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Principles of Psychology and Neuroscience, First Edition

This is a new, somewhat "radical" introductory textbook for General Psychology and Neuroscience, based on a small set of core principles that cut across the full spectrum from neuroscience to social psychology. In short, this is an ambitious attempt to present a unified, principled perspective on the field, akin to what is standard in other fields.

The advantage to the student is that it is consistent, coherent, and concise (200 pages), in contrast to standard textbooks which run over 800 pages and are filled with topical stories and historical accounts, that, while fascinating, ultimately distract from the understanding of the core concepts in the field.

Web page: PrinciplesOfPsych.org

Formats

Please use the following links to download the formatted version of the book (v1.1.1, updated Sep 26, 2021):

  • PDF --- best for printing.

  • ePub --- opens in e.g., Mac iBooks (also usable on Kindle now).

  • Kindle / KPF --- you can email this to yourself at your amazon kindle account to get it on your device: Kindle help page

  • Amazon.com --- you can pay $2.99 (lowest price possible) to have Amazon upload the book to your kindle, or roughly $53 for them to send you an on-demand paperback print version (in color).

  • HTML --- single big HTML file, readable in your browser.

Note: if you click on book and the individual .md files in there (which is the raw source for the text), you can read the text but the figure captions will not show up, and there will be a { width } styling tag after figures.

Lecture Videos

Recorded lectures for this course are available on this YouTube Playlist. Here a Course Syllabus

The Three-C Principles

The core principles are the Three C's

  • Compression: The brain actively compresses the large amount of information flowing in through the senses, to extract the most relevant, salient information. This principle is essential for understanding the basic function of the neuron, the core principles of sensation and perception, attention, and stereotyping, among others.

  • Contrast: The brain encodes all information in a relative way, by constantly contrasting information over space and time. Again, this function is anchored in the basic function of the neuron, and explains many phenomena in sensation and perception (color contrast effects, etc), and the core mechanisms in reinforcement learning where the rewards we experience are always contrasted with our expectations, and in the fact that we don't care what our absolute salary is --- we only care about how much we make relative to our peer group.

  • Control: Above all, the brain seeks control. Loss of perceived control is an essential element in most mental disorders, and many aspects of social psychology are driven by the dynamics of control. The trajectory of development can be understood in terms of a progression in ability to control the environment and oneself. Large portions of the brain are devoted to control, and understanding how basic motor control works can help understand higher levels of self-control. A key element of control is the ability to predict what will happen next --- prediction and control are two sides of the same coin.

With just these three principles, we can understand a huge swath of psychology and neuroscience, and do so in a much more connected, coherent manner than the jumble of facts and stories typically presented in standard textbooks.

Open publishing

This book is open source, published under a Creative Commons license, and available in a wide range of formats. It is formatted using the markdown format and rendered via pandoc https://pandoc.org using the Cogent Author tool.

$ author book -f pdf -o psychneuro_ed1