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The chapters in this volume are the edited versions of invited
addresses to the XXVI International Congress of Psychology held in
Montreal in August 1996. As one major goal of the Congress was to
promote communication among specializations in scientific
psychology, the speakers were asked to survey their research area
and present their own work in a way that would be accessible to
their colleagues in other areas. Another purpose of the meeting was
to bring researchers together from different parts of the world,
reflecting their different approaches to the scientific study of
mind, brain, and behavior. Consequently, the eminent researchers
who have written the twenty-six chapters included in the present
volume were drawn from universities and research institutes in
North America, Europe, Japan, Russia, Israel, and New Zealand. The
chapters cover a range of topics in human and animal experimental
psychology. The first section deals with psychobiological processes
- the interplay of body and mind in determining intelligence,
stress, and pain. The next five chapters address current issues in
neuropsychology and neuroscience, including the neural correlates
of attention and vision. A third section looks at learning
processes in humans and animals, and a fourth deals with a range of
topics in perception and cognition. The final five chapters take a
developmental perspective, presenting theoretical and empirical
analyses of the acquisition of perceptual and cognitive abilities.
Overall, the collection illustrates the growing trend to break down
traditional barriers between areas of experimental psychology;
there are many instances of profitable interactions between
researchers studying aspects of behavior and those studying the
biological bases of these behaviors. The twenty-six chapters give
an excellent overview of current research in scientific psychology.
This volume describes the present status and the history of the
International Union of Psychological Science - the most
representative international psychological body. The IUPsyS
includes national psychological associations from 66 countries,
with more joining every year, and it has formal relations with the
United Nations, UNESCO, the World Health Organization, the
International Council for Science, and the International Social
Science Council. Many well known psychologists have played
important roles in this international organization, and the text
and many photographs bring the story to life. IUPsyS was organized
formally at the 14th International Congress of Psychology at
Stockholm in 1951, so the 27th International Congress of Psychology
at Stockholm in 2000 marks a half-century of its existence. But the
history of the IUPsyS goes back to the first International
Congresses of Psychology, 1889, and to the International Congress
Committee which foreshadowed the organization of the International
Union. After describing the present status of the IUPsyS in Chapter
one, the book traces briefly the early development of scientific
societies and organizations. Chapter three tells how
This book describes the present status and the history of the
International Union of Psychological Science (IUPsyS) -- the most
representative international psychological body. The IUPsyS
includes national psychological associations from 66 countries,
with more joining every year, and it has formal relations with the
United Nations, UNESCO, the World Health Organization, the
International Council for Science, and the International Social
Science Council. Many well known psychologists have played
important roles in this international organization, and the text
and many photographs bring the story to life. IUPsyS was organized
formally at the 14th international Congress of Psychology at
Stockholm in 1951, so the 27th International Congress of Psychology
at Stockholm in 2000 marks a half-century of its existence. But the
history of the IUPsyS goes back to the first International
Congresses of Psychology, 1889, and to the International Congress
Committee which foreshadowed the organization of the International
Union. After describing the present status of the IUPsyS in Chapter
1, the book traces briefly the early development of scientific
societies and organizations. Chapter 3 tells how the first
International Congress of Psychology was organized in Paris in 1889
and what it accomplished. Successive international congresses and
the growth of psychology during the next sixty years are treated in
chapters 4-6. The founding and development of the International
Union in the last half of the 20th Century are described in the
remaining chapters. International Congresses organized by the
IUPsyS have taken place regularly since 1951, and the IUPsyS has
steadily gained in the scope and influence of its activities. The
congresses, long restricted to western Europe and North America,
became more representative geographically, moving to Moscow, Tokyo,
Leipzig, Acapulco, and Sydney, with the 28th congress planned for
Beijing in 2004. The history shows how the IUPsyS has become
increasingly able to face the problems and opportunities of the
21st century.
The chapters in this volume are the edited versions of invited
addresses to the XXVI International Congress of Psychology held in
Montreal in August 1996. As one major goal of the Congress was to
promote communication among specializations in scientific
psychology, the speakers were asked to survey their research area
and present their own work in a way that would be accessible to
their colleagues in other areas. Another purpose of the meeting was
to bring researchers together from different parts of the world,
reflecting their different approaches to the scientific study of
mind, brain, and behavior. Consequently, the eminent researchers
who have written the twenty-six chapters included in the present
volume were drawn from universities and research institutes in
North America, Europe, Japan, Russia, Israel, and New Zealand. The
chapters cover a range of topics in human and animal experimental
psychology. The first section deals with psychobiological processes
- the interplay of body and mind in determining intelligence,
stress, and pain. The next five chapters address current issues in
neuropsychology and neuroscience, including the neural correlates
of attention and vision. A third section looks at learning
processes in humans and animals, and a fourth deals with a range of
topics in perception and cognition. The final five chapters take a
developmental perspective, presenting theoretical and empirical
analyses of the acquisition of perceptual and cognitive abilities.
Overall, the collection illustrates the growing trend to break down
traditional barriers between areas of experimental psychology;
there are many instances of profitable interactions between
researchers studying aspects of behavior and those studying the
biological bases of these behaviors. The twenty-six chapters give
an excellent overview of current research in scientific psychology.
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