Psychology and Industrial Efficiency
BOSTON AND NEW YORK HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY The Riverside Press Cambridge 1913
TO HAROLD F. McCORMICK
This book corresponds to a German book, which I published a few months ago, under the title Psychologie und Wirlschaftsleben: Ein Beitrag zur angewandten Experimental-Psychologie (Leipzig: J.A. Barth). It is not a translation, as some parts of the German volume have been abbreviated or entirely omitted and other parts have been enlarged and supplemented. Yet the essential substance of the two books is identical.
Our aim is to sketch the outlines of a new science which is to intermediate between the modern laboratory psychology and the problems of economics: the psychological experiment is systematically to be placed at the service of commerce and industry. So far we have only scattered beginnings of the new doctrine, only tentative efforts and disconnected attempts which have started, sometimes in economic, and sometimes in psychological, quarters. The time when an exact psychology of business life will be presented as a closed and perfected system lies very far distant. But the earlier the attention of wider circles is directed to its beginnings and to the importance and bearings of its tasks, the quicker and the more sound will be the development of this young science. What is most needed to-day at the beginning of the new movement are clear, concrete illustrations which demonstrate the possibilities of the new method. In the following pages, accordingly, it will be my aim to analyze the results of experiments which have actually been carried out, experiments belonging to many different spheres of economic life. But these detached experiments ought always at least to point to a connected whole; the single experiments will, therefore, always need a general discussion of the principles as a background. In the interest of such a wider perspective we may at first enter into some preparatory questions of theory. They may serve as an introduction which is to lead us to the actual economic life and the present achievements of experimental psychology.
Hugo Münsterberg
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HUGO MÜNSTERBERG
APPLIED PSYCHOLOGY
THE DEMANDS OF PRACTICAL LIFE
MEANS AND ENDS
THE BEST POSSIBLE MAN
VOCATION AND FITNESS
SCIENTIFIC VOCATIONAL GUIDANCE
SCIENTIFIC MANAGEMENT
THE METHODS OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
EXPERIMENTS IN THE INTEREST OF ELECTRIC RAILWAY SERVICE
EXPERIMENTS IN THE INTEREST OF SHIP SERVICE
EXPERIMENTS IN THE INTEREST OF TELEPHONE SERVICE
CONTRIBUTIONS FROM MEN OF AFFAIRS
INDIVIDUALS AND GROUPS
THE BEST POSSIBLE WORK
LEARNING AND TRAINING
THE ADJUSTMENT OF TECHNICAL TO PSYCHICAL CONDITIONS
THE ECONOMY OF MOVEMENT
EXPERIMENTS ON THE PROBLEM OF MONOTONY
ATTENTION AND FATIGUE
PHYSICAL AND SOCIAL INFLUENCES ON THE WORKING POWER
THE BEST POSSIBLE EFFECT
THE SATISFACTION OF ECONOMIC DEMANDS
EXPERIMENTS ON THE EFFECTS OF ADVERTISEMENTS
THE EFFECT OF DISPLAY
EXPERIMENTS WITH REFERENCE TO ILLEGAL IMITATION
BUYING AND SELLING
THE FUTURE DEVELOPMENT OF ECONOMIC PSYCHOLOGY