Universitas Psychologica Vol. 9 Nº 1

Universitas Psychologica Vol. 9 Nº 1

En los últimos años la citación se ha convertido en un elemento crucial en la valoración de la producción académica. Sin embargo, en el contexto latinoamericano, ésta ha suscitado diversas preguntas al investigador, en especial al de las Ciencias Sociales y Humanas. En primer término: ¿Es posible hacer investigación sin que la misma se comunique, ¿es la comunicación una condición imprescindible en la dinámica de la investigación Esto es, ¿alguien lee lo que se publica En segundo término: ¿Quién lee y utiliza lo que se publica, ¿qué implicaciones de responsabilidad social tiene un investigador que no comunica lo que investiga, ¿debe el investigador entender las dinámicas de comunicación internacional como parte de su trabajo, ¿puede un investigador simplemente ignorar que lo que publica tiene consecuencias en algún lector, ¿cual perspectiva epistemológica está implicada en el hecho de que el investigador en Ciencias Sociales y Humanas se pregunte por la comunicación científica Aun cuando es claro que para un editor estas preguntas están resueltas, su labor académica es un ejercicio de comunicación y entre sus preocupaciones está no sólo la de dar cuenta de la calidad de un contenido, sino de las implicaciones comunicativas de la misma. Es decir que para un editor la "investigación que no se comunica no existe" y, por tanto, la comunicación es un elemento imprescindible del proceso de investigación y es importante lograr que lo que se publique sea leído y, en lo posible, sea utilizado. La comunicación de la investigación y de los productos académicos es un acto de res-ponsabilidad social no sólo académica o económica; compete tanto al editor como al investigador que, en principio, debe conocer las redes de pares académicos, las de potenciales usuarios del conocimiento que produce y, por tanto, debe situarse en lo local, lo regional y lo global, y debe asumir las consecuencias de lo que publica. En este sentido, la epistemología involucrada puede estar vinculada a múltiples perspectivas filosóficas, que comparten con ella el concepto de que la investigación sin comunicación no es posible. La comunicación de la investigación tiene múltiples formas de expresión, entre las que están la publicación en revistas académicas y de investigación (que publican resultados de investigación sometidos a procesos de evaluación por pares), pero es claro que hay otras modalidades de comunicación como los artículos en revistas de difusión o el desarrollo de piezas de comunicación (folletos, videos, audios, etc.), dirigidas a públicos que no necesariamente son pares académicos. Esto, sin olvidar tampoco que con seguridad algunos de dichos resultados generan otros productos tales como: patentes, intervenciones o acompañamientos psicosociales u otros artefactos tecnológicos o técnicos, críticas o denuncias, o recomendaciones de política, orientación a procesos de formación, o incluso consultorías. In the last few years, citation has become a crucial element in the assessment of academic production. Nevertheless, in the Latin American context, citation has given rise to several questions for researchers, especially those in the Social Sciences and Humanities fields: First, is it possible to do research without communicating it Is com-munication a necessary condition in the dynamics of research This is, does anybody read what we publish Second, who reads and uses what we publish What are the social responsibility implications of researchers who do not publish what they write Should researchers understand the dynamics of international communication as part of their work Can researchers just ignore that what they publish has an influence on readers What is the epistemological perspective involved in that Social Science researchers question themselves about scientific communication It is dear that these questions are already answered for editors. Their academic work is an exercise in communication, and their concerns are not just to account for content quality, but for the communicational implications of this content. For an editor, in sum, unpublished research does not exist. Hence, communication is a necessary element of the research process, and it is important to seek that what is published is also read and used when possible. Communication of research and academic production is an act of social responsibility, not only from the academic or economic perspectives. This responsibility is shared by editors and researchers, and the latter should be acquainted with networks of academic peers and potential users of the knowledge they create. Researchers should therefore think locally, regionally and globally, and they must take responsibility for the consequences of what they publish. The epistemology involved may be linked to different philosophical perspectives that share that research is impossible without communication. It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services). En primer término: ¿Es posible hacer investigación sin que la misma se comunique, ¿es la comunicación una condición imprescindible en la dinámica de la investigación Esto es, ¿alguien lee lo que se publica En segundo término: ¿Quién lee y utiliza lo que se publica, ¿qué implicaciones de responsabilidad social tiene un investigador que no comunica lo que investiga, ¿debe el investigador entender las dinámicas de comunicación internacional como parte de su trabajo, ¿puede un investigador simplemente ignorar que lo que publica tiene consecuencias en algún lector, ¿cual perspectiva epistemológica está implicada en el hecho de que el investigador en Ciencias Sociales y Humanas se pregunte por la comunicación científica Aun cuando es claro que para un editor estas preguntas están resueltas, su labor académica es un ejercicio de comunicación y entre sus preocupaciones está no sólo la de dar cuenta de la calidad de un contenido, sino de las implicaciones comunicativas de la misma. Es decir que para un editor la "investigación que no se comunica no existe" y, por tanto, la comunicación es un elemento imprescindible del proceso de investigación y es importante lograr que lo que se publique sea leído y, en lo posible, sea utilizado. La comunicación de la investigación y de los productos académicos es un acto de res-ponsabilidad social no sólo académica o económica; compete tanto al editor como al investigador que, en principio, debe conocer las redes de pares académicos, las de potenciales usuarios del conocimiento que produce y, por tanto, debe situarse en lo local, lo regional y lo global, y debe asumir las consecuencias de lo que publica. En este sentido, la epistemología involucrada puede estar vinculada a múltiples perspectivas filosóficas, que comparten con ella el concepto de que la investigación sin comunicación no es posible. La comunicación de la investigación tiene múltiples formas de expresión, entre las que están la publicación en revistas académicas y de investigación (que publican resultados de investigación sometidos a procesos de evaluación por pares), pero es claro que hay otras modalidades de comunicación como los artículos en revistas de difusión o el desarrollo de piezas de comunicación (folletos, videos, audios, etc.), dirigidas a públicos que no necesariamente son pares académicos. Esto, sin olvidar tampoco que con seguridad algunos de dichos resultados generan otros productos tales como: patentes, intervenciones o acompañamientos psicosociales u otros artefactos tecnológicos o técnicos, críticas o denuncias, o recomendaciones de política, orientación a procesos de formación, o incluso consultorías. In the last few years, citation has become a crucial element in the assessment of academic production. Nevertheless, in the Latin American context, citation has given rise to several questions for researchers, especially those in the Social Sciences and Humanities fields: First, is it possible to do research without communicating it Is com-munication a necessary condition in the dynamics of research This is, does anybody read what we publish Second, who reads and uses what we publish What are the social responsibility implications of researchers who do not publish what they write Should researchers understand the dynamics of international communication as part of their work Can researchers just ignore that what they publish has an influence on readers What is the epistemological perspective involved in that Social Science researchers question themselves about scientific communication It is dear that these questions are already answered for editors. Their academic work is an exercise in communication, and their concerns are not just to account for content quality, but for the communicational implications of this content. For an editor, in sum, unpublished research does not exist. Hence, communication is a necessary element of the research process, and it is important to seek that what is published is also read and used when possible. Communication of research and academic production is an act of social responsibility, not only from the academic or economic perspectives. This responsibility is shared by editors and researchers, and the latter should be acquainted with networks of academic peers and potential users of the knowledge they create. Researchers should therefore think locally, regionally and globally, and they must take responsibility for the consequences of what they publish. The epistemology involved may be linked to different philosophical perspectives that share that research is impossible without communication. It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services). En segundo término: ¿Quién lee y utiliza lo que se publica, ¿qué implicaciones de responsabilidad social tiene un investigador que no comunica lo que investiga, ¿debe el investigador entender las dinámicas de comunicación internacional como parte de su trabajo, ¿puede un investigador simplemente ignorar que lo que publica tiene consecuencias en algún lector, ¿cual perspectiva epistemológica está implicada en el hecho de que el investigador en Ciencias Sociales y Humanas se pregunte por la comunicación científica Aun cuando es claro que para un editor estas preguntas están resueltas, su labor académica es un ejercicio de comunicación y entre sus preocupaciones está no sólo la de dar cuenta de la calidad de un contenido, sino de las implicaciones comunicativas de la misma. Es decir que para un editor la "investigación que no se comunica no existe" y, por tanto, la comunicación es un elemento imprescindible del proceso de investigación y es importante lograr que lo que se publique sea leído y, en lo posible, sea utilizado. La comunicación de la investigación y de los productos académicos es un acto de res-ponsabilidad social no sólo académica o económica; compete tanto al editor como al investigador que, en principio, debe conocer las redes de pares académicos, las de potenciales usuarios del conocimiento que produce y, por tanto, debe situarse en lo local, lo regional y lo global, y debe asumir las consecuencias de lo que publica. En este sentido, la epistemología involucrada puede estar vinculada a múltiples perspectivas filosóficas, que comparten con ella el concepto de que la investigación sin comunicación no es posible. La comunicación de la investigación tiene múltiples formas de expresión, entre las que están la publicación en revistas académicas y de investigación (que publican resultados de investigación sometidos a procesos de evaluación por pares), pero es claro que hay otras modalidades de comunicación como los artículos en revistas de difusión o el desarrollo de piezas de comunicación (folletos, videos, audios, etc.), dirigidas a públicos que no necesariamente son pares académicos. Esto, sin olvidar tampoco que con seguridad algunos de dichos resultados generan otros productos tales como: patentes, intervenciones o acompañamientos psicosociales u otros artefactos tecnológicos o técnicos, críticas o denuncias, o recomendaciones de política, orientación a procesos de formación, o incluso consultorías. In the last few years, citation has become a crucial element in the assessment of academic production. Nevertheless, in the Latin American context, citation has given rise to several questions for researchers, especially those in the Social Sciences and Humanities fields: First, is it possible to do research without communicating it Is com-munication a necessary condition in the dynamics of research This is, does anybody read what we publish Second, who reads and uses what we publish What are the social responsibility implications of researchers who do not publish what they write Should researchers understand the dynamics of international communication as part of their work Can researchers just ignore that what they publish has an influence on readers What is the epistemological perspective involved in that Social Science researchers question themselves about scientific communication It is dear that these questions are already answered for editors. Their academic work is an exercise in communication, and their concerns are not just to account for content quality, but for the communicational implications of this content. For an editor, in sum, unpublished research does not exist. Hence, communication is a necessary element of the research process, and it is important to seek that what is published is also read and used when possible. Communication of research and academic production is an act of social responsibility, not only from the academic or economic perspectives. This responsibility is shared by editors and researchers, and the latter should be acquainted with networks of academic peers and potential users of the knowledge they create. Researchers should therefore think locally, regionally and globally, and they must take responsibility for the consequences of what they publish. The epistemology involved may be linked to different philosophical perspectives that share that research is impossible without communication. It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services). Aun cuando es claro que para un editor estas preguntas están resueltas, su labor académica es un ejercicio de comunicación y entre sus preocupaciones está no sólo la de dar cuenta de la calidad de un contenido, sino de las implicaciones comunicativas de la misma. Es decir que para un editor la "investigación que no se comunica no existe" y, por tanto, la comunicación es un elemento imprescindible del proceso de investigación y es importante lograr que lo que se publique sea leído y, en lo posible, sea utilizado. La comunicación de la investigación y de los productos académicos es un acto de res-ponsabilidad social no sólo académica o económica; compete tanto al editor como al investigador que, en principio, debe conocer las redes de pares académicos, las de potenciales usuarios del conocimiento que produce y, por tanto, debe situarse en lo local, lo regional y lo global, y debe asumir las consecuencias de lo que publica. En este sentido, la epistemología involucrada puede estar vinculada a múltiples perspectivas filosóficas, que comparten con ella el concepto de que la investigación sin comunicación no es posible. La comunicación de la investigación tiene múltiples formas de expresión, entre las que están la publicación en revistas académicas y de investigación (que publican resultados de investigación sometidos a procesos de evaluación por pares), pero es claro que hay otras modalidades de comunicación como los artículos en revistas de difusión o el desarrollo de piezas de comunicación (folletos, videos, audios, etc.), dirigidas a públicos que no necesariamente son pares académicos. Esto, sin olvidar tampoco que con seguridad algunos de dichos resultados generan otros productos tales como: patentes, intervenciones o acompañamientos psicosociales u otros artefactos tecnológicos o técnicos, críticas o denuncias, o recomendaciones de política, orientación a procesos de formación, o incluso consultorías. In the last few years, citation has become a crucial element in the assessment of academic production. Nevertheless, in the Latin American context, citation has given rise to several questions for researchers, especially those in the Social Sciences and Humanities fields: First, is it possible to do research without communicating it Is com-munication a necessary condition in the dynamics of research This is, does anybody read what we publish Second, who reads and uses what we publish What are the social responsibility implications of researchers who do not publish what they write Should researchers understand the dynamics of international communication as part of their work Can researchers just ignore that what they publish has an influence on readers What is the epistemological perspective involved in that Social Science researchers question themselves about scientific communication It is dear that these questions are already answered for editors. Their academic work is an exercise in communication, and their concerns are not just to account for content quality, but for the communicational implications of this content. For an editor, in sum, unpublished research does not exist. Hence, communication is a necessary element of the research process, and it is important to seek that what is published is also read and used when possible. Communication of research and academic production is an act of social responsibility, not only from the academic or economic perspectives. This responsibility is shared by editors and researchers, and the latter should be acquainted with networks of academic peers and potential users of the knowledge they create. Researchers should therefore think locally, regionally and globally, and they must take responsibility for the consequences of what they publish. The epistemology involved may be linked to different philosophical perspectives that share that research is impossible without communication. It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services). La comunicación de la investigación tiene múltiples formas de expresión, entre las que están la publicación en revistas académicas y de investigación (que publican resultados de investigación sometidos a procesos de evaluación por pares), pero es claro que hay otras modalidades de comunicación como los artículos en revistas de difusión o el desarrollo de piezas de comunicación (folletos, videos, audios, etc.), dirigidas a públicos que no necesariamente son pares académicos. Esto, sin olvidar tampoco que con seguridad algunos de dichos resultados generan otros productos tales como: patentes, intervenciones o acompañamientos psicosociales u otros artefactos tecnológicos o técnicos, críticas o denuncias, o recomendaciones de política, orientación a procesos de formación, o incluso consultorías. In the last few years, citation has become a crucial element in the assessment of academic production. Nevertheless, in the Latin American context, citation has given rise to several questions for researchers, especially those in the Social Sciences and Humanities fields: First, is it possible to do research without communicating it Is com-munication a necessary condition in the dynamics of research This is, does anybody read what we publish Second, who reads and uses what we publish What are the social responsibility implications of researchers who do not publish what they write Should researchers understand the dynamics of international communication as part of their work Can researchers just ignore that what they publish has an influence on readers What is the epistemological perspective involved in that Social Science researchers question themselves about scientific communication It is dear that these questions are already answered for editors. Their academic work is an exercise in communication, and their concerns are not just to account for content quality, but for the communicational implications of this content. For an editor, in sum, unpublished research does not exist. Hence, communication is a necessary element of the research process, and it is important to seek that what is published is also read and used when possible. Communication of research and academic production is an act of social responsibility, not only from the academic or economic perspectives. This responsibility is shared by editors and researchers, and the latter should be acquainted with networks of academic peers and potential users of the knowledge they create. Researchers should therefore think locally, regionally and globally, and they must take responsibility for the consequences of what they publish. The epistemology involved may be linked to different philosophical perspectives that share that research is impossible without communication. It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services). Abstract: In the last few years, citation has become a crucial element in the assessment of academic production. Nevertheless, in the Latin American context, citation has given rise to several questions for researchers, especially those in the Social Sciences and Humanities fields: First, is it possible to do research without communicating it Is com-munication a necessary condition in the dynamics of research This is, does anybody read what we publish Second, who reads and uses what we publish What are the social responsibility implications of researchers who do not publish what they write Should researchers understand the dynamics of international communication as part of their work Can researchers just ignore that what they publish has an influence on readers What is the epistemological perspective involved in that Social Science researchers question themselves about scientific communication It is dear that these questions are already answered for editors. Their academic work is an exercise in communication, and their concerns are not just to account for content quality, but for the communicational implications of this content. For an editor, in sum, unpublished research does not exist. Hence, communication is a necessary element of the research process, and it is important to seek that what is published is also read and used when possible. Communication of research and academic production is an act of social responsibility, not only from the academic or economic perspectives. This responsibility is shared by editors and researchers, and the latter should be acquainted with networks of academic peers and potential users of the knowledge they create. Researchers should therefore think locally, regionally and globally, and they must take responsibility for the consequences of what they publish. The epistemology involved may be linked to different philosophical perspectives that share that research is impossible without communication. It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services). Second, who reads and uses what we publish What are the social responsibility implications of researchers who do not publish what they write Should researchers understand the dynamics of international communication as part of their work Can researchers just ignore that what they publish has an influence on readers What is the epistemological perspective involved in that Social Science researchers question themselves about scientific communication It is dear that these questions are already answered for editors. Their academic work is an exercise in communication, and their concerns are not just to account for content quality, but for the communicational implications of this content. For an editor, in sum, unpublished research does not exist. Hence, communication is a necessary element of the research process, and it is important to seek that what is published is also read and used when possible. Communication of research and academic production is an act of social responsibility, not only from the academic or economic perspectives. This responsibility is shared by editors and researchers, and the latter should be acquainted with networks of academic peers and potential users of the knowledge they create. Researchers should therefore think locally, regionally and globally, and they must take responsibility for the consequences of what they publish. The epistemology involved may be linked to different philosophical perspectives that share that research is impossible without communication. It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services). It is dear that these questions are already answered for editors. Their academic work is an exercise in communication, and their concerns are not just to account for content quality, but for the communicational implications of this content. For an editor, in sum, unpublished research does not exist. Hence, communication is a necessary element of the research process, and it is important to seek that what is published is also read and used when possible. Communication of research and academic production is an act of social responsibility, not only from the academic or economic perspectives. This responsibility is shared by editors and researchers, and the latter should be acquainted with networks of academic peers and potential users of the knowledge they create. Researchers should therefore think locally, regionally and globally, and they must take responsibility for the consequences of what they publish. The epistemology involved may be linked to different philosophical perspectives that share that research is impossible without communication. It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services). It is also dear that research communication has multiple forms of expression which include academic and research journals (that publish peer reviewed research results), but also general journal articles or communication media such as booklets, videos, audios, etc., which are directed towards non-academic audiences. Surely, some of these research results may in turn create other products (patents, interventions, psychosocial accompani-ments, other technical or technological artifacts, criticism, reports, policy suggestions, education processes or consulting services).  
Editorial
Citación y dinámicas de la comunicación científica
Citation and Dynamics of Scientific Communication
Wilson López-López

El estudio de productividad académica de profesores universitarios a través de análisis factorial confirmatorio: el caso de psicología en Estados Unidos de América
The Study of Faculty Productivity through Confirmatory Factor Analysis: the case of Psychology in United States of America
María Caridad García-Cepero

Internacionalidad de las revistas de psicología multidisciplinar editadas en iberoamérica e incluidas en la Web of Science
Internationality of the Multidisciplinary Psychology Journals Published in Ibero-America and Included in the Web of Science
Izabela Zych y Gualberto Buela-Casal

Perdón y resolución de conflictos en relaciones cercanas: efectos intra y entre parejas
Forgiveness and Conflict Resolution in Close Relationships: Within and Cross Partner Effects
F. Giorgia Paleari, Camillo Regalia y Frank D. Fincham

¿Por qué tienen éxito y fracasan las personas con poder y sin poder? Poder y atribuciones de control
Why do People With and Without Power Succeed or Fail? Power and Control Attributions
Rocío Martínez-Gutiérrez, Rosa Rodríguez-Bailón y Miguel Moya

Evaluación de la potencia explicativa de los grafos de redes sociales clandestinos con UciNet y NetDraw
Assessment the explanatory power of clandestine social networks graphs with UciNet and NetDraw
Humberto M. Trujillo, Fernando M. Mañas Joaquín González-Cabrera

El impacto de la cultura nacional sobre la cultura organizacional
The Impact of National Culture on the Organizational Culture
Alicia Omar y Alicia Florencia Urteaga

El análisis crítico del discurso como herramienta de investigación psicosocial del mundo del trabajo. Discusiones desde América Latina
Critical Discourse Analysis as a Tool in Psychosocial Research on the World of Work. Discussions from Latin America
Antonio Stecher

Perfiles motivacionales y diferencias en variables afectivas, motivacionales y de logro
Motivational Profiles and Differences in Affective, Motivational and Achievement Variables
Antonio Valle Arias, Susana Rodríguez, Ramón G. Cabanach, José Carlos Núñez Pérez, Julio Antonio González Pienda y Pedro Rosario

La tutoría entre iguales: una modalidad para el desarrollo de la escritura en la educación superior
Peer Tutoring: Developing Writing in College Education
Gloria Mercedes Alzate-Medina, Luis Bernardo Peña-Borrero

Escala de modos de afrontamiento: consideraciones teóricas y metodológicas
Scale of Ways of Coping: Theoretical and Methodological Considerations
Carlos Nava-Quiroz, Cynthia Zaira Vega-Valero y Rocío Soria Trujano

El inventario de fobia social y ansiedad: primeros resultados de confiabilidad y validez estructural en adolescentes chilenos
The Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory: First Results of the Reliability and Structural Validity in Chilean Adolescents
José Olivares, Pablo Vera-Villarroel, Ana I. Rosa-Alcázar, Walter Kuhne, Luis Montesinos y José Antonio López-Pina

Adaptación y validación de la Escala de Orientación a la Dominancia Social (SDO) en una muestra chilena
Adaptation and Validation of the Social Domination Orientation (SDO) Scale in a Chilean Sample  
Manuel Cárdenas, Patricio Meza, Karen Lagues, Susan Yañez

Validez factorial del "cuestionario para la evaluación del síndrome de quemarse por el trabajo" (CESQT) en una muestra de médicos mexicanos
Factorial Validity of the "Spanish Burnout inventory “(SBI) in a Sample of Mexican Doctors
Pedro R. Gil-monte, Leslie Claret Zúñiga-Caballero

Rastreando en el pasado... formas de regular la felicidad, la tristeza, el amor, el enojo y el miedo
Looking Back into the Past: Ways of Regulating Happiness, Sadness, Love, Anger and Fear
Blanca Estela Retana-Franco, Rozzana Sánchez-Aragón

Preditores de sintomas depressivos em crianças e adolescentes institucionalizados
Predictors of Depressive Symptoms in Children and Adolescents lnstitutionalized
Josiane Lieberknecht Wathier-Abaid,  Débora Dalbosco-Dell’Aglio y Sílvia Helena Koller

Memoria y metamemoria: relaciones funcionales y estabilidad de las mismas
Memory and Metamemory: Functional Relationships and their Stability
Oscar Sierra Fitzgerald

Desarrollo tardío del lenguaje: la conciencia metapragmática en la edad escolar
Late Language Development: Metapragmatic Consciousness in School-Aged Children Nina Crespo-Allende y Pedro Alfaro-Faccio

Las categorías de sentido, sentido personal y sentido subjetivo en una perspectiva histórico-cultural: un camino hacia una nueva definición de subjetividad
Sense, Personal Sense and Subjective Sense in a Historical-Cultural Perspective: a Path Towards a New Definition of Subjectivity
Fernando Luis González-Rey
 
Psicología cultural. Contribuciones teóricas y fundamentos epistemológicos de las aportaciones de Vygotsky hacia la discusión lingüística de Bakhtin
Cultural Psychology: Theorical Contributions and Epistemological Bases - From Vygotsky's Contributions to Bakhtin's Linguistic Discusión
Adolfo Pizzinato

La construcción institucional del "loco peligroso"
lnstitutional Construction of the "Dangerous Madman"
Omar Alejandro Bravo