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Harold H Schlosberg

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Citizenship
  
United States

Name
  
Harold Schlosberg

Doctoral advisor
  
Edwin Holt

Fields
  
Psychology

Education
  
Princeton University

Institutions
  
Brown University

Role
  
Psychologist


Born
  
January 3, 1904 Brooklyn, NY (
1904-01-03
)

Alma mater
  
Princeton University, B.A. 1925; Princeton University, M.A. in Psychology, 1926; Princeton University, Ph.D. in Psychology, 1928

Known for
  
research on conditioned reflex in man and animals

Died
  
August 5, 1964, Providence, Rhode Island, United States

Residence
  
Providence, Rhode Island, United States

People also search for
  
Robert S. Woodworth, Edwin Holt, Carl Porter Duncan, Lorrin A. Riggs

Other academic advisors
  
Leonard Carmichael

Doctoral students
  
Carl Porter Duncan

Harold Schlosberg (January 3, 1904 – August 5, 1964) was a professor of psychology at Brown University. Born in Brooklyn, N.Y, Schlosberg earned his Bachelor's and Ph.D. degrees from Princeton University. Well known for his work on various topics ranging from conditioned reflexes to expression of human emotions, he co-authored the 1954 2nd edition of the textbook Experimental Psychology, with Robert Sessions Woodworth, a highly influential textbook in the field. A member of the prestigious Society of experimental Psychologists, Schlosberg served as chairman of Brown's Department of Psychology from 1954 until his death in 1964.

Harold Schlosberg (1954) discussed the major controversies in the discussion of emotion in his article Three Dimensions of Emotion. His work highlighted that human emotion recognition was perceived by many as merely a subtopic of heavier scientific debate. According to Schlosberg (1954), academic work on emotions could be convoluted by attention-grabbing data or unmoving experiments involving animals. Excessive information can overwhelm a researcher and they entirely miss the intent of the piece. Trials involving white mice maybe commonplace for the scientific community but the layman may not be able to relate to these studies because of the subjectivity of emotions. Schlosberg wrote there were three substantial disagreements in the field and embraced individual segments of differing theories and synthesized them into the three dimensions of emotion philosophy. The scope of his approach coupled the level of pleasurably, intensity and responsiveness that stimuli have human emotions Further biographical information at: [1].

References

Harold H. Schlosberg Wikipedia