Psychology is a young science. It has made great strides over the past 100 or so years, to become one of the most rapidly growing of the sciences. This book brings together some of the most influential psychologists from the past 50 years to consider just how we got to where we are in psychology, and where we might be heading.
Psychology is a young science. It has made great strides over the past 100 or so years, to become one of the most rapidly growing of the sciences. This book brings together some of the most influential psychologists from the past 50 years to consider just how we got to where we are in psychology, and where we might be heading.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
* Introduction * 1: Alan Allport: The ups and downs of cognitive psychology: attention and other 'executive functions' * 2: Alan Baddeley: Psychology in the 1950s: a personal view * 3: Robert A Boakes: Learning theory and the cognitive revolution 1961-1971 * 4: Vicki Bruce: Face recognition in our time * 5: Max Coltheart: Cognitive science now and then * 6: Fergus Craik: Aging memory - aging memories * 7: Anne Cutler: Psycholinguistics in our time * 8: Michael S Gazzaniga: Two brains; my life in science * 9: Richard Gregory: A perception of perception * 10: Miles Hewstone and Wolfgang Stroebe: Social psychology in our time: from 'fun and games' to grown-up science * 11: Glyn W Humphreys: Thirty years of object recognition * 12: Phil Johnson-Laird: Reasoning * 13: Donald Laming: Weber's Law * 14: Andrew Mayes: Fifty years of memory neuropsychology research: methods 5, theory 2 * 15: Michael Posner: Mental chronometry: long past, bright future * 16: Patrick Rabbitt: A life in grey areas: cognitive gerontology from 1950 to 2007 * 17: James Reason: From little slips to big disasters: an error quest * 18: John Ross: Visual perception 1950 - 2000 * 19: Andries Sanders: Human performance from then to now * 20: John Wearden: The perception of time * 21: Lawrence Weiskrantz: From effects to systems in neuropsychology * 22: Mark G Williams: Experimental psychopathology and psychological treatment
* Introduction * 1: Alan Allport: The ups and downs of cognitive psychology: attention and other 'executive functions' * 2: Alan Baddeley: Psychology in the 1950s: a personal view * 3: Robert A Boakes: Learning theory and the cognitive revolution 1961-1971 * 4: Vicki Bruce: Face recognition in our time * 5: Max Coltheart: Cognitive science now and then * 6: Fergus Craik: Aging memory - aging memories * 7: Anne Cutler: Psycholinguistics in our time * 8: Michael S Gazzaniga: Two brains; my life in science * 9: Richard Gregory: A perception of perception * 10: Miles Hewstone and Wolfgang Stroebe: Social psychology in our time: from 'fun and games' to grown-up science * 11: Glyn W Humphreys: Thirty years of object recognition * 12: Phil Johnson-Laird: Reasoning * 13: Donald Laming: Weber's Law * 14: Andrew Mayes: Fifty years of memory neuropsychology research: methods 5, theory 2 * 15: Michael Posner: Mental chronometry: long past, bright future * 16: Patrick Rabbitt: A life in grey areas: cognitive gerontology from 1950 to 2007 * 17: James Reason: From little slips to big disasters: an error quest * 18: John Ross: Visual perception 1950 - 2000 * 19: Andries Sanders: Human performance from then to now * 20: John Wearden: The perception of time * 21: Lawrence Weiskrantz: From effects to systems in neuropsychology * 22: Mark G Williams: Experimental psychopathology and psychological treatment
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