Story of Psychology - Morton Hunt [492]
I acknowledge permission from the following to quote copyrighted text and/or reproduce copyrighted figures as specified:
Allyn and Bacon, figure 9.4, “IQ and Genetic Relationship,” from Psychology and Life, 17th ed., 2005, by Richard Gerrig and Philip G. Zimbardo (figure 1 in the present work).
American Association for the Advancement of Science and Roger N. Shepard: three figures from “Mental Rotation of Three-Dimensional Objects” by R. N. Shepard, Science 171:2/10/11 (figure 36 in the present work).
American Psychological Association: the figure of a cat from “Some Informational Aspects of Visual Perception” by Fred Attneave, Psychol. Rev. 61 (1954):183–193 (figure 29 in the present work); American Psychological Association and Jay McClelland: the figure “Network and connectionist representations of concepts relating to birds,” from the article “Why there are complementary learning systems and the hippocampus and neo-cortex,” Psychol. Rev. 102 (3) (1995):430 (figure 42 in the present work).
The British Psychological Society: two figures of impossible objects from “Impossible Objects: A Special Type of Visual Illusion,” Brit. Jour. of Psychol. 49 (1958):31–33 (figure 27 in the present work).
Raymond B. Cattell: diagram of three personality profiles from his “Personality Pinned Down,” Psychology Today, July 1973 (figure 17 in the present work).
Albert Ellis: a passage from his Growth Through Reason (Wilshire, 1975), and a passage from his “Self-Direction in Sport and Life,” Rational Living 17 (1982):27–33.
Elsevier Science Publishers: the logo COGNITION from early 1970s editions of Cognition (figure 45 in the present work); figure of Hs and Ss in “Forest Before Trees” by David Navon in Cognitive Psychology 9 (3), July, 1977 (figure 14 in the present work).
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., and Elizabeth Loftus: figure titled “A piece of the semantic memory network—a later view,” from Cognitive Psychology and Information Processing: An Introduction (1979), edited by Roy Lachman, Janet L. Lachman, and Earl C. Butterfield (figure 41 in the present work).
H. J. Eysenck: multiplex figure of personality dimensions from The Causes and Cures of Neurosis (Knapp, 1965), by H. J. Eysenck and S. Rachman (figure 16 in the present work).
W. H. Freeman and Company, publishers, and Ulric Neisser: figure 1 from Ulric Neisser’s Cognition and Reality, 1976 (adapted in figure 39 in the present work).
Greenwood Publishing Group: a passage from Wilhelm Wundt’s Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology, University Publications of America, 1977 [1892, 1919].
Guilford Publications and Aaron T. Beck: two passages from Cognitive Therapy of Depression, 1979, by Aaron T. Beck, A. John Rush, et al.
HarperCollins Publishers and James R. Rest: a passage, adapted, from the excerpt of Rest’s doctoral dissertation that appears on pp. 49–55 of Lawrence Kohlberg, Psychology of Moral Development, vol. II, Harper and Row, 1984.
Hogarth Press, Sigmund Freud Copyrights, and The Institute of Psychoanalysis: passages from The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, 23 vols., 1953–1966, James Strachey, ed., as follows: three passages from pp. 63, 101–102, and 270 of “Studies in Hysteria,” 1893–1895, vol. II of the Standard Edition; two passages from pp. 116–118 of “Fragment of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria,” 1905, vol. VII; a passage from p. 223 of “Formulations