Psychology Wiki
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<div style="text-align:center;font-size:225%;font-weight:bold;color:#000080;margin-bottom:2em">''The'' PSYCHOLOGY WIKI</div>
 
<div style="text-align:center;font-size:225%;font-weight:bold;color:#000080;margin-bottom:2em">''The'' PSYCHOLOGY WIKI</div>
   

Revision as of 22:52, 2 August 2006

Assessment | Biopsychology | Comparative | Cognitive | Developmental | Language | Individual differences | Personality | Philosophy | Social |
Methods | Statistics | Clinical | Educational | Industrial | Professional items | World psychology |


The PSYCHOLOGY WIKI

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Welcome to The Psychology Wiki

The Psychology Wiki started on 21st January 2006 and is now one of the largest psychology resources on the internet. We currently have 12832 pages and are working on 34,782 articles and have over 45 MB of content. This is a trade-a-fact website.

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NEW: Featured Article

The Psychology Wiki is proud to present its first featured article:

Have a look at this article as an example of how the Psychology Wiki is intended to work. Please feel free to add internal or external links to the article, and/or improve the article if you want to.

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What is the Psychology Wiki?

The Psychology Wiki is an offshoot of the popular Wikipedia site, which is an online, user contribution orientated encyclopedia. The Psychology Wiki was started by a group of professional psychologists who decided that a single reference site containing all of the information contained within psychology as a discipline would be an invaluable tool to clinical professionals, academics, students and other interested parties.

This site aims to provide an up-to-date, authoritative statement of knowledge, theory, and practice in the whole field of psychology. It is written to serve academic needs at both undergraduate and postgraduate level, to inform professionals, both in training and in the field, and to provide information for the people we seek to help.

Using the same software as the Wikipedia site, the Psychology Wiki is intended to slowly develop through contributions from its users. Initially much of the information will be similar to that on the Wikipedia site; however it is envisaged that the Psychology Wiki will go into much greater depth.

As the intended users of the Wiki are professionals and students within Psychology, there is much greater potential for the articles and information to be of a higher standard than is the case in Wikipedia, due to a greater level of expertise. Another aim of the site is allow users of psychologic & psychiatric services to comment on their experiences in seperate discussion areas, linked to each article.

The Psychology Wiki is intended to link to every academic paper referenced, either on-site (elsewhere in the Psychology Wiki) or off-site (to external sources, eg. PubMed). This was the original intention of the internet, allowing scientists to quickly cross reference papers with their colleagues in related fields.

Finally, the Psychology Wiki will have extensive indexing, allowing easy navigation from one subject to another, as well as extensive cross-linking of keywords to different subjects, which will be familiar to users of wikipedia.

For more information, see the About Page.

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How do I USE the Psychology Wiki?

Terms and keywords can be searched for in the search box (to the left side of the screen). It is also possible to search for terms using the sites indexing, for example:

Index Page

Clinical Psychology
Clinical Psychology: Types of Problem
Problems Defined by the DSM-IV codes
Clinical Depression
Treatment for Depression
SSRI Treatment
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Psychotherapy

The site index is easily accessible via the Psychology Wiki navigation box (on the right hand side of most pages).

Highlighted words will take you to a page within the Psychology Wiki, related to that word. For example, here the word Depression will take you to the main page for clinical depression. Highlighted words with an arrow next to them [1] will take you to an external site elsewhere on the internet, for example The British Psychological Society.

If you were looking for it, here is an Introduction to Psychology.

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How do I CONTRIBUTE to the Psychology Wiki?

Guide Page

If you are new to Wikis, please see our:
  • A wiki is a new type of web page that you can edit and you are cordially invited to contribute to this collaborative project.
  • For newcomers our Orientation Section and Help Section should ease you into the site. Another good start is the Site Layout which describes the layout of the site.
If you are already familiar with Wiki's, go to the Community Portal our Tasks To Do Portal or our General Discussion Forum.
  • If you are already familiar with editing using Wiki based software, then you can Create an Account and begin to contribute. You can check the Tasks To Do portal for a general list of things to do, or contribute to the General Discussion Forum for discussions about specific aims we are trying to achieve with the Psychology Wiki at the moment.
  • Adding Material & Referencing. All information should be factually correct and properly referenced. The Psychology Wiki uses the American Psychological Association format for referencing. For example:
Henriques, Gregg (2003) The Tree of Knowledge System and the Theoretical Unification of Psychology. Review of General Psychology, Vol. 7, No. 2, 150-182. Fulltext.
  • However, in the discussion pages for any particular topic, we encourage constructive criticisms, alternative opinions, proposals for hypotheses requiring verification, practitioner reports, user views, etc...

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What if I am a user of Psychology / Psychiatric services?}

Personal Experiences Page

  • As someone with personal experience of Psychology or Psychiatric services you can also use and contribute to this site. It is intended to be a source of information for all people with an interest in Psychology, and as such this includes people who may be currently undergoing counselling, therapy or treatment.*
  • Whilst the main content pages are intended to be edited by Academics, Professionals, Students and Trainees in Psychology, there is also a way in which users of psychology or psychiatric services can contribute to the site. There are Personal Experience pages, with a pale rose background, which are intended for people to share their experiences in psychology.
The purpose of the Personal Experiences will be to share our stories relating to mental health with others, who may have had similar experiences but not met anyone else who has had them. They are also intended to be useful to psychologists to try and gain insight into peoples experiences. They will be totally anonymous, confidential, and can be removed at any time should the contributor wish it so.
  • The rose colour of these pages will help people to identify that they are not necessarily written by an expert.
  • These pages will by definition not be a neutral point of view (NPOV) which will make the Psychology Wiki to be distinctly different from material one would encounter on Wikipedia. These pages will also be protected from further editing by an Administrator. This will prevent user experiences from being altered.
  • (*) Please Note: The information given on this website, is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. If you have a medical or psychological problem, or are taking prescribed medication, please consult with your doctor.

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The Site Index

Index Page

  • The Index Pages of the Psychology Wiki follow on from the links on the front page, and generally follow the headings used by PsychINFO as approved by the American Psychological Society.
  • The links below lead to a series of further links forming an Heirarchical Index Skeleton underpinning the structure of the site.
  • From here you should be no more than five clicks away from any subject in any field.



Academic psychology

Assessment (Psychometics)

Biological psychology

Comparative psychology

Cognitive psychology

Developmental psychology

Human experimental psychology

Language & Communication

Psychology of personality

Philosophy & psychology

Research methods

Social psychology

Social processes

Statistics


Applied psychology

Clinical psychology & psychotherapy

Educational psychology

Industrial & organisational psychology

Professional items

Other specialist fields of psychology

Transpersonal psychology

World psychology

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Funding

The Psychology Wiki and its founders make no money from this site. It is an entirely voluntary operation deseminating copyright free psychology information. Our goal is to share, without costs of any kind, psychology knowledge between academic and professional psychologists and with a wider audience of non-psychologists.

The Google advertisements to the right hand pane on your screen are part of the business funding model of Wikia Inc.. They host the wiki, providing the technical facilities, bandwidth, storage, backup and technical support for the site for free, as they do for other Wikia sites. Their declared intention is to do this in perpetuity, the company making its profit via the advertisments. Wikia was set up by the founders of Wikipedia as another approach to making knowlege available, without cost, to the people of the world.

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Disclaimer

Please Note:
Psychology and medicine are changing sciences and not all therapies are clearly established. New research changes treatment and therapy recommendations daily. The contributors to the Psychology Wiki have used their best efforts to provide information that is up-to-date and accurate and reflects generally accepted academic standards at the time of publication. However, as our science is constantly changing and human error possible, the contributors to this article do not warrant the information as accurate or complete, nor are they responsible for omissions or errors in the article or for the results of using this information. The reader should confirm the information in this article from other sources prior to use. See full disclaimer for further statement.




The information given on this website, is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. If you have a medical or psychological problem, or are taking prescribed medication, please consult with your doctor.