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This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Cognitive therapy or cognitive behavior therapy is a kind of psychotherapy used to treat depression, anxiety disorders, phobias, and other forms of mental disorder. ...
Cognitive Psychology is the school of psychology that examines internal mental processes such as problem solving, memory, and language. ...
It has been suggested that Explicit_memory be merged into this article or section. ...
This article or section is incomplete and may require expansion and/or cleanup. ...
Evolutionary psychology (abbreviated ev-psych or EP) is a theoretical approach to psychology that attempts to explain certain mental and psychological traitsâsuch as memory, perception, or languageâas evolved adaptations, i. ...
Expressive aphasia, known as Brocas aphasia in clinical neuropsychology and agrammatic aphasia in cognitive neuropsychology, is an aphasia caused by damage to Brocas area in the brain. ...
Educational psychology is the study of how humans learn in educational settings, the effectiveness of educational interventions, the psychology of teaching, and the social psychology of schools as organizations. ...
Emotion, in its most general definition, is an intense neural mental state that arises subjectively rather than through conscious effort and evokes either a positive or negative psychological response . ...
See fantasy for an account of the literary genre involving the development of common or popular fantasies. ...
Free-running sleep is sleep that is not artificially regulated. ...
Incremental reading is a newly proposed learning technique in which the student studies a substantial load of material subdivided into articles and its extracts. ...
In learning, implicit repetition is unintentional repetition. ...
Industrial and organizational psychology (also known as I/O psychology, work psychology, work and organisational psychology, W-O psychology, occupational psychology, or personnel psychology) concerns the application of psychological theories, research methods, and intervention strategies to workplace issues. ...
For other uses, see Memory (disambiguation). ...
Psychology is an academic and applied discipline involving the scientific study of mental processes and behavior. ...
Psychological statistics is the application of statistics to psychology. ...
Psychoanalysis is a family of psychological theories and methods based on the work of Sigmund Freud. ...
Psychophysiology is the science of understanding the link between psychology and physiology. ...
In psychotherapy, paradoxical intention is the deliberate practice of a neurotic habit or thought, undertaken in order to identify and remove it. ...
Psychometrics is the field of study concerned with the theory and technique of psychological measurement, which includes the measurement of knowledge, abilities, attitudes, and personality traits. ...
Personality psychology is a branch of psychology which studies personality and individual differences. ...
In psychology and the cognitive sciences, perception is the process of acquiring, interpreting, selecting, and organizing sensory information. ...
Victimology is the study of why certain people are victims of crime and how lifestyles affect the chances that a certain person will fall victim to a crime. ...
In psychology and psychiatry, clanging is a form of speech pattern where thinking is driven by word sounds. ...
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Patience Patience is the ability to endure waiting, delay, or provocation without becoming annoyed or upset, or to persevere calmly when faced with difficulties. ...
A mnemonic link system is a method of remembering lists, based on creating an association between the elements of that list. ...
Submissiveness is the trait of being willing to yield to the will of another person or a superior force. ...
Touch illusions are illusions that exploit the sense of touch. ...
Gestalt psychology (also Gestalt theory of the Berlin School) is a theory of mind and brain that proposes that the operational principle of the brain is holistic, parallel, and analog, with self-organizing tendencies. ...
A psychologist is a scientist and/or clinician who studies psychology, the systematic investigation of the human mind, including behavior and cognition. ...
For Wikipedias categorization projects, see Wikipedia:Categorization. ...
The concepts of psychoanalysis have been applied to films in various ways; however the 1970s and 1980s saw the development of theory that took concepts developed by the French psychoanalyst and writer Jacques Lacan and applied them to the experience of watching a film. ...
Look up Cognition in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Large Group Awareness Training or LGAT is a term popularized in the American Psychological Associations 1986 draft DIMPAC report and also by Margaret Singer in her 1996 book Cults in our Midst to describe intense commercial trainings by non-psychologists which from the outside may resemble group therapy. ...
Brief reactive psychosis is the psychiatric term for psychosis which is triggered by extreme stress. ...
Feigned madness is acted madness, used in modern times to try to avoid punishment in a court of law, so called insanity defense. ...
This article is about a feeling, for other meanings see epiphany (disambiguation). ...
A personal relationship may result in a psychological bond. ...
Psycholinguistics or psychology of language is the study of the psychological and neurobiological factors that enable humans to acquire, use, and understand language. ...
Escalation is the phenomenon of something getting worse step by step, for example a quarrel, or, notably, military presence and nuclear armament during the Cold War. ...
Mind Dynamics, a seminar-based proto-LGAT founded by Alexander Everett in Texas in 1968, led to derivative organisations such as est and Lifespring. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Childhood (song) Childhood is a broad term usually applied to the phase of development in humans between infancy and adulthood. ...
In psychology, closure may refer to the state of experiencing an emotional conclusion to a difficult life event, such as the breakdown of a close interpersonal relationship or the death of loved one. ...
Pleasure is a positive sensation, which by analogy to pain, can be physiologically described as either peripheral or central (euphoria). ...
Encounter groups sprang up in the New Age psychic-awareness environment of the 1960s, and explored new models of inter-personal communication and the intensification of psychological experience. ...
The Sigmund Freud Archives mainly consists of a trove of documents housed at the US Library of Congress and in a former residence of Freud. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
ISTP (Introverted Sensing Thinking Perceiving) is one of the sixteen personality types from the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. ...
Positive psychology is the scientific study of human happiness. ...
Clinophobia is the fear of going to bed. ...
This does not cite its references or sources. ...
Identity in psychological terms relates to self-image, self-esteem and individuation. ...
This list includes notable psychologists and contributors to psychology, some of whom may not have thought of themselves primarily as psychologists but are included here because of their important contributions to the discipline. ...
Music therapy is the clinical and evidence-based use of music interventions to accomplish individualized goals within a therapeutic relationship by a qualified professional who has completed an approved music therapy program. ...
People feel remorse when reflecting on their actions that they believe are wrong. ...
link title Headline text --Cknuth7 16:35, 3 April 2006 (UTC) This page aims to list articles related to psychology. ...
Definition Intimacy is complex in that its meaning varies from relationship to relationship, and within a given relationship over time. ...
Bus shelter with seats with armrests, designed to deter proximity, as well as sleeping. ...
Orthorexia, or orthorexia nervosa is a term coined by Dr. Steven Bratman, a Colorado specialist, to denote what he considers to be an eating disorder characterized by a fixation on eating healthful food. ...
The concept of ego reduction occurs in several contexts. ...
Abnormal psychology is the scientific study of abnormal behavior in order to describe, predict, explain, and change abnormal patterns of functioning. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Separation anxiety disorder (or simply separation anxiety) is a psychological condition in which an individual has excessive anxiety regarding separation from home or from people to whom the individual has a strong emotional attachment (like a mother). ...
Philosophy of psychology typically refers to a set of issues at the theoretical foundations of modern psychology. ...
A flashbulb memory is a memory laid down in great detail during a highly personally significant event. ...
An energumen (from Greek energoumenos, possessed) is a frantic and hysterical person, who commonly shows a strength superior to what he/she should have. ...
Disappointment is the emotion felt when a strongly held expectation is not met. ...
In social psychology, the designated patient is a person socially constructed as mentally ill, regardless of the existence of real and measurable symptoms. ...
The American Association for the Abolition of Involuntary Mental Hospitalization (AAAIMH) was an organization founded in 1970 by Dr. Thomas Szasz, George Alexander, Erving Goffman for the purpose of abolishing involuntary psychiatric intervention, particularly involuntary commitment, against individuals. ...
Graphic organizers are visual representations of knowledge, concepts or ideas. ...
Discipline is any training intended to produce a specific character or pattern of behaviour, especially training that produces moral, physical, or mental development in a particular direction. ...
Bibliomania is the obsessive purchase or collecting of books to the point where social relations or health are damaged. ...
Boldness is an opposite of shyness. ...
Neuropsychology is a branch of psychology and neurology that aims to understand how the structure and function of the brain relate to specific psychological processes. ...
Color psychology is a field of study devoted to analyzing the effect of color on human behavior and feeling, distinct from phototherapy (the use of ultraviolet light to cure infantile jaundice). ...
In psychology, alogia, or poverty of speech, is a general lack of additional, unprompted content seen in normal speech. ...
Discovered by Diana Deutsch in 1973, the octave illusion is an auditory illusion produced by simultaneously playing two sequences of two notes, high to low, and low to high, in separate stereo channels over headphones. ...
Conjoint analysis, also called multi-attribute compositional models, is a statistical technique that originated in mathematical psychology. ...
ENTJ (Extroverted iNtuitive Thinking Judging) is one of the sixteen personality types from personality type systems based on C.G. Jung, of which the best-known are the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), Keirsey Temperament Sorter and Socionics. ...
The Center for Applications of Psychological Type is a non-profit organization co-founded by Isabel Myers in 1975 for MBTI development, research and training. ...
The Center for Applications of Psychological Type is a non-profit organization co-founded by Isabel Myers in 1975 for MBTI development, research and training. ...
ESTJ (Extroverted Sensing Thinking Judging) is one of the sixteen personality types from personality type systems based on C.G. Jung, which best known are the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), Keirsey Temperament Sorter and Socionics. ...
The Center for Applications of Psychological Type is a non-profit organization co-founded by Isabel Myers in 1975 for MBTI development, research and training. ...
The Center for Applications of Psychological Type is a non-profit organization co-founded by Isabel Myers in 1975 for MBTI development, research and training. ...
ESFJ (Extroverted Sensing Feeling Judging) is one of the sixteen personality types from personality type systems based on C.G. Jung, which best known are the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), Keirsey Temperament Sorter and Socionics. ...
The Center for Applications of Psychological Type is a non-profit organization co-founded by Isabel Myers in 1975 for MBTI development, research and training. ...
The Center for Applications of Psychological Type is a non-profit organization co-founded by Isabel Myers in 1975 for MBTI development, research and training. ...
Structural information theory (SIT) is a general theory of pattern perception, set about by Emanuel Leeuwenberg in the 1960s. ...
In psychology, avolition is a general lack of desire, motivation, and persistence. ...
Intertwingularity is a term coined by Ted Nelson to express the complexity of interrelations in human knowledge. ...
Italic text:For other uses, see Rapport (disambiguation). ...
In psychology, cognitivism is a theoretical approach to understanding the mind, which argues that mental function can be understood by quantitative, positivist and scientific methods, and that such functions can be described as information processing models. ...
In the first five years of life beginning at conception, the organism being created first learns the sort of environment it lives in. ...
Volition is the study of will, choice, and decision. ...
A persecution complex is a term given to an array of psychologically complex behaviours, that specifically deals with the perception of being persecuted, for various possible reasons. ...
Humanistic psychology is a school of psychology that emerged in the 1950s in reaction to both behaviorism and psychoanalysis. ...
Nominal aphasia (also known as anomic aphasia) is a form of aphasia (loss of language capability caused by brain damage) in which the subject has difficulty remembering or recognizing names which the subject should know well. ...
The basic premise of applied psychology is the use of psychological principles and theories to overcome practical problems in other fields, such as business management, product design, ergonomics, nutrition, law and clinical medicine. ...
Mysophilia is a paraphilia relating to soiled or dirty material. ...
In the broadest sense qualitative research is research which uses only dichotomous data â that is, data which can take only the values 0 (zero) and 1 (one). ...
In most if not all societies there are prescriptions regarding gender roles. ...
A thought-terminating cliché is a commonly used phrase, sometimes passing as folk wisdom, used to quell cognitive dissonance, especially in cases where the person experiencing the cognitive dissonance might resolve it by reaching a thought-provoking epiphany. ...
N-Pow (Need for Power) is a term introduced by David McClelland into the field of psychology, referring to an individuals need to be in charge. ...
N-Affil (Need for Affiliation) is a term introduced by David McClelland into the field of psychology, to describe a persons need to feel like he needs to belong to a group. ...
Biological psychology is the scientific study of the biological bases of behavior and mental states. ...
Self-deception is a process of denying or rationalizing away the relevance, significance, or importance of opposing evidence and argument. ...
now. ...
Robopsychology is the fictional study of the personalities of intelligent machines. ...
Experimental psychology is an approach to psychology that treats it as one of the natural sciences, and therefore assumes that it is susceptible to the experimental method. ...
Quantitative psychological research is psychological research which performs statistical estimation or statistical inference. ...
Higher nervous activity is a name for behavioral sciences such as ethology, animal psychology, theory of memory and consciousness, theory of intellect, reflex doctrine etc. ...
In psychology, the term jamais vu (from the French, meaning never seen) is used to describe any familiar situation which is not recognized by the observer. ...
Comparative psychology, taken in its most usual, broad sense, refers to the study of the behavior and mental life of animals other than human beings. ...
Trichotillomania in a young woman Trichotillomania (TTM) is an impulse control disorder characterised by the repeated urge to pull out scalp hair, eyelashes, eyebrows or other body hair. ...
A mood swing is an extreme change in mood. ...
Moral reasoning is a study in psychology that overlaps with moral philosophy. ...
Half empty or half full? Is the glass half empty or half full? is a common expression, used rhetorically to indicate that a particular situation could be a cause for optimism (half full) or pessimism (half empty), or as a general litmus test to simply determine if an individual is...
Pathognomy is the study of passions and emotions. ...
Kleptomania (Greek: κλÎÏÏειν, kleptein, to steal, μανία, mania) is an inability to resist impulses of stealing. ...
The International Journal of Psychiatry is an international scientific medical journal dedicated to publish papers in the field of psychiatry. ...
Psychophysics is the branch of cognitive psychology dealing with the relationship between physical stimuli and their perception. ...
Gestalt Theoretical Psychotherapy is a method of psychotherapy based strictly on Gestalt psychology. ...
The sensitivity or insensitivity of a human, often considered with regard to a particular kind of stimulus, is the strength of the feeling it results in, in comparison with the strength of the stimulus. ...
Social cognition is the name for both a branch of psychology that studies the cognitive processes involved in social interaction, and an umbrella term for the processes themselves. ...
Educational psychology or school psychology is the psychological science studying how children and adults learn, the effectiveness of various educational strategies and tactics, and how schools function as organizations. ...
Forensic psychology is the application of psychological priniciples and knowledge to various legal activities involving child custody disputes, child abuse of an emotional, physical and sexual nature, assessing ones personal capacity to manage ones affairs, matters of competency to stand trial, criminal responsbility & personal injury and advising judges...
Psychological pain refers to pain caused by psychological stress and by emotional trauma, as distinct from that caused by physiological injuries and syndromes. ...
In psychology, sublimation is a coping mechanism. ...
Perspective in theory of cognition is the choice of a context or a reference (or the result of this choice) from which to sense, categorize, measure or codify experience, cohesively forming a coherent belief, typically for comparing with another. ...
For other uses, see Puppy love (disambiguation). ...
Physiological psychology is sometimes related to psychiatry, and in fact may end up becoming the parent branch which contains psychiatry. ...
Clinical psychology is the application of psychology to troublesome mental distress in a health and social care context. ...
Hypergraphia is an overwhelming urge to write. ...
Psychobiography is a type of biography that seeks to understand individual, often historical, people and their motivations in history. ...
Image schema is a recurring structure of, or within, our cognitive processes, which establishes patterns of understanding and reasoning. ...
This article or section is in need of attention from an expert on the subject. ...
Microphilia is the sexual attraction to a smaller person. ...
Information metabolism is a psychological theory of human social interactions based on information processing. ...
Psychological abuse refers to the humiliation or intimidation of another person, but is also used to refer to the long-term effects of emotional shock. ...
This article is about the psychological state of dissociation. ...
Personal construct theory (PCT) is a psychological theory of human cognition. ...
The Interference theory proposes the idea that people forget because new learning is disrupted by or disrupts past learning. ...
The Decay theory states that when something new is learned, a neuro-chemical memory trace is formed, but over time this trace tends to disintegrate. ...
Developmental disorders are disorders that occur at some stage in a childs development, often retarding the development. ...
Sapience is the ability of an organism or entity to act with judgment. ...
Jacques Lacan tells of the mirror stage in his essay The Mirror stage as formative of the function of the I as revealed in psychoanalytic experience, which was published in English in Ãcrits: A Selection, first by Alan Sheridan in 1977, and more recently by Bruce Fink in 2002. ...
Conceptual Blending is a theory of cognition[1]. According to the Theory of Conceptual Blending, elements and vital relations from diverse scenarios are blended in a subconscious process. ...
Behaviorism is an approach to psychology based on the proposition that behaviour can be studied and explained scientifically without recourse to internal mental states. ...
Innocence is a term that describes the lack of guilt of an individual, with respect to a crime. ...
Nebraska Police Sergeant Herbert Schirmer claimed that he was abducted by extraterrestrials in 1967. ...
Ritualization is a behavior that occurs typically in the member of a given species in a highly stereotyped fashion and independent of any direct physiological significance. ...
Human behavio(u)r is the collection of activities performed by human beings and influenced by culture, attitudes, emotions, values, ethics, authority, rapport, hypnosis, persuasion, and/or coercion. ...
Sultan, one of the brightest of the early chimpanzees used for psychological research, was tested by Gestalt psychologist Wolfgang Köhler. ...
A microexpression is a tiny facial expression that lasts less than a quarter of a second. ...
See also open marriage. ...
A daydream is a form of consciousness that involves a low level of conscious activity. ...
In psychology and marketing, two concepts or stimuli are associated when the experience of one leads to the effects of another, due to repeated pairing. ...
The Bambi Effect is an informal name used primarily by hunters and trappers for the emotional impact of the harvesting of animals which the public considers adorable, regardless of what the opponents consider are environmental and economic realities. ...
Imitation is an advanced animal behaviour whereby an individual observes anothers behaviour and replicates it itself. ...
Being awake is a metabolic state which is marked by catabolic processes and which is characterized by consciousness, the opposite of sleep, an anabolic process. ...
In communications and psychology, polarization is the process whereby a social or political group is divided into two opposing sub-groups with fewer and fewer members of the group remaining neutral or holding an intermediate position. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into gay panic defense. ...
Unlike clinical psychology, counseling psychology is generally a joint-venture of both psychology departments and departments of education. ...
Sociosexual orientation in social psychology, refers to individual differences in the tendency to prefer either unrestricted sex (without the necessity of love) or restricted sex (only in the context of a long term loving relationship). ...
Care perspective In psychology, the care perspective focuses on people in terms of their connectedness with others, interpesonal communication, relationships with others, and concern for others. ...
Attention span is the amount of time a person can concentrate on a single activity. ...
In psychology, mythomania (also known as mitomania, pseudologia phantastica, or pathological lying) is a condition involving compulsive lying by a person with no obvious source of motivation. ...
The British Psychological Society (BPS) is the representative body for psychologists and psychology in the United Kingdom. ...
The concept of a protoself was popularized by a neurology department chairman from University of Iowa College of Medicine, Antonio Damasio . ...
The idea of Self-parenting is that a persons mind is created in the form of a conversation between two voices generated by the two parts of the cerebral hemisphere. ...
Ideation is the process of forming and relating ideas. ...
Disillusionment is the process of removal of an illusion from the human mind. ...
One-upmanship is the systematic and conscious practice of making ones associates feel inferior and thereby gaining the status of being one-up on them, as described by Stephen Potter in his tongue-in-cheek self-help books, and in film and television derivatives from them. ...
Benevolence characterizes the true goodness of the mind and spirit, the unbiased kindness to do good. ...
PDD not otherwise specified or PDD-NOS is a pervasive developmental disorder. ...
Social proof, aka informational social influence, is a psychological phenomenon which occurs in ambiguous social situations when people are unable to determine the appropriate mode of behavior. ...
In Ken Wilbers integral theory of developmental psychology, vision-logic is a post-formal but personal level of cognitive development. ...
The recency effect, in psychology, is a cognitive bias that results from disproportionate salience of recent stimuli or observations. ...
A security blanket is any familiar object whose presence provides comfort or security to its owner, such as the literal blankets often favored by small children. ...
Latah is a condition of hyperstartling found in southeast Asia that is commonly considered a culture-bound syndrome. ...
The Graz School of experimental psychology and object-theory was headed by Alexius Meinong, who was professor and Chair of Philosophy at the University of Graz where he founded the Graz psychological institute (in 1894). ...
The Berlin School of experimental psychology was headed by Carl Stumpf (a pupil of Franz Brentano and Rudolf Hermann Lotze), who became professor at the University of Berlin where he founded the Berlin laboratory of experimental psychology (in 1893). ...
Memory augmentation is the process by which ones ability to retain information is increased. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged into Therianthropy. ...
Chronophilia is a rarely-used term which refers to a group of paraphilias of the type in which the paraphiles sexuoerotic age is discordant with his or her actual chronological age and is concordant with the age of the partner. ...
Eros is the Greek word for (especially) romantic or sexual love. ...
Criminal psychology is the study of the wills, thoughts, intentions and reactions of criminals. ...
Greed and fear are supposed, together with imitation, to be the three main motivators of stock markets and business behavior, and one of the cause of bull markets, bear markets and business cycles. ...
Look up confabulation in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
The genital stage is a stage of child development in one of the theories postulated by Sigmund Freud and elaborated by his followers. ...
William Guglielmo Niederland (1904 - 1993) was a German-American psychoanalyst. ...
William C. Menninger is a co-founder with his brother Karl and his father of The Menninger Foundation in Topeka, Kansas. ...
Psychopathology is a term which refers to either the study of mental illness or mental distress the manifestation of behaviours and experiences which may be indicative of mental illness or psychological impairment. ...
In the fields of psychology and psychoanalysis, Napoleon complex (or Napoleon syndrome) is a colloquial term used to describe Matt Hoagland, a type of mean and bald person. ...
An inferiority complex, in the fields of psychology and psychoanalysis, is a feeling that one is inferior to others in some way. ...
In psychometrics, predictive validity is the extent to which a scale predicts scores on some criterion measure. ...
Sujit Kumar (born October 4, 1973) is a man who was raised as a chicken for several years of his life. ...
Convergent and divergent production are the two types of human response to a set problem that were identified by J. P. Guilford. ...
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Xenophily means having an affection for unknown objects or human beings. ...
Weapon focus is a factor affecting the reliability of eyewitness testimony. ...
Same-sex attachment disorder (SSAD) is a term invented by psychotherapist Richard Cohen in an attempt to re-pathologize homosexuality as an emotional or mental disorder. ...
Destrudo is the energy of the destructive impulse. ...
Role theory is a perspective in social psychology that considers most of everyday activity to be living up to the roles, or expectations, of others. ...
Learning is a process that depends on experience and leads to longterm changes in behavior potential. ...
In Freuds psychoanalytic theory, reaction formation is a defense mechanism in which anxiety-producing or unacceptable emotions are replaced by their direct opposites. ...
In psychology, the term displacement is an unconscious defence mechanism, whereby the mind redirects emotion from a dangerous object to a safe object. ...
In psychology and sociology, a trust metric is a measure of how a member of a group is trusted by the other members. ...
A Firebug is a truly insane type of Arsonist. ...
Legal psychology was defined by James Ogloff, in his article Two Steps Forward and One Step Back as the scientific study of the effect of law on people; and the effect people have on the law. ...
In psychology, adjustment disorder refers to a psychological disturbance that develops in response to a stressor. ...
A mass hallucination is a phenomenon in which a large group of people, usually in physical proximity to each other, all experience the same hallucination simultaneously. ...
Highway hypnosis is a mental state in which the person can drive an automobile great distances, responding to external events in the expected manner, with no recollection of having consciously done so. ...
A projective test, in psychology, is a personality test designed to let a person respond to ambiguous stimuli, presumably revealing hidden emotions and internal conflicts. ...
). Signaling, in economic terms, is putting money on the table just to prove that you can. ...
A dipsomaniac is a person with an uncontrollable craving for alcohol, especially alcoholic liquors. ...
Psychonomics describes an approach to psychology that aims at discovering the laws (Greek: nomos) that govern the workings of the mind (Greek: psyche). The field is directly related to experimental psychology. ...
Reality distortion field (RDF) is both slang and computer industry jargon. ...
Cathexis is the libidos charge of energy. ...
Introjection is a psychological process where the subject replicates in itself behaviors, attributes or other fragments of the surrounding world, especially of other subjects. ...
Safety in numbers is the theory that by being part of a large group, an individual member is proportionally less likely to be the victim of a mishap, accident, or other bad event. ...
Drama therapy is a health and human services profession that seeks to facilitate physical integration and personal growth for individuals, couples, families, and various groups through the use of theatrical and dramatic processes. ...
Synectics is a relatively unknown problem solving approach that stimulates thought processes of which the subject is generally unaware. ...
The simulation heuristic is a psychological heuristic, or simplified mental strategy, first theorized by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky as a specialized adaptation of the availability heuristic to explain counterfactual thinking and regret. ...
The term bouma (pronounced bowma) is sometimes used in the work of cognitive psychology to mean the shape of a cluster of letters, often a whole word. ...
The power process is a theoretical process necessary to fulfill ones psychological need to exert power to fulfill goals, discussed in Theodore Kaczynskis manifesto, Industrial Society and Its Future. ...
Categories: Wikipedia cleanup | Stub | Aphasia ...
A contrast effect is the enhancement or diminishment, relative to normal, of a perception and related performance as a result of immediately previous or simultaneous exposure to a stimulus of lesser or greater value in the same dimension. ...
The Radial Arm Maze is used to measure Spatial learning and Memory. ...
Theoretical psychology is concerned with theoretical and philosophical aspects of the discipline of psychology. ...
Ziwo yixiang is the Chinese language translation for the Western psychology term self image. In China, particularly in mainland China, a positive self image is regarded as an undesirable state. ...
History Distributed cognition is a school of psychology developed in the 1990s by Edwin Hutchins. ...
Embodied psychology is a school of psychology which stresses embodiment. ...
Dynamicism, also termed the dynamic hypothesis or the dynamic hypothesis in cognitive science or dynamic cognition, is a new approach in cognitive science exemplified by the work of philosopher Tim van Gelder. ...
In cognitive psychology a representation is a hypothetical internal cognitive symbol that represents external reality. ...
A mental model is an explanation in someones thought process for how something works in the real world. ...
The phallic stage is the third of Freuds psychosexual stages, when awareness of and manipulation of the genitals is supposed to be a primary source of pleasure. ...
This article needs cleanup. ...
Coleman lantern style nightlight A nightlight is a small, usually electrical, light source placed for comfort or convenience in indoor dark areas or areas that become dark at certain times. ...
Soldiers heart was a term during the U.S. Civil War era that described the mental / emotional changes of combatants resulting from the wars horrific conditions and violence. ...
Psychomotor retardation comprises a slowing down of thought and a reduction of physical movements in a person. ...
Faculty psychology is a view of the mind as having seperare modules or faculties assigned to various mental tasks. ...
Joyce Brothers Joyce Brothers, Ph. ...
Psychological movements are considered to be post-cognitivist if they are opposed or move beyond the cognitivist theories posited by Noam Chomsky, Jerry Fodor, David Marr and others. ...
Rapport congruency is the human tendency to form rapport with someone who seems to be portraying a common role, such as a friend. ...
Fechner color is an illusion of color seen when looking at certain rapidly changing or moving black-and-white patterns. ...
This article needs cleanup. ...
Content theory explains why human needs change with time. ...
This is the counterpart to the concept of Eve teasing, wherein individual or a group of females impose sexual harassment on a male. ...
In social psychology, similarity refers to how closely attitudes, values, interests and personality match between people. ...
The psychological schools are the great classical theories of psychology. ...
An intimate relationship is an interpersonal relationship with a great deal of physical and/or emotional intimacy. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Relational aggression. ...
In psychology, a behavior or trait is adaptive when it helps an individual adjust and function well within their environment. ...
Abnormality is a subjectively defined characteristic, assigned to those with rare or dysfunctional conditions. ...
In Developmental psychology, a stage is a distinct phase in an individuals development. ...
In psychology, coping is the process of managing taxing circumstances, expending effort to solve personal and interpersonal problems, and seeking to master, minimize, reduce or tolerate stress or conflict. ...
Core process psychotherapy is a psychotherapy that practices a Buddhist awareness as the centre of a healing relationship between client and therapist. ...
Incentive salience occurs when stimuli associated with drug-taking behavior become reinforcing themselves. ...
Please wikify (format) this article or section as suggested in the Guide to layout and the Manual of Style. ...
Positive psychotherapy is a psychodynamic method of psychotherapy founded by Dr. Nossrat Peseschkian in the early 1970s in Germany. ...
In cognitive psychology, fast mapping is a mental process whereby a new concept can be learned (or a new hypothesis formed) based only on a single exposure to a given unit of information. ...
Integrative Psychotherapy involves the fusion of different schools of psychotherapy. ...
Cognitive closure refers to the possibility or belief that the human mind is closed to some facts--that there are things human beings are simply not able to know, not because there is not enough time to figure them out, but because the human mind does not have the capacity...
Emotional dissonance is a feeling experienced when one is forced to fake an emotion. ...
Expressive therapy know alse as art therapy provides the means and support to express and explore feelings, thought problems and potentials through the use of art media and imagery. ...
The Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research (NKI) is a New York State-funded research Institute, located in Orangeburg New York. ...
Anticipation is an emotion involving pleasure (and sometimes anxiety) in considering some expected or longed-for good event, or irritation at having to wait. ...
The Lüscher color test is a psychological test invented by Dr. Max Lüscher. ...
Stucture building is a framework proposed by Morton Ann Gernsbacher (1990) for understanding reading comprehension. ...
Piquerism is a psychosexual disorder in which the person finds pleasure in penetrating the victims body with a foreign object such as a sharp pin, or a knife. ...
The Ternus illusion is an illusion of human visual perception involving apparent motion. ...
Psychological Review is a highly-acclaimed scientific journal that publishes review articles in the field of psychology. ...
Lucio Bini (1908-1964) was an Italian psychiatrist and professor at the University of Rome, Italy. ...
Hakomi therapy is a form of depth psychology developed by Ron Kurtz. ...
The Anal Stage in psychology is the term used by Sigmund Freud to describe the development during the second year of life, in which an childs pleasure and conflict centers are in the anal area. ...
Properception is a term used in psychiatry as oposed to perception. ...
{{Album infobox | Name = Inner Child| Type = Album | Artist = Shanice | Cover = Shaniceinnerchild. ...
This is similar to the Association for Transpersonal Psychology, but with a more international emphasis. ...
Art therapy is a form of expressive therapy that uses art-making and creativity to increase emotional well-being. ...
Thankfulness is an emotion, which involves a feeling of emotional indebtedness towards another person; often accompanied by a desire to thank them, or to reciprocate for a favour they have done for you. ...
Block Design is a subtest on many intelligence tests that tests visospatial and motor skills. ...
Dennis Organ of Indiana University is widely credited with introducing OCB in academic literature. ...
Dr. Dorothy Lewis is a psychiatrist specializing in the study of serial killers. ...
Sleep-learning (also known as hypnopædia) attempts to convey information to a sleeping person, typically by playing a sound recording to them in their sleep. ...
Repertory Grid is an interviewing technique to complement the [Theory of Personal Constructs], both devised by [George Kelly] around 1955. ...
Classical Adlerian individual psychotherapy, brief therapy, couple therapy, and family therapy follow parallel paths. ...
Mob psychology is a theoretical approach attempting to explain collective behavior solely on the basis of the psychological states of people who participate. ...
Headline text COLOR AGNOSIA http://nanonline. ...
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Geophagia is the consumption of dirt. ...
Belief Perseverance is the persistence of ones held beliefs despite evidence to the contrary. ...
Charles Kirk Clarke (1857 - 20 January 1924) was a psychiatrist who was influential in Canadian politics. ...
Youth & Society (ISSN 0044-118X) is an academic journal published quarterly by Sage Publications Inc. ...
Taijin kyofusho (対人ææç, TKS, for taijin kyofusho symptoms), is a culture-bound syndrome (cultural disorder, or mental illness) specific to Japan. ...
In social science, hypergyny refers to the phenomenon in which women tend to marry men that are of slightly higher social status. ...
Percept - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
This does not cite its references or sources. ...
In philosophy, two different theories are labeled egoism: psychological egoism is the view that one is always motivated to act in ones own best interests, while ethical egoism is the view that one ought to always act that way. ...
Psychology Today is a monthly magazine published in the United States. ...
In sociology and psychology, internalized oppression is the manner in which an oppressed group comes to use against itself the methods of the oppressor. ...
The pseudocertainty effect is a concept from prospect theory. ...
Visuospatial Sketchpad is a component of Working Memory Model proposed by Alan Baddeley and Graham Hitch in 1974. ...
Liberation by Oppression: A Comparative Study of Slavery and Psychiatry is a work on, and a critique of, psychiatry by Thomas Stephen Szasz. ...
Superiority Complex refers to a subconscious neurotic mechanism of compensation developed by the individual as a result of feelings of inferiority. ...
Idiothetic literally means self-proposition (greek derivation), and is used in navigation models (e. ...
Cultural dimensions are the mostly psychological dimensions, or value constructs, which can be used to describe a specific culture. ...
Bioenergetic Analysis is a body-oriented psychotherapy based on the expression of feelings and the re-establishment of energy flow in the body. ...
Hyperkinesis is a state of overactive restlesness in children. ...