scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessBook

心理学原理 = The principles of psychology

William James
About
The article was published on 2010-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 8181 citations till now.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Urban-related identity: Theory, measurement, and empirical findings

TL;DR: In this paper, a framework for conceptualizing urban-related identity and identification is developed on the basis of social psychological work on self-concept, which offers an empirically useful operationalization of the theoretical considerations presented in the first part of the paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inferring PSychological Significance From Physiological Signals

TL;DR: This model specifies how to determine whether a psychophysiological relation is an outcome, concomitant, marker, or invariant, and it describes important limitations in inferences of psychological significance based on physiological signals when dealing with each.
Journal ArticleDOI

A theory of implicit and explicit knowledge

TL;DR: These distinctions are discussed in their relationship to similar distinctions such as procedural-declarative, conscious-unconscious, verbalizable-nonverbalizable, direct-indirect tests, and automatic-voluntary control and an outline of how these distinctions can be used to integrate and relate the often divergent uses of the implicit-explicit distinction in different research areas are illustrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Alternative Perspectives in the Organizational Sciences: “Inquiry from the Inside” and “Inquiry from the Outside”

TL;DR: The epistemological differences between these two approaches can help organization scientists select the mode of inquiry appropriate to the phenomenon under study and to their own abilities and purposes as discussed by the authors, which can also help organizational scientists to make better decisions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-enhancement and self-protection: what they are and what they do

TL;DR: The authors define self-enhancement and self-protection as interests that individuals have in advancing one or more self-domains or defending against negative self-views, and discuss the role of these motivational constructs in scientific explanations, argue for their importance in maintaining psychological and physical well-being, and consider conditions in which they are likely to operate.