Animal Sentience (journal)

Peer-reviewed academic journal From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Animal Sentience: An Interdisciplinary Journal on Animal Feeling is a peer-reviewed academic journal.[1][2] Its subject matter, animal sentience, concerns what and how nonhuman animals think and feel as well as the scientific and scholarly methods of investigating it and conveying the findings to the general public.[3] The initial publisher was the Animal Studies Repository of the Institute for Science and Policy of The Humane Society of the United States,[4] now the Animal Studies Repository of WellBeing International.[5] The editor-in-chief is Stevan Harnad.[6][7]

LanguageEnglish
History2016–present
Quick facts Discipline, Language ...
Animal Sentience
DisciplineEthics, animal behavior
LanguageEnglish
Edited byStevan Harnad
Publication details
History2016–present
Publisher
WellBeing International
Yes
LicenseCC BY
Standard abbreviations
ISO 4Anim. Sentience
Indexing
ISSN2377-7478
LCCN2015201663
OCLC no.1002278624
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History

The 2012 Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness led to many scientists acknowledging that animals other than humans can feel subjectively and experience qualia.[citation needed] In response to this, in 2014, the Institute for Science and Policy decided to create a peer-reviewed journal focused on animal sentience.[8] The first issue of Animal Sentience appeared in 2016.[9][10] A target article on pain in fish in the inaugural issue drew 45 commentary articles as well as media attention.[11][12]

Publication model

All articles accepted for publication are open to open peer commentary, in which multiple researchers may submit mini-articles criticizing, clarifying, or elaborating on the article from the viewpoint of any research field relevant to its content.[2]

See also

References

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