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      Psychology and neuroscience: How close are we to an integrative perspective? Reply to Staats (2016) and Tryon (2016).

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          Abstract

          This article responds to commentaries written by Warren Tryon (2016) and Arthur Staats (2016) concerning Schwartz, Lilienfeld, Meca, and Sauvigné (2016). In this reply, we reiterate our key thesis-that psychology, and the problems it addresses, are likely best approached from multiple levels of analysis. Unlike Tryon, we are not convinced that neural networks and computational neuroscience provide a single template through which all of psychology can be integrated. We are in agreement with Staats that attempts to reduce psychological phenomena to neural events alone are likely to be misleading and unproductive. One important example where such reductionism has been alive and well is addiction, where prominent biomedical models have defined addiction as a "brain disease." Our reply article concludes by arguing that a multilevel approach to psychology is essential in guiding hiring practices, funding agency priorities, and training students. (PsycINFO Database Record

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Am Psychol
          The American psychologist
          American Psychological Association (APA)
          1935-990X
          0003-066X
          Dec 2016
          : 71
          : 9
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Miami.
          [2 ] Department of Psychology, Emory University.
          [3 ] Department of Psychology, Georgia State University.
          Article
          2016-61507-009
          10.1037/amp0000119
          28032785
          c1c0547c-8b7a-4369-9dc7-83779320ed66
          History

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