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.
The three largest sub-fields of psychology are clinical psychology, counseling psychology, and cognitive 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.
Psychoanalysis, Clinical Psychology, Counseling Psychology, Child Psychology, Neuro Psychology, Psychiatry.
Some fields in psychology include clinical psychology, counseling psychology, developmental psychology, cognitive psychology, and social psychology. Each field focuses on different aspects of human behavior, mental processes, and emotions.
Three of the largest sub-fields of psychology are clinical psychology, cognitive psychology, and developmental psychology. Clinical psychology focuses on diagnosing and treating mental health disorders, cognitive psychology studies mental processes like thinking and memory, and developmental psychology examines human growth and changes across the lifespan.
Psychology is a very broad term. There are very many different psychology fields, and social psychology is one of them, it focuses mainly on interpersonal behavior and role of social forces in governing behavior. e.g. attitude formation, prejudice, conformity, attraction, aggression, group behavior. Other Psychology fields includes but not limited to, developmental psychology, experimental psychology, physiological psychology, cognitive psychology, personality, psychometric, evolution psychology, forensic psychology, criminal psychology.....
Branches of psychology include clinical psychology, cognitive psychology, developmental psychology, and social psychology. Related fields include psychiatry, counseling, neuroscience, and cognitive science. Each branch and related field focuses on different aspects of human behavior, cognition, and mental health.
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.
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics as of 2006, there were 166,000 psychologists in the US. The projected data suggests there will be an increase reaching 191,000 by 2016.
I would say that Behavioral Science and Neuroscience are most closely related to Psychology.
physiology. Wilhelm Wundt is often credited as the founder of psychology for establishing the first psychology laboratory in the late 19th century in Germany. By merging insights from philosophy and physiology, Wundt laid the foundation for psychology as a distinct scientific discipline.
Some subfields in psychology include cognitive psychology, developmental psychology, clinical psychology, social psychology, and industrial-organizational psychology. Each subfield focuses on different aspects of human behavior and mental processes.