Florence Bagley

[2] She then moved to Cornell University in 1898, again as a Fellow in Psychology, holding the Susan Linn Sage Fellowship in Philosophy and Ethics.

Her work defined that a low rate of rotation was required for this subjective effect.

[7] In 1902, Bagley's work "An Investigation of Fechner's Colors" was published in The American Journal of Psychology.

[4][8] In autumn 1901 her husband obtained a post as principal of Meramec Elementary School in St. Louis, Missouri, and she moved there with him.

Titchener in which he expressed Florence's desire to finish her degree and her willingness to attempt in the future.

[8] The family subsequently moved several times and in 1914 she was recorded as living in Dillon, Montana and was described as a writer.