B-
Although I/O psychology is often misperceived as a new field in psychology, it is actually more than a century old. In Chapter 1, you learned about Wilhelm Wundt, generally credited as the founder of psychology. Wundt’s first research assistant, James McKeen Cattell, broke new ground in the field of mental testing (Cattell, 1890), thus influencing the job application process as we know it today. If you’ve ever taken a personality test, an IQ test, or even a state-
Another one of Wundt’s students, Hugo Münsterberg, is considered by many to be the father of I/O psychology. His book Psychology and Industrial Efficiency (1913) was the field’s first textbook. Here, Münsterberg explained the benefits of matching the job to the worker. He believed that successful matches had multiple benefits, including increased job satisfaction, improved work quality, and higher worker productivity.