The fee , open access or not, the period need to publish the paper... etc like what we can find in DOAJ site. I would llike to have journals in Neurocognition, neuroscience or neuropsychology
I mean to know for evry journal the time need from acceptance to be publish , the procedure how long caus many students get trouble in puting their papers and find out after the peocedure take too long year or more but in doaj it is easy u just clic in the link of journal and then appear if it is free or not and how long
I think that if the journal is open access, it is necessary to pay the publication fee if is the journal is not open access, the journal will sell your publication,
For the period need to publish the paper. I think that every journal has its policy to examine your paper.
To find journals in Neurocognition, neuroscience or neuropsychology, you should check this link (https://www.scopus.com/sources).
Ok I see.... what I understand that when it's not free then the procedure can be short while u pay more u get a little period to be publish and vice versa this make the stuff difucult for the student to graduate quiqly unfortuntly
Also, it depend on reviewers. Sometimes, they do not respect the deadline. In all cases, it is not preferred to submit to open access journals because most of them are not serious and their reviews are not so deep. Publishing in such journals may reduce researcher fame.
If you already have the title and abstract for your article, you can use the following tools from Elsevier and Springer to help you pick a right journal among those that belong to the respective publisher
http://journalfinder.elsevier.com
http://journalsuggester.springer.com
The output of these tools shows inter alia average article processing times and impact factors of the journals and, if I recall correctly, also publication fees and open access fees.
In many journals you can publish free of charge if you do NOT make your article open access (i.e. it is available only to journal subscribers), but this should be checked for each journal separately.
Once you make a short list of potentially suitable journals, you can check whether they are covered by Scopus here (cf. the other answers)
scimagojr is quite informative displaying not only the SJR score but other metrics, a few recent ones, including ICR. Turnaround time is something you need to find out. It's a painstaking process. Most Elsevier journals do document that information, however.