Cambridge Psychology

About Cambridge Psychology

Cambridge Psychology (CP) is the leading research centre for Scalable Psychology and Applied Cognitive NeuroscienceCP is revolutionising the understanding of human learning and decision making by bringing the power of neuroimagining techniques into real world contexts. By creating this possibility, CP is establishing a radically different view of how human beings actually navigate the world. Equally focused on deploying these techniques in psychological marketing and educational science, CP is transforming our understanding of processes like intuition, creativity and social intelligence. From developing advanced mathematical skills in young children to helping Justin Bieber break the global streaming record, with downloads of his single "What do you mean", CP is putting new science into practice, with exceptional learning and behavioural results. The extraordinary human ability to learn and to make complex decisions outstrips the capability of any artificial intelligence ever built. Ironically, it is skills perceived as primitive such as intuition, which are the seat of this complex ability, representing our most sophisticated neural processes but, due to our beliefs, our least sophisticated understanding. CP's research is broadening understanding of human intelligence and integrating it with a deeper view of personality and emotion. Through the development of personalised and contextual psychometrics, CP is producing new insights into how individuals communicate, feel, evaluate, choose, learn and develop. Through its work CP is further clarifying and trying to resolve the deep rift between what science tells us about how our brains learn, the approaches commonly seen in education, and the post-AI skills requirements in the workplace.
Social Link - Linkedin: http://www. linkedin.com/company /cambridge-psychology
Employee Count: 4
Keywords: research services

More about Cambridge Psychology

Cambridge Psychology is located at Cambridge, England, United Kingdom
http://www.cambridgepsychology.org