SCiP at 35: An idiosyncratic history of the society for computers in psychology

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Abstract

SCiP history may be divided into three eras: the Paleozoic (1971-1982), the Mesozoic (1982-1994), and the Cenozoic (1994-present). Following a list of Secretary-Treasurers, a list of all SCiP Presidents is provided in Table 1. Next I present personal highlights, including the first symposium on psychology and the World-Wide Web; David Rumelhart's mathematical explanation of connectionism; and Stevan Harnad's discussion of "freeing" the journal literature. I observe that a small conference is becoming more intimate and that much of our mission involves figuring out how to conduct high-quality scientific research with consumer-grade electronics. I argue that we are an increasingly international organization, that graduate students are welcome, and that we should become more inclusive in the areas of gender and ethnicity and should make membership more meaningful I conclude by looking ahead and attempting to predict the future. Copyright 2006 Psychonomic Society, Inc.

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Wolfe, C. R. (2006). SCiP at 35: An idiosyncratic history of the society for computers in psychology. Behavior Research Methods. Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.3758/BF03192776

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