Berlin School of experimental psychology

[2] Noted members include Max Wertheimer, Kurt Koffka, and Wolfgang Köhler.

[5] The new facility, which was also supported by the Society for Experimental Psychology, focused on applied work and incorporated its own laboratory so that it became an expanded university institute.

[4] Stumpf influenced his pupils[6] such as Wertheimer, Koffka, Köhler, and Kurt Lewin, and these contributed to the school's development.

[7] Lewin, for instance, developed a set of models and ideas linked to change management theory and practice.

[8] These psychologists further refined Stumpf's work, which facilitated experimental investigation that culminated in the development of Gestalt psychology.