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  1. Psychophysik und experimentelle psychologie.W. Wundt - 1893 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 36:444-444.
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  • Les laboratoires de psychologie expérimentale en allemagne.Victor Henri - 1893 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 36:608 - 622.
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  • Dead Rooms and Live Wires: Harvard, Hollywood, and the Deconstruction of Architectural Acoustics, 1900-1930.Emily Thompson - 1997 - Isis 88:597-626.
    In 1900 Wallace Sabine, a physicist at Harvard University, published a mathematical formula for calculating the reverberation time in a room, a measure of how quickly or slowly sound energy dies away in an enclosed space. In 1930 Carl Eyring, a physicist working in the Sound Motion Picture Studio at Bell Telephone Laboratories, revised Sabine's equation. This essay examines material changes in the practice of architectural acoustics in order to explain how and why Eyring was motivated to reformulate the Sabine (...)
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  • Exit the frog, enter the human: physiology and experimental psychology in nineteenth-century astronomy.Jimena Canales - 2001 - British Journal for the History of Science 34 (2):173-197.
    This paper deals with one of the first attempts to measure simple reactions in humans. The Swiss astronomer Adolph Hirsch investigated personal differences in the speed of sensory transmission in order to achieve accuracy in astronomy. His controversial results, however, started an intense debate among both physiologists and astronomers who disagreed on the nature of these differences. Were they due to different eyes or brains, or to differences in skill and education? Furthermore, they debated how to eliminate them. Some, for (...)
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  • Die Aufgaben der experimentelle Psychologie.W. Wundt - 1882 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 13:661-668.
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  • Terrestrial magnetism and the development of international collaboration in the early nineteenth century.John Cawood - 1977 - Annals of Science 34 (6):551-587.
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  • Communications from the psychological laboratory of Harvard University: Automatic reactions.Leon M. Solomons - 1899 - Psychological Review 6 (4):376-394.
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  • The Beginning and Growth of Measurement in Psychology.Edwin Boring - 1961 - Isis 52:238-257.
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  • Astronomers Mark Time: Discipline and the Personal Equation.Simon Schaffer - 1988 - Science in Context 2 (1):115-145.
    The ArgumentIt is often assumed that all sciences travel the path of increasing precision and quantification. It is also assumed that such processes transcend the boundaries of rival scientific disciplines. The history of the personal equation has been cited as an example: the “personal equation” was the name given by astronomers after Bessel to the differences in measured transit times recorded by observers in the same situation. Later in the nineteenth century Wilhelm Wundt used this phenomenon as a type for (...)
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  • Princeton Psychological Laboratory.H. S. Langfeld - 1926 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 9 (3):259.
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  • In Pursuit of Precision: The Calibration of Minds and Machines in Late Nineteenth-century Psychology.Ruth Benschop & Douwe Draaisma - 2000 - Annals of Science 57 (1):1-25.
    A prominent feature of late nineteenth-century psychology was its intense preoccupation with precision. Precision was at once an ideal and an argument: the quest for precision helped psychology to establish its status as a mature science, sharing a characteristic concern with the natural sciences. We will analyse how psychologists set out to produce precision in 'mental chronometry', the measurement of the duration of psychological processes. In his Leipzig laboratory, Wundt inaugurated an elaborate research programme on mental chronometry. We will look (...)
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  • „Feinere Messungen in der Mitte einer belebten Stadt”—Berliner Großstadtverkehr und die apparativen Hilfsmittel der Elektrophysiologie, 1845–1910.Sven Dierig - 1998 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 6 (1):148-169.
    In the history of science, the alterations of laboratorial working conditions during a defined period of time and the processes leading to substitution of one instrument by another are not well reconstructed. With respect to electrophysiology between 1845 and 1910, the present article attempts to call attention to the relationship between the use of instruments in a laboratory, the change in these instruments and the change of local environments in which the laboratory was situated.
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  • The developing technology of apparatus in psychology's early laboratories.Fairfid M. Caudle - 1983 - In Joseph Warren Dauben & Virginia Staudt Sexton (eds.), History and Philosophy of Science: Selected Papers : Monthly Meetings, New York, 1979-1981, Selection of Papers. New York Academy of Sciences.
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