Showing 40 results

Archival Description
Halifax (N.S.) Psychology Image
Print preview View:

40 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Photograph of the student cubicles in the undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology Department

Item is a photograph of an unidentified student in the cubicles in the undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology Department. The undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology building contain well-equipped individual cubicles which give students the opportunity to run their own experiments. Also see PC1_31-35-19 and PC1_31-35-20.

Photograph of the student cubicles in the undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology Department

Item is a photograph of an unidentified student in the cubicles in the undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology Department. The undergraduate laboratories in the Psychology building contain well-equipped individual cubicles which give students the opportunity to run their own experiments. Also see PC1_31-35-44.

Photograph of a meeting for a course in Community Psychology

Item is a photograph of students Elaine Chapman (back to the camera left), Elizabeth Baker (back to the camera right), at the back of the room Louise Cook a member of the CCAVAW communications-education committee, students Karen Higginbotham, Margot Sundquist and Dr. Ed Renner who assigned the students the project for work in their course, Community Psychology. The four students were studying rape and rape relief for a course they met twice a week in the psychology wing of the Life Sciences centre.

Wilkins, Gina

Photograph of lobsters in 'crowded' housing conditions for aggression experiments in the Psychology Department

Item is a photograph of lobsters in "crowded" housing conditions in the Psychology Department. Lobsters placed in close proximity to one another will fight and frequently damage each other. Research done in the Psychology Department has attempted to determine the conditions which cause this aggression and how to eliminate it. The lobster's antennae and stalked eyes all play a role in their aggressive bouts with other lobsters. The amount of aggression shown by lobsters as been shown to be influenced by their "housing" conditions and how "crowded" they are.