 | 
1900: Many people suffer from the stresses the industrial, urbanizing society, experiencing a variety of nervous disorders, such asinsomnia, headaches, anxiety, and exhaustion. Some doctors thinkthis is a disease they call "neurasthenia," and thereare many patent medicines claiming to be cures. Some think thatyou are born with a temperament toward this condition, as arethose who succumb to serious mental illness and are confined toasylums for the insane. A few doctors begin to look for a wayto treat the mind, rather than the body, to cure these conditions. |  |
Here are a few steps on the science odyssey from then to now, including links to activities and databank entries on this site. - At the end of the nineteenth century, female patients with oddbehaviors were often described as suffering from hysteria. Dr.Charcot studied hysteria in his asylum in Paris, attracting suchprominent students as Sigmund Freud.
People: Jean-Martin Charcot
- By 1900, Sigmund Freud has begun to elaborate an explanation anda therapy for hysteria.
"That's My Theory!" with special guest Sigmund Freud Discoveries: Freud's book, "The Interpretation of Dreams" released People: Sigmund Freud
- In 1905, Alfred Binet studies the ability of children to performtasks, introducing a method to test "intelligence."
Discoveries: Binet pioneers intelligence testing
- In 1913, building on the recent work of Pavlov, John Watson presentshis theory that human behavior is based upon conditioned responsesto stimuli.
Discoveries: Watson launches behaviorist school of psychology People: Ivan Pavlov People: John Watson
- In spite of the growth of behaviorism, in the early 1920s, theEugenics movement, based on the idea that human behavior is aninherited trait, reaches its height.
Discoveries: Eugenics movement reaches its height People: Charles Davenport
- During the 1930s, scientists begin to try to affect the workingsof the brain to treat mental illness, sometimes using radicaltechniques.
Discoveries: Moniz develops lobotomy for mental illness Discoveries: Electroshock therapy introduced
- From the late 1930s through the 1960s, B.F. Skinner contributesto the field of behaviorist psychology.
People: B.F. Skinner
- During approximately the same period, Jean Piaget expands ourunderstanding of how children's mental abilities develop.
Discoveries: Piaget describes stages of cognitive development
- Meanwhile, Harry Harlow conducts experiments on monkeys and findsthat love may be as important as nourishment in an infant's emotionaldevelopment.
People: Harry Harlow
- In 1952, Henri Laborit finds a tranquilizer that appears to relievethe symptoms of those suffering from mental illness, usheringin a new era of drug therapies for behavior disorders.
On The Edge: Miracle Pill Discoveries: Drug for treating schizophrenia identified
- In the 1950s and 1960s, Wilder Penfield publishes studies of thehuman brain, which isolate specific areas of the brain that controlmotor impulses, sensory inputs, and memories.
You Try It: Probe the Brain People: Wilder Penfield
- In the early 1960s, Roger Sperry refines our understanding ofbrain function, experimenting with patients whose right and lefthemispheres have been severed.
People: Roger Sperry
- At the same time, the ideas of earlier psychologists such as Freudand Harlow evolve into new psychotherapies developed by theirstudents.
People: Frieda Fromm-Reichmann People: Abraham Maslow
As we approach the later years of the century, new technologiesand new understandings of genetics and biochemistry graduallypoint scientists away from behaviorist and psychotherapeutic approachesfor understanding human behavior.- In the 1970s and 1980, new scanning devices allow detailed mappingof brain functions.
Discoveries: CT scan and MRI introduced
- The discovery of brain chemicals such as endorphins leads to anunderstanding, in 1975, of how behavior is a biochemical event.
Discoveries: Role of endorphins discovered
- This leads to more effective drugs that can alter one's behavioror mood. The most prominent of these by the 1990s is Prozac.
Discoveries: Antidepressant Prozac introduced
- Genetic research in the 1990s leads to identification of certaingenes that seem tied to behaviors.
Discoveries: Search for behavioral genes  | Today: Science has come to understand that our mental condition is part of a complex interplay between our biology and our environment. We have identified brain structures and chemistry which controlbehavior and have produced medicines which affect our behavior.We have begun to identify the genes that control the moleculesof the brain. We also have a range of psychological tools to helpus cope with the stresses of life as we enter the twenty-firstcentury. Our challenge is to gain a greater understanding of howthe environment actually affects our genes, creating the diversityof human behavior. |
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