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    • Wilhelm Wundt

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      • Wilhelm Wundt (born August 16, 1832, Neckarau, near Mannheim, Baden [Germany]—died August 31, 1920, Grossbothen, Germany) was a German physiologist and psychologist who is generally acknowledged as the founder of experimental psychology.
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  2. Wilhelm Wundt (born August 16, 1832, Neckarau, near Mannheim, Baden [Germany]—died August 31, 1920, Grossbothen, Germany) was a German physiologist and psychologist who is generally acknowledged as the founder of experimental psychology.

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      The founder of experimental psychology was the German...

  3. Wundt, who distinguished psychology as a science from philosophy and biology, was the first person to call himself a psychologist. [1] He is widely regarded as the "father of experimental psychology ". [2][3] In 1879, at the University of Leipzig, Wundt founded the first formal laboratory for psychological research.

  4. Jun 16, 2006 · Wilhelm Maximilian Wundt (1832–1920) is known to posterity as the “father of experimental psychology” and the founder of the first psychology laboratory (Boring 1950: 317, 322, 344–5), [1] whence he exerted enormous influence on the development of psychology as a discipline, especially in the United States.

  5. Feb 24, 2021 · The most famous book by Wundt, which comprises his experimental psychology. Over the years Wundt revised and enlarged this work in successive editions, the last of which appeared in three volumes between 1908 and 1911.

  6. George Trumbull Ladd introduced experimental psychology into the United States and founded Yale University's psychological laboratory during his time there (from 1881 to 1905). In 1887, Ladd published Elements of Physiological Psychology, the first American textbook that extensively discussed experimental psychology. [7]

  7. Oct 6, 2023 · Wilhelm Wundt opened the Institute for Experimental Psychology at the University of Leipzig in Germany in 1879. This was the first laboratory dedicated to psychology, and its opening is usually thought of as the beginning of modern psychology.

  8. A History of Experimental Psychology is a monograph on the history of modern psychology. The book was written by American psychologist Edwin Garrigues Boring and published by Appleton-Century-Crofts Company in New York in 1929 (Fig. 1). In 1950, the second revised edition was published.

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