The theory that frustration often leads to behavior characteristic of a much earlier period of life and was proposed in 1941 by U.S. psychologists Roger G. Barker, Tamara Dembo and Kurt Lewin.
The theory that frustration often leads to behavior characteristic of a much earlier period of life and was proposed in 1941 by U.S. psychologists Roger G. Barker, Tamara Dembo and Kurt Lewin.