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| a german professor who started the first formal laboratory for psychology called the University of Leipzig. |
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| believed that the task of psychology is to analyze consciousness into its basic elements and investigate how these elements are related |
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| based on the belief that psychology should investigate the function or purpose of consciousness rather than its structure |
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| a theoretical orientation based on the premise that psychology should study only observable behavior |
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| Developed psychoanalytic theory |
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| attempts to explain personality, motivation and mental disorders by focusing on unconscious determinants of behavior |
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| A Behaviorist, who believed there was no such thing as free will |
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| Carl Rogers, Abe Maslow, belief that humans had the power to "choose their destinies" |
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| the mental processes involved in aquiring knowledge |
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| looks at human development across the life-span |
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| focuses on interpersonal behavior and the role of social forces in governing behavior. |
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| deals with perception, sensation, perception, learning, conditioning, motivation, and emotion. |
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| First woman to be president of the APA |
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| The first woman to receive a Ph.D. in psychology |
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| Did empirical studies that disproved the variability hypothesis |
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conducted behaviors that were measurable. (dogs and saliva) Influenced behaviorism. |
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