Psychology
Color Psychology – The Relation Between Color And Human Response
There are many types of treatments available for diseases like allopathic, homeopathic, chiropractic treatments to name a few. There is a heightened awareness among people on what they consume as medicines and for this reason many people are slowly getting away from allopathic treatments and medicines, not to mention the soaring costs of patented medicines. These days, you have to spend a fortune even for a small illness. But there are many alternative treatments available to cure various physical and psychological illnesses.
One of which is color therapy. Catherine Poole, a well known color expert says colors play an important role in our every day lives. What we see, what we wear and the colors affect the way we see the world. Imagine a person is wearing in a color that you don’t like, you would have negative thoughts about that person, but if he/she is wearing in a color that you like, you get positive impression on that person. The same thing applies to most of the things in the world. Unconsciously, we perceive the world for how it looks.
Behaviorism- Branch of Psychology
Behaviorism is a major branch of psychology as it covers the aspects how mind is link to the physical actions preformed by the living being. The branch covers everything which a person does in his or her daily life which common folks define as behavior. This is one of the most recent discoveries in social sciences as it began to appear in the years of the World War 2 by 1950s and its main development was made in United States.
Behaviorism’s discovery dates up to in the early 20th century by American psychologist John B. Watson, and accepted and further more upgraded and extended by Edward Thorndike, Clark L. Hull, Edward C. Tolman, and later B.F. Skinner. Theories of learning, which are the grass roots of the behavioral sciences define and emphasized the ways in which people might be of a nature, or accustomed, by their natural environment to behave in certain ways.