Listing 1 - 10 of 265 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
This book constitutes, in a sense, a revision of the author's Introduction to Physiological Psychology, published in 1934, but its advance over that work is sufficient to warrant the new title. Besides adding new chapters and sections to give the book a more comprehensive scope, the content of the earlier treatment has been entirely reworked so as to sharpen the exposition. Discussion of individual topics is brief, but is annotated by footnote references to authoritative sources and by supplementary reading lists at chapter endings. As a text, the book has a two-fold purpose: (1) to provide psychologists with a survey of pertinent physiological fact and theory, and (2) to give a systematic orientation to the study of psychophysiology. Both of these are necessary objectives. Even students with considerable background in physiology and neurology are unlikely to have had emphasis on those topics of most use to them as psychologists. The systematic treatment of the problems of psychophysiology is equally essential, for without it this difficult field appears very chaotic. Such systematization can be accomplished in several ways. The author has used the concept of homcostasis as a basic integrating principle, and has considered the neuromuscular adjustments of the total organism as acting similarly to those of more limited organ systems in the maintenance of essential "steady" states. Treatments of the mechanisms of learning, emotion and thought draw upon the constructs of motor psychology, which asserts that all behavioral adjustments, including those of "consciousness," have motor accompaniments. The teacher who wishes to emphasize instead the central control mechanisms or the sensory processes may readily do so, as the system preferred by the author is concentrated into one part of the book. The text is intended to cover the content of a full year course, and is divided into four parts. Teachers who used the previous edition in semester courses have indicated several feasible combinations of parts. These are: (a) Parts I and II, for those primarily interested in sensory process; (b) Parts II and III, for those more interested in central control mechanisms; (c) Parts I and IV, for those interested in the motor aspects of total performance. In addition, it is possible to select particular chapters from all sections with a more general end in view.
Choose an application
Psychophysiology --- Behavioral physiology --- Physiological psychology --- Physiopsychology --- Psychology, Physiological --- Somatopsychics --- Physiology --- Psychobiology --- Mind and body --- Psychophysiology.
Choose an application
Psychophysiology. --- Behavioral physiology --- Physiological psychology --- Physiopsychology --- Psychology, Physiological --- Somatopsychics --- Physiology --- Psychobiology --- Mind and body --- Psychophysiology
Choose an application
Affect (Psychology). --- Emotions and cognition. --- Emotions --- Intentionality (Philosophy). --- PSYCHOLOGY / Physiological Psychology. --- Research --- History --- Research. --- 1900-2099.
Choose an application
Psychophysiology. --- Psychophysiology --- Behavioral physiology --- Physiological psychology --- Physiopsychology --- Psychology, Physiological --- Somatopsychics --- Physiology --- Psychobiology --- Mind and body
Choose an application
applied psychology --- clinical psychology --- developmental psychology and education --- psychology --- neurological psychology --- physiological psychology
Choose an application
First Published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Psychophysiology. --- Behavioral physiology --- Physiological psychology --- Physiopsychology --- Psychology, Physiological --- Somatopsychics --- Physiology --- Psychobiology --- Mind and body
Choose an application
Psychophysiology --- Behavioral physiology --- Physiological psychology --- Physiopsychology --- Psychology, Physiological --- Somatopsychics --- Physiology --- Psychobiology --- Mind and body --- Psychophysiology.
Choose an application
First published in 1940, as the fourth edition of a 1911 original, this book forms part of The Cambridge Psychological Library series. The text is divided into two main sections, with the first part discussing aspects of psychophysics and the second focusing on the area of correlation. Detailed notes and numerous tables are contained throughout. This book will be of value to anyone with an interest in the history of psychology and mental measurement.
Psychophysiology. --- Behavioral physiology --- Physiological psychology --- Physiopsychology --- Psychology, Physiological --- Somatopsychics --- Physiology --- Psychobiology --- Mind and body
Choose an application
This book explores the concept of psychophysics and details the development of the ideas which made the mathematisation of desire possible. The experience of desire accompanies us all throughout life, but dealing with it as psychologists and scientists is far from easy. Psychophysics was conceived to help map, mathematically, these unknowable feelings of desire. As such, this book will help to provide an accessible account of psychophysics while telling the story of its creation, which was, in essence, the birth of scientific psychology and contemporary cognitive neuroscience, alongside many of the technologies which characterize the contemporary world. It is a strange and intriguing story, which begins with the German physiologist Ernst Heinrich Weber in the first half of the nineteenth century, and its story will help the reader gain fresh insight into how scientists came to be able to map and quantify complex and private emotional states. Nicola Bruno is Professor of General Psychology at The University of Parma, Italy.
Neuropsychology. --- Psychobiology. --- Psychology. --- Cognitive psychology. --- Psychophysiology. --- Biological Psychology. --- Theoretical Psychology. --- Cognitive Psychology. --- Physiological Psychology.
Listing 1 - 10 of 265 | << page >> |
Sort by
|