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Story of Psychology - Morton Hunt [490]

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Racism and the SAT.” Z, August 15. www.zmag.org.

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS


For this updated edition of The Story of Psychology, I received the help of a number of individuals and organizations whom it is my pleasure to thank.

Some deserve special mention: Philip Zimbardo, Donald Norman, and Michael Gazzaniga steered me toward the central issues in the explosive developments in psychology within the fifteen years since the first edition of this book was published. Pamela Wilentz of the APA (American Psychological Association) Public Affairs Office, Jessica Kohout of the APA Office of Research, and Nina Jackson, Membership Coordinator of the APS (Association for Psychological Science) provided me with much essential information, contacts, and other forms of assistance. Donald Cherry, survey statistician, National Center for Health Statistics, Centers for Disease Control, ferreted out answers to a number of difficult statistical questions, Howard Silver, executive director of COSSA (Consortium of Social Science Associations), was an invaluable source of information about political interference with psychological research.

Among the many psychologists and other specialists I spoke to, I owe particular thanks to several for their patient explanations

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