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Psychology Introduction Introduction
The study of the way people think and behave is called psychology. The field of psychology has a number of subdisciplines devoted to the study of the different levels and contexts of human thought and behavior. Social psychology, for example, deals with human thought and action in a social context, while physiological psychology is concerned with thought and behavior at the level of neurology. Another division of psychology—comparative psychology—compares the thought and behavior of humans with that of other species. Abnormal psychology studies atypical thought and action. Psychology is an interdisciplinary science. Social psychology, for example, involves both sociology and anthropology. Abnormal psychology has much in common with psychiatry, while physiological psychology builds on the techniques and methods of neurology and physiology.
Methods Inasmuch as psychology overlaps so many other disciplines, its methods are as varied as the problems that it attempts to investigate. In general the methods range from simple observation to rigorous experimentation. The use of observation is appropriate in early phases of investigation when the basic issues and parameters of a problem are not well known. Experimentation is often the last stage of investigation when the variables involved are well enough known to permit quantification and measurement. Naturalistic methods are often used in child psychology. To determine the frequency with which boys and girls engage in aggressive play during a session in nursery school, for example, two different observational methods might be used. In one, called time sampling, the children are observed on a regular basis for a fixed time interval. In another method, episode sampling, the children are observed when engaged in a particular activity, such as block play. Questionnaires are frequently used in psychology. They question subjects about their beliefs, attitudes, childhood experiences, and food and clothing preferences. In order to obtain accurate results, questions must be stated clearly. They must also be varied in order that the subject will not lose interest and begin responding in a routine way, without trying to understand and answer each question. Because subjects tend to respond according to