Developmental Psychology
[2023-03-19 04:28:27]
This section is dedicated to presenting applied theories on new theories, experiments, methods, and human thought and behavior development. Developmental psychology is unique in its broad range - it bridges application and basic research - and clinical, cognitive, perceptual, sensory, social, moral, practical, educational, We will study biological, genetic and neurological aspects. The most breakthrough research in developmental psychology has increasingly established links between these content areas and has created new areas such as the development of cognitive neuroscience and the development of social cognition. This collaboration brings significant theoretical and methodological advances and provides important insight into the mechanisms that cause change. Therefore, this section actively encourages important work and cross-content work.
Contributions to developmental psychology can take advantage of available scientific methods, including laboratory experiments, nature observations, clinical interviews, case studies, modeling, brain imaging, and electrophysiology. In developmental psychology, we regularly publish research topics that focus on new or rapidly developing research topics or disciplines. This article is chosen based on its scientific quality and theoretical and / or empirical innovation level.
Developmental psychology welcomes the submission of the following article types: book reviews, simple research reports, case reports, clinical trials, conceptual analysis, corrections, data reporting, editing, general reviews, hypotheses and theories, methods, Mini review, opinion, original research, outlook, contract, review, professional task, systematic review, technical report
All manuscripts must be submitted directly to the Department of Developmental Psychology and reviewed by associate editors and peer review editors of the special department.
Articles posted in the Psychology section will benefit from the frontier impact and layered system after online release. Most influential publications judged by readers As authors of their own research, he will be invited by the editors to write articles on cutting-edge comments. We call this "democratic stratification". The authors chose the impact analysis of articles based on original research published in all Frontiers' specialized journals and sections. The main comments focus on the first discovery and place them in a wider context to address the broader community problem in all psychology
Developmental psychology covers a wide range of fields such as psychology of education, psychopathology of children, forensic developmental psychology, child development, cognitive psychology, ecological psychology, cultural psychology and so on. Development psychologists influencing the 20th century include Urie Bronfenbrenner, Erik Erikson, Sigmund Freud, Jean Piaget, Barbara Rogoff, Esther Thelen, Lev Vygotsky. John B. Watson and Jean-Jacques Rousseau are often considered to provide the foundation of modern developmental psychology. In the mid-eighteenth century, Jean Jacques Rousseau depicted three developmental stages: Emile's baby (early childhood), puer (childhood) and adolescence: or education. Rousseau's idea was strongly influenced by educators at the time.
Pediatric psychology is a subset of developmental psychology focusing on the life stage from birth to adolescence (about 12 to 13 years old). Adolescent psychology is also a subset of developmental psychology and focuses on the early adolescent development to adolescent youth in our later years (13-19). The theory of developmental psychology is an important field of research because it is the product of all adults experienced when they were children and when they were children. Therefore, developing psychological theory by studying infants, children, and adolescents will help to better understand adult thoughts.
Developmental psychology involves psychological changes that occur throughout the life