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Some Areas of Interest in Psychology
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- Biological psychology is the study of the biological mechanisms
underlying behavior. Biological psychologists generally are interested in
the brain and the nervous system, in the endocrine system, and in other
organismic processes.
- Clinical psychology is the study of problems encountered by individuals,
groups, and families especially problems involving psychopathology.
Clinical psychologists are interested in the application of psychological
knowledge and techniques for the alleviation of these problems.
- Cognitive neuroscience is concerned with understanding the
neuroscientific bases of cognition. Various methods are employed to assess
the roles of different brain systems in psychological functions such as
memory, attention, language, executive control, decision making, response
processing, and emotion.
- Cognitive and neurobiological aging examine how the aging process
affects memory, thought, and brain function, as well as how life experiences
affect cognitive function.
- Developmental psychology is the study of intellectual development,
emerging personality, and the acquisition of language, as well as
psychophysiological and social development processes as individuals develop
from birth through old age.
- Community psychology is the study of social processes and problems of
groups, organizations, and neighborhoods, and the development and evaluation
of progress for social change and social policy based on psychological
understanding.
- Engineering psychology is the study of human behavior in the context of
interactions between humans and machines.
- Cognitive psychology is the study of basic behavioral and cognitive
processes, including learning, memory, problem-solving, motivation, and
language.
- Language processing and psycholinguistics focus on how humans acquire
and use language and how these processes are related to neural
organization.
- Measurement and mathematical psychology specialists develop mathematical
models of psychological processes and devise methods for quantitative
representation and analysis of data about behavior. These are used in the
study of differences between individuals in ability, personality,
preferences, and other psychological phenomena.
- Personality psychology focuses on individual behavior. It is the study
of ways to understand and describe an individual's behavior and to predict
an individual's future behavior.
- Personnel psychology is the application of techniques of assessment,
prediction, and intervention to areas of human resources in organizations,
including, but not limited to, standard personnel selection and training,
attitude assessments and interventions, and program evaluations.
- Social psychology is the study of attitudes, social perception and
cognition, interpersonal relations, interpersonal interactions, and social
and cultural factors affecting human behavior.
- Visual cognition is the study of attention, visual perception, visual
memory, and human performance. Visual cognition research uses tools drawn
from cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience to better understand
how visual information is perceived and remembered.
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