The Psychology Department at Tianjin Normal University is dedicated to psychology education and research, offering comprehensive undergraduate, master's, and doctoral programs. The department focuses on cultivating students' theoretical knowledge and practical skills, actively engaging in domestic and international academic exchanges and collaborations.
The department has multiple research directions and laboratories, supported by a team of high-level faculty members. It has achieved significant research results in areas such as psychological measurement, cognitive psychology, and social psychology, and is committed to training high-quality psychology professionals.
The Department of Psychology at George Mason University strives to generate new psychological knowledge and promote its application to enhance human potential. They are committed to mentorship and fostering an inclusive environment for all individuals.
Faculty in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience at Boston College synergistically blend behavioral neuroscience, cognitive neuroscience, and psychological science approaches to address questions at the core of the human experience. As psychologists and neuroscientists, we seek to understand basic functions such as memory, emotion, visual perception, social interaction, development and learning, and problem solving and creativity, and to shed light on how these functions are altered in psychopathology, developmental disorders, or neurological disorders. Faculty in our department approach these topics from multiple, converging levels, using assessments of individual behavior, dynamic group interactions, and investigations of the neural processes and computations that give rise to behavior.
Psychological science is traditionally defined as the study of behavior; neuroscience as the study of the nervous system. As a Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences we are focused on understanding mind and behavior in terms of underlying psychological processes that have their genesis in neural activity in the brain.