The Department of Psychology at the University of Münster is responsible for bachelor's, master's, and doctoral programs in psychology and psychological content in teacher training. It collaborates with the Department of Sport & Exercise Sciences and is divided into two main institutes: the Institute of Psychology and the Institute of Psychology in Education & Training. The Department of Psychology at the University of Münster offers comprehensive bachelor's, master's, and doctoral programs, emphasizing foundational, methodological, and applied psychological sciences.
At the University of Münster, the Department of Psychology is dedicated to advancing psychological education and research. It comprises two main institutes: the Institute of Psychology, focusing on foundational and applied subjects, and the Institute of Psychology in Education & Training, responsible for teacher education within psychology. The department is committed to integrating modern technologies, such as artificial intelligence, into psychological research and upholding open science principles.
USP's Institute of Psychology has 80 teaching staff and 129 technical-administrative staff, 400 undergraduate students and 561 postgraduate students.
The Department of Psychology at Notre Dame is a community of scholars and learners seeking to reveal and understand the principles and mechanisms that give rise to human behavior. Using basic, applied, and clinical research methods, our faculty and students develop novel theories of behavior, connect behavior to brain function, and develop evidence-based approaches to the treatment of behavioral disorders.
Vanderbilt Psychology - Unraveling the Human Brain and Behavior. To understand psychology is to understand the human brain, human behavior, and human cognitive processes—essentially, the key to how we think, act, and feel. Under the guidance of faculty renowned for their expertise in clinical psychology, cognition, and neuroscience, students pursue careers as therapists, data scientists in life sciences, policy makers, university professors, and many other fields that rely on deep knowledge of psychology and neuroscience