Psychology Atlas
Psychology coverage on Engaia, including foundational concepts, major branches, historical development, core methods, and related topics for broad encyclopedia publishing. This page gathers the large psychology expansion into one place so readers can move through topic guides, deep-reference articles, and glossary terms without losing the section structure.
Open Psychology section•Open Psychology glossary•Search Psychology
Subcategory Paths
The main routes into this expansion set and the large reference field growing under it.
Behavioral Science
A guide to Behavioral Science within Psychology, outlining its meaning, major questions, and the related topics readers should explore next.
Cognitive Psychology
A guide to Cognitive Psychology within Psychology, outlining its meaning, major questions, and the related topics readers should explore next.
Developmental Psychology
A guide to Developmental Psychology within Psychology, outlining its meaning, major questions, and the related topics readers should explore next.
Expansion Articles
A large reading field for this section, spanning its methods, history, major concepts, evidence, comparisons, and current frontiers.
Behavior: Origins, Development, and Enduring Impact
Behavior is where psychology touches the world most visibly. Thoughts and feelings may remain partly hidden, but behavior leaves traces: words spoken, choices made, routines repeated, risks taken, tasks avoided, habits sustained, and relationships shaped through action. To study behavior
Behavioral Science: Main Topics, Key Debates, and Essential Background
A research-level introduction to behavioral science covering its main topics, core debates, classic examples, and practical relevance across health, policy, organizations, and digital systems.
Behavioral Science: Meaning, Main Questions, and Why It Matters
Behavioral science studies how people and groups act, why they act that way, and how patterns of behavior can be described, predicted, and sometimes changed.
Clinical Care: Connections, Context, and Wider Relevance
Clinical care is the part of psychology most people picture first because it is where psychological knowledge meets distress face to face. Panic, trauma, grief, compulsive behavior, depression, psychosis, personality disorder, sleep disruption, addiction,
Cognition: Meaning, Importance, and Lasting Influence in Psychology
Cognition names the family of mental processes by which organisms take in information, organize it, keep some of it available, transform it, and use it to guide action. The word can sound abstract, but the reality is concrete and constant.
Cognitive Psychology: Main Topics, Key Debates, and Essential Background
A research-level overview of cognitive psychology covering attention, memory, perception, language, reasoning, core debates, classic findings, and why the field matters beyond the lab.
Cognitive Psychology: Meaning, Main Questions, and Why It Matters
Cognitive psychology studies the mental processes that make experience intelligible and action possible. It asks how people attend, perceive, remember, learn, reason, use language, solve problems, and make decisions.
Development: Main Ideas, Key Debates, and Historical Significance
Development is the study of change across time in thought, emotion, behavior, relationship, and capacity. It asks how infants become language users, how children acquire self-control and social understanding, how adolescents renegotiate identity and risk, how adults continue to learn
Developmental Psychology: Main Topics, Key Debates, and Essential Background
A research-level introduction to developmental psychology covering life-span change, core domains, major debates, classic topics, and why developmental thinking matters for institutions and public life.
Developmental Psychology: Meaning, Main Questions, and Why It Matters
Developmental psychology studies how people change across the lifespan and why those changes unfold differently across individuals and environments.
Ethics in Psychology: Major Questions, Disputes, and Modern Relevance
Ethics in psychology is not an afterthought added once research is finished or once treatment begins. It is woven into the field because psychology studies persons rather than inert objects, and because its findings can be used to classify, persuade,
History of Psychology: Major Milestones, Turning Points, and Lasting Influence
The history of psychology is not a simple march from superstition to science. It is a record of shifting answers to one difficult question: how should human thought, feeling, perception, memory, development, and behavior be studied? At different…
How Behavioral Science Is Studied: Methods, Evidence, and Research
A detailed guide to how behavioral science is studied, from experiments and field trials to measurement, causal inference, replication, ethics, and the limits of behavioral evidence.
How Cognitive Psychology Is Studied: Methods, Evidence, and Research
A detailed guide to how cognitive psychology is studied through experimental tasks, reaction time, eye tracking, modeling, neuro measures, replication, and strong inferential design.
How Developmental Psychology Is Studied: Methods, Evidence, and Research
A detailed guide to how developmental psychology is studied through longitudinal, cross-sectional, observational, experimental, and causal designs across the life course.
How Is Psychology Studied? Methods, Evidence, and Main Questions
Psychology is studied through observation, measurement, experimentation, longitudinal tracking, interviewing, behavioral tasks, clinical assessment,…
How Psychology Connects to Neuroscience: Why the Relationship Matters
Psychology connects to neuroscience because human thought, emotion, perception, memory, motivation, and behavior are lived at the level of persons but made possible through the nervous system.
How Psychology Connects to Sport and Exercise Science: Why the Relationship Matters
Psychology connects to sport and exercise science because human performance is never only physical. Strength, endurance, coordination, and training load matter, but so do attention, confidence, emotion regulation, habit formation, pain perception, self-talk, stress.
How Psychology Is Studied: Methods, Evidence, and Research
Psychology can look deceptively familiar because its subject matter is ordinary human life. Everyone has memories, emotions, motives, habits, and relationships, so everyone already carries private theories about why people act as they do. The discipline becomes scientific when it
How Psychology Is Studied: Methods, Tools, and Evidence
Psychology is studied through a broad toolkit because the subject itself is broad. Researchers investigate perception, memory, learning, development, emotion, relationships, personality, decision-making, mental illness, social influence, and behavior change across settings that range from tightly controlled laboratories to homes, schools, clinics,…
How Veterinary Medicine Connects to Psychology: Why the Relationship Matters
Veterinary medicine connects to psychology because animal health is never only a biological matter. It also involves behavior, stress, attachment, perception, grief, communication, decision-making, and the complex emotional bond between people and animals.
Key Psychology Terms: Definitions Every Reader Should Know
Psychology becomes far easier to read once its recurring vocabulary is made precise. Without that vocabulary, conversations about behavior, mind, development, trauma, attention, learning, or mental health quickly become muddy. People use words such as memory, personality, bias, anxiety, reinforcement, attachment, and…
Personality: Turning Points, Consequences, and Why It Still Matters
Personality asks one of psychology’s most persistent questions: why do people who share a world still differ so markedly in how they think, feel, interpret, relate, and act? Some are markedly more emotionally reactive, some more socially bold, some more
Psychology and Its Neighboring Fields: Key Connections and Overlap
Psychology sits in the middle of an unusually crowded intellectual neighborhood. It studies minds, behavior, development, learning, judgment, emotion, personality, and disorder, but none of those topics belongs to psychology alone. Brains matter, so