Explore our collection of legacy products at Psychology Software Tools, offering discontinued software and hardware solutions that were once at the forefront of psychological research and development.
Legacy Products from Psychology Software Tools represent a historical archive of software and hardware solutions that have contributed significantly to the field of psychological research. While no longer in production, these products have shaped the way we understand and approach behavioral studies.
The Psychology department at the University of Edinburgh was established in 1906 by the estate of George Combe. The first permanent post was known as the Combe lectureship in General and Experimental Psychology. The first incumbent, Dr W.G. Smith, was a PhD student of Wilhelm Wundt, a founding father of modern psychology. The second incumbent, James Drever, became the first Professor of Psychology in Scotland. After a philosophically oriented start, the appointment of a biologist, Professor D.M. Vowles, as chair in 1968 saw psychology develop strongly as a scientific discipline. The department was incorporated into the School of Philosophy, Psychology, & Language Sciences in 2003. We currently have around forty members of academic staff spanning all major areas of academic psychology: cognition, development, individual differences, neuroscience, and social psychology. We offer both undergraduate and postgraduate training, including several taught and research Masters, and PhDs.
DeepSeek-R1 is a reasoning model trained via large-scale reinforcement learning (RL) without the need for supervised fine-tuning (SFT). It demonstrates remarkable performance in reasoning tasks, including self-verification and reflection. The model addresses challenges such as endless repetition and poor readability, and achieves performance comparable to OpenAI-o1 across math, code, and reasoning tasks.
The Department of Psychology at Northwestern University is dedicated to research and teaching in the field of psychology, covering a range of research directions from non-human primate vocalizations and cognition to political bias. Our faculty and students conduct cutting-edge research across various domains, including cognitive, social, developmental, and clinical psychology, providing profound insights into human behavior and mental processes.