The Psychology Lab, Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology, Faculty of Letters, The University of Tokyo, is an academic institution dedicated to research and education in psychology. The lab is located in Hongo, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, in Room 2111, 1st floor, Law and Letters Building 2. The lab conducts research activities in various fields of psychology and promotes exchanges between students and researchers.
The Department of Psychology, The University of Tokyo focuses on the researches in fundamental aspects of psychology. Our department has a long history. The department was founded in 1903 as the first experimental laboratory for psychology in Japan. Since then, our faculty members have been contributing to the research and education in basic psychological science. The department is currently led by three professors, one associate professor, and two assistant professors. Our department is home to about 70 people including graduate and undergraduate students, postdoctoral fellows (JSPS research fellows, etc.), and research students. We are engaged in experimental studies focusing on basic psychological processes, such as perception, attention, learning, language, memory, emotion, and social cognition. We take interdisciplinary approaches utilizing methods in psychophysics, neuroscience, and cognitive science.
Simon Fraser University's Department of Psychology offers undergraduate and graduate programs, including a professional PhD training program in Clinical Psychology, with a focus on six core areas of Psychology.
Drexel University's Psychological and Brain Sciences department engages faculty and students in cutting-edge research and clinical projects across various areas including health, forensics, neuropsychology, pediatric and child psychology, and cognitive psychology.
Queen's University's Department of Psychology features 35 research labs focusing on Cognitive Neuroscience and areas such as Developmental, Social, and Clinical Psychology. Students collaborate with faculty and graduate students on research topics including sexuality, bullying, mood disorders, and infant cognition.