About Us

About Us

Empowering Insight. Unleashing Infinite Potential.

Welcome to PsychometricLab.com

The online home of the London Psychometric Laboratory (LPL), a world-leading center for advanced psychological theory, practice, and application.

Under the direction of Professor Konstantinos V. Petrides, the Laboratory has pioneered multiple breakthroughs in this challenging field, developing products, technologies, and training that are now implemented worldwide in scientific, medical, industrial, commercial, and governmental sectors.

Here, you’ll find access to cutting-edge tools, research publications, and practical insights on enhancing well-being, leadership, and personal growth across all areas of life, in full alignment with LPL’s core mission: to help individuals discover and realize their limitless nature.

Our Mission

The ultimate aim of the Laboratory and its activities is to help people realize their infinite – totally limitless – potential. This aim concerns any and all individuals who are willing to put the necessary time and effort in order to shed their limited identity and discover their true nature.
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Konstantinos Vassilis Petrides

Konstantinos Vassilis Petrides was born in Thessaloniki, Greece, in 1972. He completed high-school in Anatolia College (Thessaloniki, Greece) and his Bachelor in Business Administration at PACE University in New York City (USA), where he graduated with summa cum laude honors. In his undergraduate degree, he pursued a rounded, multidisciplinary education with particular emphasis on general business management, mathematics, and philosophy. Subsequently, he focused on psychology, statistics, and psychometrics obtaining postgraduate qualifications from the Universities of Exeter (MSc in Psychological Research Methods) and Nottingham (Postgraduate Diploma in Psychology) in the UK before going on to complete a PhD at University College London. In Exeter university, he was taught psychometrics by Professor Paul Kline, the first-ever Professor of Psychometrics in the UK and completed his dissertation in Hans J. Eysenck's lab under the supervision of Dr. Paul Barrett.
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