Uppsala University's Department of Psychology is part of a comprehensive research university founded in 1477, consistently ranked among the world's best, with a current student population of 50,000 and a strong research community of nearly 5,000.
The School of Psychology at the University of Birmingham is renowned for developing graduates' knowledge and skills and for research that impacts individuals, communities, and societies.
The Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences at Washington University was established nearly 100 years ago and remains committed to excellence in the field. We currently support four primary research programs: aging and development; clinical psychology; behavior, brain & cognition; and social and personality psychology, with an additional emphasis on diversity science that cuts across all of these areas of specialization.
For over 60 years, the Department of Psychology has been at the forefront of research into clinical practice. Its research interests span a wide range of mental health disorders and physical health problems, including anxiety disorders, trauma, somatoform disorders, pain, psychosis, depression, antisocial personality, disorders in childhood and adolescence, emotion and personality, and neurodegeneration.