Paul Thomas Young

Paul Thomas Young (1892–1978) was an American experimental psychologist and inventor.

Young originally studied at Occidental College and Princeton, and subsequently at Cornell, where his doctoral adviser was Edward Titchener. For most of his career, he was a faculty member at the University of Illinois. In 1928, he constructed the ''pseudophone'', an acoustic device that induced a form of auditory illusion by distorting the direction from which an audible sound appeared to originate.

Young's primary area of research interest was motivation and emotion, in both humans and animals. He received the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the American Psychological Association in 1965. Provided by Wikipedia
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    by Young, Paul Thomas, 1892-
    Published 1943
    Book
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    by Young, Paul Thomas, 1892-
    Published 1961
    Book
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    by Young, Paul Thomas, 1892-
    Published 1975
    Book
  4. 4
    by Young, Paul Thomas, 1892-
    Published 1936
    Book
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