- How are our brains wired to be social?
- How do stressful and traumatic experiences influence our physical, cognitive, social, and emotional health?
- How can depression, anxiety, and addiction be prevented and treated?
- How do cultural contexts shape our identities and values?
- How can scientists conduct meaningful quantitative analyses when some of the data are missing?
- How do we learn?
- How do some intimate relationships thrive while others falter?
Welcome to UCLA’s Department of Psychology. These are just a few of the questions our faculty are addressing in their research, in the classroom, and in the community. If such questions sound intriguing, read on!
Psychology at UCLA is at the forefront of generating, communicating, and applying psychological science. Our community is a large one, including 83 core, adjunct, and active emeriti faculty members; more than 4,000 undergraduates enrolled in our three majors (Psychology, Psychobiology, Cognitive Science); about 200 Ph.D. students; 24 postdoctoral scholars; 40 administrative staff; and 48 research staff. Our home is the Psychology Complex, which comprises more than 800 rooms in three connected buildings on the east side of campus. Our largest building, Pritzker Hall—named in recognition of the exceptional generosity of the Anthony and Jeanne Pritzker Family Foundation—recently underwent a major renovation and features beautiful and functional new offices, labs, classrooms, conference rooms, student study spaces, and a welcoming entry space. Our two additional buildings—the Psychology Building and Franz Hall—also are home to faculty, students, and staff, including our UCLA Psychology Clinic, which offers evidence-based psychological assessment and treatment to the Los Angeles community. The Clinic serves as a training ground for the Ph.D. students in our premiere clinical psychology program and as a site for research to optimize the efficacy of psychological therapies.
As set out in our 2024 Strategic Plan, the goals of our research and teaching in the UCLA Department of Psychology are to:
- advance understanding of human behavior, cognition, and emotion, including functional and dysfunctional processes, across multiple levels of analysis;
- promote human welfare through intervention, dissemination, and implementation of psychological research, and to translate knowledge into action across the realms of mental and physical health services, education, public policy, and more; and
- recognize and advance understanding about how inequities and disparities impact cognition, emotion, and behavior and to use psychological science methods to promote wellbeing for all.
As defined by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences at the National Institutes of Health, “translation is the process of turning observations in the laboratory, clinic and community into interventions that improve the health of individuals and the public . . .”. Applied psychological science serves to translate knowledge into action across the realms of psychological and physical health services, education, public policy, and more.
The UCLA Department of Psychology is focused equally on basic science and societal impact through prevention and treatment, educational interventions, and social policy. Abundant expertise in psychological research across multiple levels of analysis, from single neurons to social cultures, positions our department to contribute to the welfare of a rapidly diversifying population, while also addressing complex population-level, interpersonal, and intrapersonal problems. Collaborations among our basic and translational scientists within the department are perhaps more abundant than anywhere else in the nation. Moreover, our professors and students forge strong ties with faculty in many other disciplines, including medical sciences, law, computer science, artificial intelligence, applied mathematics, statistics, engineering, economics, linguistics, education, anthropology, communication, political science, sociology, biology, public health, and business. Such collaborative research and education enables us to bring methods and findings in psychological science to bear on human functioning and fundamental human problems.
Allow me to tell you a bit more about the department and its programs. Our home is in the Division of Life Sciences within the College of Letters and Science at UCLA. In addition to our three undergraduate majors, we have an undergraduate Departmental Honors Program, as well as the UCLA Psychology Research Opportunities Programs (PROPS), which supports a select group of undergraduate majors from underrepresented groups who seek to conduct mentored research and prepare for graduate or advanced professional study. We host an annual Psychology Undergraduate Research Conference (PURC) with local and national presenters. We founded an Infant Development Program, which is a highly valued and evidence-based day care program, as well as a teaching and research facility for the department that accommodates research with infants, toddlers, and their parents and caregivers. The associated Applied Developmental Psychology undergraduate minor is a unique opportunity for UCLA students which combines rigorous academic courses with hands-on experience working with infants and young children. We house a vivarium and have access to the latest scientific technologies. Along with faculty mentors, our Ph.D. students and postdoctoral scholars study behavioral neuroscience, clinical psychology, cognitive psychology, developmental psychology, health psychology, quantitative psychology, social and affective neuroscience, and social psychology. Our Diversity Science Initiative bridges our areas of expertise across the department to advance theory, research, and education on underrepresented and underserved populations.
As you can see, the Department of Psychology offers coverage of psychological science that is broad and deep, all supported and advanced by dedicated faculty, staff, undergraduate majors, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows. I am honored to serve as Chair of the department, and I welcome your involvement in the department as we work together to address essential questions about the mind and behavior.
Thomas N. Bradbury, Distinguished Professor and Chair, UCLA Department of Psychology