington, McCollough, KWUSU, Bryant, & DeVries, 1994;and Snyder & Rice, 1994). We also agree with Gurman that "this analysis may be more informative about the three journals surveyed here than about family therapy as a whole" (Gurman, 1981, p. 86).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 52%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…. such as papers presented at professional meetings, books, and workshops" (p. 86; see also Shortz, Worthington, McCollough, DeVries, & Morrow, 1994;Shortz, Worthington, McCollough, KWUSU, Bryant, & DeVries, 1994;and Snyder & Rice, 1994). We also agree with Gurman that "this analysis may be more informative about the three journals surveyed here than about family therapy as a whole" (Gurman, 1981, p. 86).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 52%
“…This study explores institutional contributions to the literature in the field in these same journals for the years 1980-95, adding detail on the characteristics of authors, including their levels of education and positions at the time of publication, to fill out the picture of who contributes to this literature. By documenting the publishing trends in the field and indicating needed directions for future research and writing, the study also serves as a complement to recent works that focus on marital therapy publications (Shortz, Worthington, McCollough, DeVries, & Morrow, 1994) and on the effectiveness of marriage and family therapy (Pinsof & Wynne, 1995b).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following the tradition of Shortz et al. () and the earlier study (DuPree et al., ) we wanted to recognize the most productive faculty members and those newer faculty who have also demonstrated high levels of scholarship. The scholars considered to be most prolific in this study (based on their cumulative publications and h‐index score) include Fred Piercy (Virginia Tech), Jonathan Sandberg (BYU), Natasha Slesnick (Ohio State), Russ Crane (BYU), Jeff Larson (BYU), Rick Miller (BYU), Lenore McWey (Florida State), Sandra Stith (Kansas State), William Doherty (Minnesota), Suzanne Bartle‐Haring (Ohio State), and Adrian Blow (Michigan State).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The earliest study that evaluated MFT-related scholarship and provided ranking information for the field examined the most prominent authors and their institutions across a six-year period (Shortz, Worthington, McCollough, DeVries, & Morrow, 1994). The most productive researchers included Doug Snyder, Susan Johnson, Timothy Ingram, Neil Jacobson, Leslie Greenberg, S. Allen Wilcoxon, and Edward Waring.…”
Section: Mft Ranking Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In regard to past studies evaluating scholarship productivity within the field of MFT, Shortz, Worthington, McCollough, DeVries, and Morrow (1994a) listed prolific authors and institutions that published marital therapy research over a 6‐year period. Prolific authors included S. Allen Wilcoxon, Susan Johnson, Neil Jacobson, Leslie Greenberg, Timothy Ingram, Edward Waring, and Doug Snyder.…”
Section: Ranking Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%