Modern Psychology
This article needs attention
This notice was generated automatically from the latest Roovet Articles quality audit. Editors can improve this page by adding reliable citations, useful internal links, categories, and more complete context.
Modern psychology is the contemporary scientific study of behavior and mental processes, integrating multiple perspectives such as biological, cognitive, behavioral, humanistic, psychodynamic, and sociocultural approaches. Emerging from the foundations laid by early schools of thought in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, modern psychology is characterized by its interdisciplinary methods, empirical research, and diverse applications in clinical, educational, industrial, and social settings.[1][2]
Modern psychology emphasizes evidence-based practice and draws upon neuroscience, genetics, computer science, and cultural studies to explain complex human behavior.
Historical Development
Modern psychology arose from earlier schools such as structuralism, functionalism, psychoanalysis, behaviorism, and Gestalt psychology. By the mid-20th century, psychology had expanded into multiple branches, including cognitive, biological, and social psychology.
Key milestones included:
- **1879** – Wilhelm Wundt founded the first psychology laboratory in Leipzig, Germany.
- **1890** – William James published Principles of Psychology.
- **1900s** – Freud developed psychoanalysis.
- **1913** – John B. Watson promoted behaviorism.
- **1950s–1960s** – Humanistic psychology and the cognitive revolution reshaped the field.
- **21st century** – Integration with neuroscience, genetics, and global cultural studies.
Major Perspectives in Modern Psychology
Modern psychology incorporates multiple perspectives, often complementing one another:
| Perspective | Focus | Key Figures |
|---|---|---|
| Biological | Brain structures, neurotransmitters, genetics, evolution | Paul Broca, Roger Sperry, Eric Kandel |
| Cognitive | Information processing, memory, perception, problem-solving | Ulric Neisser, George Miller, Noam Chomsky |
| Behavioral | Learning through conditioning and reinforcement | John B. Watson, B.F. Skinner, Ivan Pavlov |
| Humanistic | Personal growth, free will, self-actualization | Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers |
| Psychodynamic | Unconscious motives, early childhood experiences | Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung, Erik Erikson |
| Sociocultural | Cultural and social influences on behavior | Lev Vygotsky, Urie Bronfenbrenner, Hazel Markus |
This pluralis
See also
Use and verify this page
Modern Psychology. Roovet Articles. Retrieved from https://articles.roovet.com/Modern_Psychology