Revolution or the new phrenology—the advent of functional neuroimaging has led some psychologists to address issues of structure-function relations that only two decades ago would have been relegated to science fiction. Others, however, are skep-tical of recent bridges between psychological and biological science and consider these advances as misguided and leading us astray. With any new advancement comes problems and pitfalls, and constructive criticisms help to sharpen the research program. Here I offer commentary on the state of the art and identify both advances and concerns in bridging psychological and biological science
Neurobiological advances have resulted in growing interest in many psychological phenomena heretofor...
Science, Psychoanalysis, and the Brain is an invitation to a space for dialogue where reflections on...
We think that psychology as science is – once again—at a crossroads. As it has happened recurrently...
We systematically mistreat psychological phenomena, both logically and clinically. This article expl...
Kandel (2006) started his career interested in becoming a psychoanalyst, and turned to biology in wh...
Addresses the identity crisis of physiological psychology by focusing on the concept of the localiza...
ABSTRACT—Advances in brain research have invigorated an ongoing debate about the relations between p...
Over the last century, the predominant research model for science, including naturalistically orient...
Functional imaging has become a primary tool in the study of human psychology but is not without its...
We discuss the development of cognitive neuroscience in terms of the tension between the greater sop...
There is a strong philosophical intuition that direct study of the brain can and will constrain the ...
In this paper we argue that psychology should be understood as a developmental science, and we place...
I examine some of the key scientific pre-commitments of modern psychology, and argue that their adop...
The relationship between the human psychological faculties and their underlying biological foundatio...
There is a strong philosophical intuition that direct study of the brain can and will constrain the ...
Neurobiological advances have resulted in growing interest in many psychological phenomena heretofor...
Science, Psychoanalysis, and the Brain is an invitation to a space for dialogue where reflections on...
We think that psychology as science is – once again—at a crossroads. As it has happened recurrently...
We systematically mistreat psychological phenomena, both logically and clinically. This article expl...
Kandel (2006) started his career interested in becoming a psychoanalyst, and turned to biology in wh...
Addresses the identity crisis of physiological psychology by focusing on the concept of the localiza...
ABSTRACT—Advances in brain research have invigorated an ongoing debate about the relations between p...
Over the last century, the predominant research model for science, including naturalistically orient...
Functional imaging has become a primary tool in the study of human psychology but is not without its...
We discuss the development of cognitive neuroscience in terms of the tension between the greater sop...
There is a strong philosophical intuition that direct study of the brain can and will constrain the ...
In this paper we argue that psychology should be understood as a developmental science, and we place...
I examine some of the key scientific pre-commitments of modern psychology, and argue that their adop...
The relationship between the human psychological faculties and their underlying biological foundatio...
There is a strong philosophical intuition that direct study of the brain can and will constrain the ...
Neurobiological advances have resulted in growing interest in many psychological phenomena heretofor...
Science, Psychoanalysis, and the Brain is an invitation to a space for dialogue where reflections on...
We think that psychology as science is – once again—at a crossroads. As it has happened recurrently...