

BA Experimental Psychology
About this course
Experimental psychology treats the mind and behaviour as subjects for rigorous scientific investigation, using controlled experiments, statistical analysis, and increasingly sophisticated measurement tools to understand how humans perceive, think, feel, remember, and act. It is a discipline that takes seriously the complexity of human experience while insisting on the need for evidence rather than speculation, and it draws on neuroscience, cognitive science, philosophy, and biology to build an empirically grounded account of mental life. At Oxford, this four-year full-time programme is one of the most demanding and prestigious routes into the discipline available anywhere. You will study the major areas of psychological science, including perception, memory, attention, language, decision-making, social behaviour, developmental psychology, and neuroscience, alongside the statistical and methodological tools needed to design and analyse experiments rigorously. Oxford's tutorial system means you will engage in close intellectual dialogue with world-leading researchers, and the opportunity to conduct your own empirical work as part of the degree is substantial. The programme's experimental emphasis distinguishes it from more applied psychology degrees and provides a particularly strong foundation for research-oriented careers. Entry is exceptionally competitive, typically requiring a tariff of around 232 points. Graduates of experimental psychology at Oxford are well prepared for a wide range of careers in research, clinical psychology, academia, human factors and ergonomics, user experience design, market research, public health, and the civil service. Many continue to doctoral training in clinical psychology, research psychology, or neuroscience, which is the standard route to a career as a practitioner psychologist or academic researcher. The analytical and methodological rigour developed during the degree is valued across many sectors, including technology, finance, and policy, where understanding human behaviour and decision-making is increasingly central to good practice.
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