[2] The Psychology Today website features therapist and health professional directories[2] and hundreds of blogs written by a wide variety of psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, medical doctors, marriage and family therapists, anthropologists, sociologists, and science journalists.
It draws on research reports and interviews with experts on topics, including human motivation, personality development, intelligence, child development, parenting practices, schizophrenia, sexuality, leadership, addiction, anxiety, politics, and human and animal behavior.
[10] The Psychology Today website, which includes archived articles since 1992, features a continuous stream of blogs by laboratory researchers, clinical practitioners, and writers with a broad range of expertise.
Daily reports of the findings of new research on human behavior accompany accounts of common concerns and explorations of the impact of current events on mental health.
[1] The magazine is not peer-reviewed,[12] but all expert author content is reviewed, edited, and fact-checked for accuracy and objectivity by the publication's editorial staff.