Paul Thomas Young

For other people named Paul Young, see Paul Young (disambiguation).

Paul Thomas Young (1892-1978) was an American experimental psychologist and inventor.[1]

Young originally studied at Occidental College and Princeton, and subsequently at Cornell, where his doctoral adviser was Edward Titchener. For most of his career, he was a faculty member at the University of Illinois. In 1928, he constructed the pseudophone, an acoustic device that induced a form of auditory illusion by distorting the direction from which an audible sound appeared to originate.[2][3]

Young's primary area of research interest was motivation and emotion, in both humans and animals. He received the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the American Psychological Association in 1965.[4]

Key publications

References

  1. O'Kelly, L. I., Paul Thomas Young: 1892-1978, American Journal of Psychology 92 (3), 1979, p. 551-553.
  2. Perina, Kaja. Auditory Illusion, Psychology Today, Nov 1 2001
  3. Roeckelein, J. E., Elsevier's Dictionary of Psychological Theories, Elsevier 2006, p. 655.
  4. Paul Thomas Young: Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award. American Psychologist 20 (12), 1965, S. 1084–1088.


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