AP Psych Review - Famous Psychologists - Mrs. Welle
William Masters & Virginia Johnson
used direct observation and experimentation to study sexual response cycle (4 stages)
Konrad Lorenz
won Nobel prize for research on imprinting
Mary Cover Jones
"mother of behavior therapy"; used classical conditioning to help "Peter" overcome fear of rabbits
Hans Selye
(Accidently) described General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)
Dorothea Dix
American activist who successfully pressured lawmakers to construct & fund asylums for the mentally ill
Noam Chomsky
Created concept of "universal grammar"; pointed out how children "overgeneralize" language rules and the concepts of "deep v. surface" structures in language
Alfred Binet
Created first intelligence test for Parisian school children
Meyer Friedman and Ray Rosenman
Cardiologists who showed that stress responses predict heart attack risk; established Type A & Type B personality model to describe this
Stanley Milgram
Conducted "shocking" (Ha!) experiments on obedience
Philip Zimbardo
Conducted Stanford Prison experiment
Martin Seligman
Conducted experiments with dogs that led to the concept of "learned helplessness"
Solomon Asch
Conducted famous conformity experiment that required subjects to match lines.
William Wundt
Conducted first psychology experiments in first psych laboratory
Ancel Keys
Conducted semi-starvation experiments to measure psych effects of hunger
Michael Gazzaniga
Conducted the "HE-ART" experiments with split brain patients
Ivan Pavlov
Described process of classical conditioning after famous experiments with dogs
B.F. Skinner
Described process of operant conditioning
Stanley Schachter
Developed "Two-Factor" theory of emotion; experiments on spillover effect
Carl Rogers
Developed "client-centered" therapy
Albert Ellis
Developed "rational emotive behavior therapy" (REBT)
Aaron Beck
Developed cognitive-behavior therapy
Sigmund Freud
Developed psychoanalysis; pioneered the "talking treatment" (psychotherapy) as intervention for psych disorders.
Edward Thorndike
Famous for "law of effect" and research on cats in "puzzle boxes"
Benjamin Lee Whorf
Famous for describing concept of "liguistic determinism"
John Watson
Early behaviorist; famous for the "Little Albert" experiments on fear conditioning
Lawrence Kohlberg
Famous for his theory of moral development in children; made use of moral dilemmas in assessment
Albert Bandura
Famous for the Bobo Doll experiments on observational learning & influence in the Socio-Cognitive Perspective
Margaret Floy Washburn
First female to be awarded a PhD in psychology; 2nd president of the APA (1921)
Gordon Allport
Founder of Trait Theory
George A. Miller
made famous the phrase: "the magical number 7, plus or minus 2" when describing human memory
Elizabeth Loftus
Her research on memory construction and the misinformation effect created doubts about the accuracy of eye-witness testimony
Abraham Maslow
Humanistic psychologist known for his "Hierarchy of Needs" and the concept of "self-actualization"
Paul Ekman
Interested in the universality of facial expressions: facial expressions carry same meaning regardless of culture, context, or language. Use of microexpressions to detect lying.
Erik Erikson
Known for his 8-stage theory of Psychosocial Development
Jean Piaget
Known for his theory of cognitive development in children
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Memorized nonsense syllables in early study on human memory
Alfred Adler
Neo-Freudian; introduced concept of "inferiority complex" and stressed the importance of birth order
Karen Horney
Neo-Freudian; offered feminist critique of Freud's theory
Carol Gilligan
Presented feminist critique of Kolhberg's moral development theory; believed women's moral sense guided by relationships
Mary Ainsworth
Studied attachment in infants using the "strange situation" model. Label infants "secure", "insecure" (etc.) in attachment
Harry Harlow
Studied attachment in monkeys with artificial mothers
Thomas Bouchard
Studied identical twins separated at birth
Lewis Terman
advocate of intelligence testing in US; developed Standford-Binet test and oversaw army's use of intelligence testing during WWI
Carl Wernicke
an area of the brain (in the left temporal lobe) involved in language comprehension and expression was named for him because he discovered it
Ernst Weber
best known for "Weber's Law", the notion that the JND magnitude is proportional to the stimulus magnitude
Howard Gardner
best known for his theory of "multiple intelligences"
Wolfgang Kohler
considered to be the founder of Gestalt Psychology; also known for his research on insight learning in chimps
William James
created Functionalist school of thought; early American psychology teacher/philosopher
Charles Spearman
creator of "g-factor", or general intelligence, concept
Robert Sternberg
creator of "successful intelligence" theory (3 types)
Paul Costa & Robert McCrae
creators of the "Big Five" model of personality traits
Leon Festinger
described concept of cognitive dissonance
Joseph Wolpe
described use of systematic desensitization to treat phobias
David Wechsler
developer of WAIS and WISC intelligence tests
Gustav Fechner
early German psychologist credited with founding psychophysics
G. Stanley Hall
first american to work for Wundt; • Founded the American Psychological Association (now largest organization of psychologists in the USA) and became first president
Mary Whiton Calkins
first female president of the APA (1905); a student of William James; denied the PhD she earned from Harvard because of her sex (later, posthumously, it was granted to her)
Lev Vygotsky
founder of "Social Development Theory" (note: not "social learning theory" OR "psychosocial" development...); emphasizes importace of More Knowledge Others (MKO) and the Zone of Proximal Development
Diana Baumrind
her theory of parenting styles had three main types (permissive, authoratative, & authoritarian)
Charles Darwin
his idea, that the genetic composition of a species can be altered through natural selection, has had a lasting impact on psychology through the evolutionary perspective
Alfred Kinsey
his research described human sexual behavior and was controversial (for its methodology & findings)
Phineas Gage
his survival of a horrible industrial accident taught us about the role of the frontal lobes (okay, he's not really a psychologist...)
Raymond Cattell
intelligence: fluid & crystal intelligence; personality testing: 16 Personality Factors (16PF personality test)
Francis Galton
interested in link between heredity and intelligence; founder of the eugenics movement
Daniel Kahneman & Amos Tversky
investigated the use of heuristics in decision-making; studied the availability, anchoring, and representativeness heuristics
Roger Sperry
like Gazzaniga, studied split brain patients; showed that left/right hemispheres have different functions
Carl Jung
neo-Freudian who created concept of "collective unconscious" and wrote books on dream interpretation
Joseph LeDoux
neuroscientist who believes that some of our emotional reactions involve no deliberate thinking and cognition is not always necessary for emotion (due to the "low road" pathway from the thalamus to the amygdala)
Walter Mischel
offered famous critique of trait theory and its claims
Robert Rescorla
researched classical conditioning; found subjects learn the predictability of an event through trials (cognitive element)
Edward Tolman
researched rats' use of "cognitive maps"
John Garcia
studied taste aversion in rats; led to knowledge that sickness and taste preferences can be conditioned
Paul Broca
the part of the brain responsible for coordinating muscles involved in speech was named for him, because he first identified it
David Hubel & Torsten Weisel
two Nobel prize winning neuroscientists who demonstrated the importance of "feature detector" neurons in visual perception