Each chapter includes an author biography to set the context of their work within the development of PCT.
- Presents case studies that show how PCT can be applied in different disciplines
- Illustrates the Test for the Controlled Variable (TCV) and the construction of functional models as fruitful alternatives to mainstream experimental design when studying behavior
- Shows how theory illuminates structure and functions in brain anatomy
- Compares and contrasts PCT with other contemporary, interdisciplinary theories
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"More than a century after John Dewey's insight that the response is not merely to the stimulus but it is into it, William Powers' community continues to challenge the "central dogma" of behavioral neuroscience: stimulus, then processing and, finally, response. While defining behavior as output is a form of covert anthropomorphism, conceiving behavior as control of perception better respects the nature of life and mind." --Alex Gomez-Marin, Principal Investigator, Behaviour of Organisms Laboratory Cellular and Systems Neurobiology Unit Instituto de Neurociencias CSIC-UMH, Alicante, Spain
"Perceptual control theory is a fascinating, complex, and profoundly fertile understanding of human being that combines scientific rigour with a deeply humanistic ethos. This interdisciplinary handbook is a much needed resource which pulls together contemporary thinking and research in the field. Ranging from robotics to neuroscience to psychotherapy, the book will be of great value to those who want to deepen their understanding of this unique approach and apply its insight to the fields of psychological and social practices." --Mick Cooper, Professor of Counselling Psychology, Department of Psychology, University of Roehampton, London, UK
"This powerful volume is the amplifying extension of Bill Powers legacy that the academic world has long needed. While other, more popular psychological theories have foundered in the much discussed "replication crisis", this collection of dogged researchers, and others like them, have quietly and persistently been piling up increasing evidence of the profound explanatory power nestled within the elegant simplicity of PCT. Skillfully curated by editor, Mansell, the rigour of their revolutionary work across a wide spectrum of fields within the biological and social sciences stands as compelling evidence that PCT is no longer simply an idea whose "time has come", but is, rather, a powerful field of application that has well and truly "arrived"." --Tom Scholte, Professor, Department of Theatre and Film, The University of British Columbia