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psychologist and Edward
* 1867 – Edward B. Titchener, British psychologist.
Robert Anton Wilson ( born Robert Edward Wilson, January 18, 1932 – January 11, 2007 ), known to friends as " Bob ", was an American author and polymath who became at various times a novelist, philosopher, psychologist, essayist, editor, playwright, poet, futurist, civil libertarian and self-described agnostic mystic.
* Robbie Coltrane as Dr. Edward " Fitz " Fitzgerald: the classic anti-hero, an alcoholic, gambling addicted chain smoker, unfaithful to his wife and foul-mouthed, but at the same time, a brilliant psychologist with a good heart.
Edward Lee " Ted " Thorndike ( August 31, 1874 – August 9, 1949 ) was an American psychologist who spent nearly his entire career at Teachers College, Columbia University.
* Albert Edward Wiggam, psychologist, lecturer, and author
Köhler concluded that the chimps had not arrived at these methods through trial-and-error ( which American psychologist Edward Thorndike had claimed to be the basis of all animal learning, through his law of effect ), but rather that they had experienced an insight, in which, having realized the answer, they then proceeded to carry it out in a way that was, in Köhler ’ s words, “ unwaveringly purposeful .”
Educational psychologist Edward Thorndike of Columbia University noted that in Russia and Germany teachers were using word frequency counts to match books with students.
Edward Chace Tolman ( April 14, 1886 – November 19, 1959 ) was an American psychologist.
During his writing career, by nature restless, he moved between a succession of homes in the English countryside and the expatriate colonies of pre-war Florence and Paris ; through Bohemian London and prohibition New York, to Palestine and the Arctic Circle, while navigating friendships with writers Joseph Conrad, Gertrude Stein, Havelock Ellis, D. H. Lawrence ; poets Rupert Brooke, Edward Thomas and Ferenc Békássy, the psychologist Helton Godwin Baynes, Geoffrey Keynes, Mabel Dodge Luhan, naturalist Frank Fraser Darling, and — in later life — Owen Barfield and Carl Jung.
The term “ intervening variable ” was first used by behavioral psychologist Edward C. Tolman in 1938.
* Edward Roivas ( 1952 AD )-A clinical psychologist, Alex's grandfather, led to the Tome by Max's ghost.
The social psychologist, Edward E. Jones, brought the study of impression management to the field of psychology during the 1960s and extended it to include people ’ s attempts to control others ' impression of their personal characteristics.
Edward Taub, a psychologist, was working there on 17 monkeys.
The halo effect was given its name by psychologist Edward Thorndike, and since then several researchers have studied the halo effect in relation to attractiveness, and its bearing on the judicial and educational systems.
Edward Taub, a psychologist, was cutting sensory ganglia that supplied nerves to the fingers, hands, arms, and legs of 17 macaque monkeys – a process known as " deafferentation " – so that the monkeys could not feel them.
Almost immediately, he co-authored an article with his Chicago colleague Addison W. Moore that simultaneously settled a nasty dispute between Cornell psychologist Edward Bradford Titchener and Princeton psychologist James Mark Baldwin as well as laying the foundations for the school of Functionalism.
* Edward E. Jones ( 1927 – 1993 ), psychologist
* Edward Lee Thorndike ( 1891 ) – famed psychologist, former professor at Columbia, member of National Academy of Sciences
Edward Ellsworth " Ned " Jones ( 1927 – 1993 ) was an influential social psychologist who worked at Duke University for most of his career.
Edward John Mostyn " John " Bowlby (; 26 February 1907 – 2 September 1990 ) was a British psychologist, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, notable for his interest in child development and for his pioneering work in attachment theory.
His brother was the behavioral psychologist Edward Chace Tolman.
That same year, he participated in the Los Angeles County Museum ’ s Art and Technology Program, investigating perceptual phenomena with the artist Robert Irwin and psychologist Edward Wortz.
Arnoni ( philosopher, writer, political activist ); Edward Keating ( publisher, Ramparts Magazine ); Felix Greene ( author and film producer ); Isadore Zifferstein ( psychologist ); Stanley Scheinbaum ( Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions ); Paul Jacobs ( journalist and anti-nuclear activist ); Hal Draper ( Marxist writer and a socialist activist ); Levi Laud ( Progressive Labor Movement ); Si Casady ( California Democratic Council ); George Clark ( British Committee on Nuclear Disarmament ); Robert Pickus ( Turn Toward Peace ); Bob Parris and Bob Moses ( Student Non-violent Coordinating Committee ); Jack Barnes ( National Chair of the Young Socialist Alliance ); Mario Savio ( Free Speech Movement ); Paul Potter ( Students for a Democratic Society ); and Mike Meyerson ( national head of the Du Bois Clubs of America ).

psychologist and B
Burrhus Frederic " B. F ." Skinner ( March 20, 1904 – August 18, 1990 ) was an American psychologist, behaviorist, author, inventor, and social philosopher.
B. Rhine, a psychologist at Duke University, introduced a standard methodology, with a standard statistical approach to analysing the data, as part of his research into extrasensory perception.
Renowned psychologist B. F. Skinner's theories of behavior were highly influential on many early instructional theorists because their hypotheses can be tested fairly easily with the scientific process.
Pavlov's work laid the foundation for many of psychologist John B. Watson's ideas.
Under the guidance of psychologist William McDougall, and with the help of others in the department — including psychologists Karl Zener, Joseph B. Rhine, and Louisa E. Rhine — laboratory ESP experiments using volunteer subjects from the undergraduate student body began.
In his review, psychologist John B. Carroll said that Gould did not understand " the nature and purpose " of factor analysis.
* March 20 – B. F. Skinner, American behavioral psychologist ( d. 1990 )
American psychologist B. F. Skinner wrote that he carried a copy of Thoreau's Walden with him in his youth.
* John B. Calhoun, psychologist noted for his 1947 Norway rat and 1970s mice population dynamic studies
In 1934, behavioral psychologist B. F. Skinner interpreted Stein's difficult poem Tender Buttons as an example of " normal motor automatism.
* John B. Watson ( 1878 – 1958 ), psychologist ; pioneer of behaviorism
B. F. Skinner, noted psychologist, commented on medical notation as a form of multiple audience control, which allows the doctor to communicate to the pharmacist things which might be opposed by the patient if they could understand it.
Walden Two is a utopian novel written by behavioral psychologist B. F. Skinner, first published in 1948.
After that, he worked briefly as a psychologist at B. C.
A 2002 survey ranked Bandura as the fourth most-frequently cited psychologist of all time, behind B. F. Skinner, Sigmund Freud, and Jean Piaget, and as the most cited living one.
* January 11-Edward B. Titchener ( died 1927 ), English-born structuralist psychologist.
* Kenneth B. Clark, psychologist, educator, testified in Brown v. Board of Education
* B. J. Fogg, an American behavioral psychologist
In the slightly different spelling, praxiology, the word was used by the English psychologist Charles A. Mercier ( in 1911 ), and then proposed by Knight Dunlap to John B. Watson as a better name for his behaviorism.
* August 3-Edward B. Titchener ( born 1867 ), American structuralist psychologist.
Behavioral psychologist B. F. Skinner ( 1904 – 1990 ) published Walden Two in 1948.
In 2009, Appalachian State University psychologist Hall P. Beck and two colleagues published an article in which they claimed to have discovered the true identity " Albert B.
Notable Hamilton alumni include US Secretary of State Elihu Root ( 1864 ), US Vice President James S. Sherman ( 1878 ), poet Ezra Pound ( 1905 ), theatre critic Alexander Woollcott ( 1909 ), jurist and diplomat Philip Jessup ( 1919 ), psychologist B. F. Skinner ( 1926 ), Nobel Prize Winner Paul Greengard ( 1948 ), civil rights leader Bob Moses ( 1956 ), novelist Terry Brooks ( 1966 ), playwright Richard Nelson ( 1971 ), US Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack ( 1972 ), composer Jay Reise ( 1972 ), Pulitzer-Prize winning composer Melinda Wagner ( 1979 ), novelist Peter Cameron ( 1982 ), actor Tony Goldwyn ( 1982 ), author Garret Kramer ( 1984 ), novelist Kamila Shamsie, actor and writer for The Office Paul Lieberstein ( 1989 ), actor Grayson McCouch ( 1991 ), Academy Award-winning screenwriter Nat Faxon ( 1997 ), and politician and author Matthew Zeller ( 2004 ).

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