The Star Malaysia - Star2

Psychology for the masses

Psychology museum in the United States explores what makes us human.

- By MITCH STACY

Wonder Woman’s striking visage on large, bright screens just inside the new national Museum of Psychology tells visitors there’s more here than dusty books and esoteric curiositie­s.

The world’s most famous female superhero gets a place of distinctio­n because she was created by a psychologi­st, William Moulton Marston, as a symbol of what he saw as the emerging power of women in the 1940s.

once past Wonder Woman, the 790sq m museum on the edge of the University of Akron’s downtown campus takes a deep dive into the study of why people do what they do. The technical stuff – treatment of mental illness, the rise of talk therapy, etc. – is keenly balanced with the kind of interactiv­e exhibits that are a requiremen­t for any modern family museum.

dennis Barrie, who developed it with his wife, Kathleen, already knew what it took to get people in the front door of a museum. He was co-creator of Cleveland’s rock and roll Hall of Fame and a former executive director there. In recent years he worked on the Internatio­nal Spy Museum in Washington and the Mob Museum in Las Vegas.

He acknowledg­ed the challenges in making psychology palatable to a mass audience.

“When I first met the team there and looked at their archives, which are extensive and for most of us probably too sophistica­ted in terms of knowledge and background, I did have those concerns,” said Barrie.

But the subject matter also gave him plenty of options.

“There were things in everything we did that were indicators of a bigger story but allowed you to have fun and participat­e in the process,” he said.

Visitors can put together a puzzle that was used as an intelligen­ce test – known in the early 20th century as a “moron test” – to assess the intellect of immigrants arriving in the United States.

They can measure their reaction time against that of legendary slugger Babe ruth. They can test their ability to multitask.

displays tell the stories of how psychology has been used in everything from workplace efficiency to determinin­g the level of caffeine in Coca-Cola and marketing handguns to women.

“Psychology is literally everywhere in our world, and applied everywhere,” said Barrie. “It’s not just lying on a couch a la Freud, talking about your childhood memories.”

Speaking of Sigmund Freud, there is a replica of the Vienna office where he pioneered psychoanal­ysis, along with some of his letters and rare home movies.

oddities include a medieval-looking skullcap from the 19th century that measured the bumps on a person’s head to determine intellectu­al traits. (Like many early psychologi­cal theories, that process, called phrenology, was later proved to be worthless.)

one of the most macabre items is a wooden cage known as a Utica Crib that was used in 19th-century asylums to keep patients from leaving their beds. displayed nearby are gleaming medical picks that belonged to dr Walter J. Freeman, a physician who specialise­d in lobotomies and botched the procedure on rosemary Kennedy, the sister of President John F. Kennedy.

Barrie’s favourite exhibit includes memorabili­a from the 1971 “Stanford prison experiment.” The famous social psychology exercise involved breaking groups of students into guards and inmates in a mock prison scenario and claimed to show that each group adapted to its role in dramatic ways.

The museum’s overarchin­g theme is examining what makes us human.

“We hope,” coordinato­r dorothy Gruich said, “that people will come in and learn a little bit about themselves.” – AP

 ??  ?? A 19th-century device used by psychologi­sts is displayed at the National Museum of Psychology in Akron, Ohio. The skullcap was supposed to measure the bumps on a person’s head to determine mental traits. — Photos: AP
A 19th-century device used by psychologi­sts is displayed at the National Museum of Psychology in Akron, Ohio. The skullcap was supposed to measure the bumps on a person’s head to determine mental traits. — Photos: AP
 ??  ?? An early straitjack­et is displayed at the museum, which features interactiv­e exhibits, along with thousands of artefacts and documents.
An early straitjack­et is displayed at the museum, which features interactiv­e exhibits, along with thousands of artefacts and documents.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia