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  2. Francis Galton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Galton

    The address was published in Nature, and Galton further developed the theory in "Regression toward mediocrity in hereditary stature" and "Hereditary Stature". [32] [33] An elaboration of this theory was published in 1889 in Natural Inheritance. There were three key developments that helped Galton develop this theory: the development of the law ...

  3. Lexical hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexical_hypothesis

    Sir Francis Galton.. Sir Francis Galton was one of the first scientists to apply the lexical hypothesis to the study of personality, [4] stating: . I tried to gain an idea of the number of the more conspicuous aspects of the character by counting in an appropriate dictionary the words used to express them...

  4. Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inquiries_into_Human...

    Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development is an 1883 book by Francis Galton, in which he covers a variety of psychological phenomena and their subsequent measurement. In this text he also references the idea of eugenics and coined the term for the first time (though he had published his ideas without the name many years earlier).

  5. Hereditary Genius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hereditary_Genius

    Hereditary Genius: An Inquiry Into Its Laws and Consequences is a book by Francis Galton about the genetic inheritance of intelligence. It was first published in 1869 by Macmillan Publishers. [1] The first American edition was published by D. Appleton & Company in 1870. [2] It was Galton's first major work written from a hereditarian ...

  6. Behavioural genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioural_genetics

    Galton was a polymath who studied many subjects, including the heritability of human abilities and mental characteristics. One of Galton's investigations involved a large pedigree study of social and intellectual achievement in the English upper class .

  7. Free association (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_association_(psychology)

    Other potential influences in the development of this technique include Husserl's version of epoche [7] and the work of Sir Francis Galton. It has been argued that Galton is the progenitor of free association, and that Freud adopted the technique from Galton's reports published in the journal Brain, of which Freud was a subscriber. [8]

  8. Mental chronometry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_chronometry

    Sir Francis Galton is typically credited as the founder of differential psychology, which seeks to determine and explain the mental differences between individuals. He was the first to use rigorous RT tests with the express intention of determining averages and ranges of individual differences in mental and behavioral traits in humans.

  9. Genius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genius

    Galton is regarded as the founder of psychometry. He studied the work of his older half-cousin Charles Darwin about biological evolution. Hypothesizing that eminence is inherited from ancestors, Galton did a study of families of eminent people in Britain, publishing it in 1869 as Hereditary Genius. [28]