Encyclopedia of Psychology, 4 Volume (2nd Edition)
by Raymond J. Corsini
English | 1994 | ISBN: 0471558192 | 672 pages | DJVU | 12.18 MB
Kudos to both Corsini and Wiley for bringing this reference set up to date! When the Encyclopedia of Psychology was first published in 1984, it quickly became known as the standard source in the multifaceted domain of psychology and a staple in library and professional collections. During the intervening 10 years, the field of psychology has given birth to new theorists, practitioners, and innovators, as well as new tests, measurements, techniques, and applications. While numerous specialized dictionaries and single-volume encyclopedias have appeared in recognition of distinct areas of psychology, they provide only brief definitions and short articles. The encyclopedia is the constant and reliable source for information on the major areas of psychology-applied, clinical, cognitive, developmental, educational, forensic, industrial, measurement, personality, physiological, social, and theoretical.
The second edition features more than 2,000 alphabetized entries by more than 500 expert contributors; contains 800 biographies in the first part of volume 4 (more than 100 of them new); boasts a unified bibliography of 15,000 entries in volume 4; and utilizes cross-references at the end of practically every entry. In comparison, the 1984 edition claimed some 1,500 separate entries. New entries include Artifical Intelligence, Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, Managed Mental Health Care, and Video Psychology. Also for comparison, while three volumes of the 1984 edition were devoted to text and the last to indexes and bibliography, volume 4 now also contains text, specifically, 180 pages of biographies.
Strengths of the 1984 edition are carried over to this new one. Articles continue to be authoritative and of high quality. The physical aspects of the set (typeface, binding) continue to be good. Some problems with the 1984 edition have been corrected. Subjects are no longer as scattered, and articles are no longer indexed without relation to the work as a whole. Cross-references appear to be more conscientiously and consistently applied. Other attempts have been made to make finding information as easy as possible. For example, the name and subject indexes and the spines of the four volumes have been designed to make locating the proper volumes and pages convenient for users. While the single bibliography saves space, some users may experience frustration going back and forth from the incomplete "Further References" listed at the end of most articles to the complete bibliography in volume 4. Some of the shortcomings of the 1984 edition have not been corrected. Article headings continue to be almost the same size as the boldface subheadings and cross-references. The arrangement of the subject index is once again not explained.
Students (college and up), professionals, and the general public interested in topics as wide-ranging as Body Image, Brief Therapy, Crisis Intervention, Loss and Grief, the Nature-Nurture Controversy, Race Bias in Testing, Occultism, Ritual Behavior, and Sleep Treatment will find much that is useful in this encyclopedia. Recommended once again for large public and academic libraries.
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