Sentences with phrase «eminent psychologists»

He was named among the 200 Eminent Psychologists of the Modern Era in 2014 (Archives of Scientific Psychology).
Believe it or not, the show — if not quite there yet — is bursting with potential, a police procedural with Hannibal Lecter at its core and assurances from the creators that the grisly nature of the eminent psychologists true culinary proclivities won't be secret for too long (though they have said that the reveal will only arrive if the show gets renewed.)
His work also influenced other eminent psychologists, including his colleague Mary Ainsworth, who also made significant contributions to attachment theory.
The eminent psychologist David McLelland, known for his theory of achievement motivation, delivered a public lecture at the Educational Testing Service in 1971.
Self - described at the time as an eminent psychologist and inventor of the lie detector, Marston was also a staunch feminist in a pre-feminist world, a polyamorist, a bondage aficionado, and a bit of a charlatan.
«Every relationship is a cross-cultural experience,» according to John Gottman, an eminent psychologist at the University of Washington whose research has focused on marriage and committed relationships.
According to eminent psychologist Dr Dianna Baumrind, the goal of parenting is to have a healthy child with competence and character.
In her landmark book For Better or For Worse, eminent psychologist E. Mavis Hetherington highlights the results of her study of 1,400 families and the importance of examining the type of conflict children experience.

Not exact matches

William James (1842 - 1910), became one of the most eminent of American philosophers and psychologists.
The works of the eminent Neo-Freudian psychologist Karen Horney on neurosis has been a major influence here.
The act of remembering, says eminent memory researcher and psychologist Elizabeth F. Loftus of the University of California, Irvine, is «more akin to putting puzzle pieces together than retrieving a video recording.»
The lottery study in particular «made people shy away from interventions,» explains eminent University of Pennsylvania psychologist Martin E. P. Seligman, the father of positive psychology and a mentor to Lyubomirsky.
The report, Understanding Psychosis and Schizophrenia: Why people sometimes hear voices, believe things that others find strange or appear out of touch with reality, and what can help, has been written by a group of eminent clinical psychologists drawn from eight universities and six NHS trusts, together with people who have themselves experienced psychosis.
One first - grader, after struggling with a computer programming task, told the eminent learning psychologist Seymour Papert that the experience was «hard fun.»
In the 1950s the eminent Humanistic Psychologist and gifted therapist, Carl Rogers, introduced the world to his «Client Centered Therapy».
Five hundred people sat in a packed workshop at the Networker Symposium last March, listening to eminent developmental psychologist and researcher Jerome Kagan draw on more than four decades of research he's conducted as he discussed the clinical relevance of inborn temperament.
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