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Ebook Exploring psychology (8th edition): Part 1

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(BQ) Part 1 book "Exploring psychology" has contents: Introduction to the history and science of psychology, the biology of mind, the biology of mind; nature, nurture, and human diversity; developing through the life span, sensation and perception; learning;.and other contents. | 1869— Francis Galton, Charles Darwin’s cousin, publishes Hereditary Genius, in which he claims that intelligence is inherited. In 1876 he coins the expression “nature and nurture” to correspond with “heredity and environment.” 1874— Carl Wernicke, a German neurologist and psychiatrist, shows that damage to a specific area in the left temporal lobe (now called Wernicke’s area) disrupts ability to comprehend or produce spoken or written language. 1878— G. Stanley Hall receives from Harvard University’s Department of Philosophy the first U.S. Ph.D. degree based on psychological research. 1879— Wilhelm Wundt establishes at the University of Leipzig, Germany, the first psychology laboratory, which becomes a Mecca for psychology students from all over the world. 1883— G. Stanley Hall, student of Wilhelm Wundt, establishes the first formal U.S. psychology laboratory at Johns Hopkins University. 1885— Hermann Ebbinghaus publishes On Memory, summarizing his extensive research on learning and memory, including the “forgetting curve.” 1886— Joseph Jastrow receives from Johns Hopkins University the first Ph.D. degree in psychology awarded by a Department of Psychology in the United States. 1889— Alfred Binet and Henri Beaunis establish the first psychology laboratory in France at the Sorbonne, and the first International Congress of Psychology meets in Paris. 1890— William James, Harvard University philosopher and psychologist, publishes The Principles of Psychology, describing psychology as “the science of mental life.” 1891— James Mark Baldwin establishes the first psychology laboratory in the British Commonwealth at the University of Toronto. 1892— G. Stanley Hall spearheads the founding of the American Psychological Association (APA) and becomes its first president. 1893— Mary Whiton Calkins (pictured) and Christine Ladd-Franklin are the first women elected to membership in the APA. 1894— Margaret Floy Washburn is the first woman to receive a Ph.D. degree in .

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