The Department of Psychology at Emory University emphasizes the scientific study of behavior, offering undergraduate and graduate programs across various psychology disciplines. Emory University's Department of Psychology conducts wide-ranging research with humans and nonhuman animals, studying cognition, memory, learning, social behavior, and the biological bases of these capacities, as well as the assessment, diagnosis, and treatment of psychopathology.
Emory University's Department of Psychology provides a balanced curriculum in experimental, social/personality/clinical, neuroscience/animal behavior, and cognitive/developmental areas, fostering collaboration and research opportunities for students. Research in the Department of Psychology is wide-ranging, including work with both humans and nonhuman animals. We study cognition, memory, learning, social behavior, and the biological bases of these capacities. There is also work on the assessment, diagnosis and treatment of psychopathology.Our methodologies include behavioral experiments, questionnaire studies, and observational studies, as well as brain imaging, electrophysiological studies, hormonal assays, and genetics.
TUM School of Management places a unique focus on the interface between management, engineering, and the natural and life sciences.
Linköping University's psychology researchers focus on diverse areas, including online therapy, early memory in children, group work dynamics, decision-making, and learning processes. The department contributes valuable knowledge to health and well-being through research in social, clinical, developmental, cognitive, neuropsychology, and educational psychology.
The Department of Psychological Sciences at the University of Missouri is a vibrant and research-focused entity emphasizing teaching excellence. It comprises tenured and tenure-track faculty, teaching faculty, clinical faculty, and staff, supporting over 1,000 undergraduate students and doctoral programs with emphasis areas in clinical, cognition and neuroscience, developmental, quantitative, and social/personality psychology.