the scientific study of the mind and behavior
I'm not exactly sure if this is right, but maybe it's psychology? Psychology is a social science that specifically deals with the way the mind works and mental processes.
Yes you can, however I would make sure you have a specific reason for doing so. In other words, what will it lead you to? What exactly will you achieve in terms of career goals and objectives?
classes of psychology are; educational psychology, industrial psychology, counselling psychology, clinical psychology, social psychology,experimental psychology, industrial psychology, physiology psychology, development psychology and engineering psychology.
There are ten branches of Psychology not two. Abnormal Psychology; Behavioral Psychology; Clinical Psychology; Cognitive Psychology; Community Psychology; Developmental Psychology; Educational Psychology; Evolutionary Psychology; Legal Psychology; and Personality Psychology.
There are ten branches of Psychology not two. Abnormal Psychology; Behavioral Psychology; Clinical Psychology; Cognitive Psychology; Community Psychology; Developmental Psychology; Educational Psychology; Evolutionary Psychology; Legal Psychology; and Personality Psychology.
Psychology is psychology.
there are very many subfields in psychology. some examples are experimental psychology, developmental psychology, consumer psychology, media psychology, educational psychology, exercise and sport psychology, behavioral psychology, social psychology, foreinsic psychology, clinical psychology, and geriatric psychology.
Psychoanalysis, Clinical Psychology, Counseling Psychology, Child Psychology, Neuro Psychology, Psychiatry.
Pure psychology have 6 branches. 1.Experimental Psychology 2.Abnormal Psychology 3.Social Psychology 4.Developmental Psychology 5.Comparative Psychology 6.Physiological Psychology
Dennis Coon has written: 'Psychology' -- subject(s): Psychology.., Psychology 'Psychology' -- subject(s): Textbooks, Psychology 'Psychology' -- subject(s): Psychology, Textbooks 'Introduction to psychology' -- subject(s): Psychology
Some branches of psychology include clinical psychology, developmental psychology, cognitive psychology, and social psychology. Related fields include neuroscience, counseling psychology, industrial-organizational psychology, and educational psychology.
Clinical, Social, School, Developmental, Family/Child, Research and more. Forensic, neuropsychology, health Psychology, organizational psychology, industrial psychology (Human factors psychology), Counseling psychology, community psychology, Geropsychology, pediatric psychology (which is somewhat different from "child psychology." Non-clinical areas include also perception, physiological psychology, cognitive psychology, psychoneuroimunology, quantitative psychology, comparative psychology, learning, and educational psychology.