Bringing history to life: simulating landmark experiments in psychology.

The course in history of psychology can be challenging for students, many of whom enter it with little background in history and faced with unfamiliar names and concepts. The sheer volume of material can encourage passive memorization unless efforts are made to increase student involvement. As part of a trend toward experiential history, historians of science have begun to supplement their lectures with demonstrations of classic physics experiments as a way to bring the history of science to life. Here, the authors report on computer simulations of five landmark experiments from early experimental psychology in the areas of reaction time, span of attention, and apparent motion. The simulations are designed not only to permit hands-on replication of historically important results but also to reproduce the experimental procedures closely enough that students can gain a feel for the nature of early research and the psychological processes being studied.

[1]  Carl E. Seashore Elementary Experiments in Psychology , 2007 .

[2]  E. Boring A History of Experimental Psychology. , 1930 .

[3]  J. E. Creighton,et al.  Lectures On Human And Animal Psychology , 1896 .

[4]  Michael E. Gorman,et al.  Scientific and Technological Thinking , 2006 .

[5]  N. Cowan The magical number 4 in short-term memory: A reconsideration of mental storage capacity , 2001, Behavioral and Brain Sciences.

[6]  Samuel W. Fernberger A Preliminary Study of the Range of Visual Apprehension , 1921 .

[7]  E. Boring Psychologist At Large , 1961 .

[8]  G. M. Reicher Perceptual recognition as a function of meaninfulness of stimulus material. , 1969, Journal of experimental psychology.

[9]  E. Titchener The Postulates of a Structural Psychology , 1898 .

[10]  Charles I. Brooks,et al.  A Role-Playing Exercise for the History of Psychology Course , 1985 .

[11]  D. E. Leary,et al.  The historical foundation of Herbart's mathematization of psychology. , 1980, Journal of the history of the behavioral sciences.

[12]  R Sekuler,et al.  Motion Perception: A Modern View of Wertheimer's 1912 Monograph , 1996, Perception.

[13]  Raymond E. Fancher,et al.  Pioneers of psychology , 1979 .

[14]  W. Wundt,et al.  An Introduction to Psychology , 1912 .

[15]  Kenneth J. Gergen,et al.  Historical Dimensions Of Psychological Discourse , 1996 .

[16]  E. Hilgard Psychology in America: A Historical Survey , 1987 .

[17]  Ryan D. Tweney,et al.  Replication and the Experimental Ethnography of Science , 2004 .

[18]  M. Ware,et al.  Handbook of demonstrations and activities in the teaching of psychology , 2013 .

[19]  Thorne Shipley,et al.  Classics in Psychology , 1964 .

[20]  G. Whipple Manual of mental and physical tests , 1911 .

[21]  F. N. Dempster,et al.  Memory Span: Sources of Individual and Developmental Differences , 1981 .

[22]  A. W. Moore,et al.  Studies from the psychological laboratory of the University of Chicago: I. Reaction-time: A study in attention and habit. , 1896 .

[23]  W. James,et al.  The Principles of Psychology. , 1983 .

[24]  A C Raphelson The history course as the capstone of the psychology curriculum. , 1982, Journal of the history of the behavioral sciences.

[25]  W. Wundt,et al.  Beiträge zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung , 1862 .

[26]  H. E. Garrett Great experiments in psychology , 1932 .

[27]  K. E. Coffield Additional stimulation for students in history and systems. , 1973 .

[28]  W. STANLEY JEVONS,et al.  The Power of Numerical Discrimination , 1871, Nature.

[29]  C. James Goodwin A history of modern psychology , 1998 .

[30]  Thomas V. McGovern Handbook for Enhancing Undergraduate Education in Psychology , 1993 .

[31]  E. Titchener THE TYPE-THEORY OF THE SIMPLE REACTION , 1895 .

[32]  R Gottsdanker,et al.  Verification of Donders' subtraction method. , 1985, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[33]  E. C. Sanford A Laboratory Course in Physiological Psychology , 1891 .

[34]  S. Diamond Wundt before Leipzig , 2001 .

[35]  E. Hilgard,et al.  The history of psychology: a survey and critical assessment. , 1991, Annual review of psychology.

[36]  Arthur Stinner,et al.  The Pendulum: Scientific, Historical, Philosophical and Educational Perspectives Part III , 2006 .

[37]  S. S. Stevens,et al.  Handbook of experimental psychology , 1951 .

[38]  H. M. Collins,et al.  The TEA Set: Tacit Knowledge and Scientific Networks , 1974 .

[39]  E. Boring Sensation and Perception. (Scientific Books: Sensation and Perception in the History of Experimental Psychology) , 1943 .

[40]  M. Kusch Psychologism : a case study in the sociology of philosophical knowledge , 1997 .

[41]  Edward Bradford Titchener,et al.  A text-book of psychology , 1909 .

[42]  Allen Allport,et al.  Visual attention , 1989 .

[43]  W. Wundt,et al.  Outline of psychology. , 1897 .

[44]  Kurt Danziger,et al.  Constructing the subject : historical origins of psychological research , 1990 .

[45]  E. J. Haupt Laboratories for Experimental Psychology , 2001 .

[46]  E. Titchener Scientific Books: Lectures on the Elementary Psychology of Feeling and Attention , 1909 .

[47]  R. Steinman,et al.  Phi is not beta, and why Wertheimer’s discovery launched the Gestalt revolution , 2000, Vision Research.

[48]  Ryan D. Tweney,et al.  Wundt Studies a Centennial Collection , 1980 .

[49]  I. Hacking,et al.  Representing and Intervening. , 1986 .

[50]  Larry V. Hedges,et al.  How hard is hard science, how soft is soft science? The empirical cumulativeness of research. , 1987 .

[51]  Jonathan Harwood,et al.  Essay review-gestalt psychology in German culture, 1890-1967: Holism and the Quest for objectivity , 1995 .

[52]  K. Milar History of Psychology: Cornerstone Instead of Capstone , 1987 .

[53]  W. Wundt Outlines of Psychology , 1897 .

[54]  C. Early,et al.  A Pictorial History of Psychology , 1997 .

[55]  D. Boorstin The Creators: A History of Heroes of the Imagination , 1992 .

[56]  G. A. Miller THE PSYCHOLOGICAL REVIEW THE MAGICAL NUMBER SEVEN, PLUS OR MINUS TWO: SOME LIMITS ON OUR CAPACITY FOR PROCESSING INFORMATION 1 , 1956 .

[57]  R. Rieber,et al.  Wilhelm Wundt in History: The Making of a Scientific Psychology , 2001 .

[58]  L. Benjamin,et al.  A History of Psychology: Original Sources and Contemporary Research , 1987 .

[59]  F. M. Caudle Using “Demonstrations, Class Experiments and the Projection Lantern” in the History of Psychology Course , 1979 .

[60]  J. Brožek Attention and Performance II. , 1971 .

[61]  David K. Robinson Reaction-Time Experiments in Wundt’s Institute and Beyond , 2001 .

[62]  J. Baldwin THE ‘TYPE-THEORY’ OF REACTION , 1896 .

[63]  Peter Galison,et al.  The science studies reader , 1999 .

[64]  Susan Leigh Star,et al.  Changing Order: Replication and Induction in Scientific Practice by H. M. Collins (review) , 1988, Technology and Culture.

[65]  J. Baldwin Types of reaction. , 1895 .

[66]  G. Stratton From the University of California psychological laboratory: The psychology of change: How is the perception of movement related to that of succession? , 1911 .

[67]  Gary Hatfield,et al.  Attention in Early Scientific Psychology , 1995 .