VITA – 2007
VITA – 2009
Donn Byrne
Address: Phone and e-mail:
15 Indian Hill Road (518) 768-2643
Feura Bush, NY 12067-2602
VyaDuckDB@
Distinguished Professor Emeritus
Department of Psychology Born: Dec. 19, 1931,
University at Albany in Austin, Texas
State University of New York
Family:
Son
Keven Singleton Byrne
Born: November 6, 1958
in San Francisco, California
West Lafayette High School
Fresno City College, Fresno, California
A.A. in Theater Arts, 1964
Stage Manager, Ball State University, 1970-2005
Event Coordinator, University at Albany, SUNY. 2006-2007
[Died on October 1, 2007, in Feura Bush, New York]
Daughters
Robin Lynn Byrne
Born: December 20, 1963
in Austin, Texas
West Lafayette High School
Indiana University
Bloomington, Indiana
B.S. in Astrophysics; B.A. in Mathematics, 1986
University of Florida
Gainesville, Florida
M.S. in Astronomy, 1989;
M. Ed. in Secondary Math Education, 1992
Associate Professor of Astronomy and Physics
Northeast State Community College
Blountville, Tennessee
(Family continued)
Lindsey Kelley Byrne
Born: October 23, 1982 in Albany, New York
Albany Academy for Girls, Bishop Magin High School,
Ravena-Coeymans-Selkirk High School
Who’s Who among American High School Students, 1998-1999
University at Albany, State University of New York
B.A. in Psychology, 2005
State University of New York – Delhi
Veterinary Science Department, 2006 – 2008
Child Protective Caseworker, Montgomery County
Department of Social Services
Fonda, New York
Rebecka Byrne Kelley
Born: December 31, 1988 in Albany, New York
Albany Academy for Girls
Who’s Who among American High School Students, 2006-2007
Johns Hopkins University, 2007-2009
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Junior Economics Major
Troy, New York
Education:
East Bakersfield High School 1945-1949
Stanford University 1949-1951
Fresno State University 1951-1954
B.A. in Psychology, 1953
M.A. in Psychology, 1956
Stanford University 1954-1958
Ph.D. in Psychology, 1958
Academic Positions:
Instructor, San Francisco State University 1957-1959
Assistant Professor, University of Texas 1959-1962
Associate Professor, University of Texas 1962-1966
Assistant Chair 1964-1966
Visiting Professor, Stanford University 1966-1967
Visiting Professor, University of Hawaii 1968
Professor, University of Texas 1966-1969
Chair, Experimental Personality Program 1963-1969
(Academic Positions continued)
Professor, Purdue University 1969-1979
Chair, Social-Personality Program 1972-1978
Professor, University at Albany, SUNY 1979-1991
Chair, Social-Personality Program 1980-1984
Chair, Department of Psychology 1984-1989
Chair, Social-Personality Program 1989-1999
Distinguished Professor, University at Albany, SUNY 1991-2001
Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University at
Albany, SUNY 2001-
Professional Organizations:
American Psychological Association (Fellow)
Association for Psychological Science (Charter Fellow)
Eastern Psychological Association
Midwestern Psychological Association (Charter Fellow)
Society of Experimental Social Psychology (Fellow)
Society for Personality and Social Psychology (Fellow)
Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality (Fellow)
Offices Held in Professional Organizations:
President, Midwestern Psychological Association
President Elect 1978-1979
President 1979-1980
Past President 1980-1981
President, Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality
President Elect 1990-1991
President 1991-1992
Past President 1992-1993
Editorships:
Editorial and Advisory Boards of Psychological Monographs, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Journal of Research in Personality, Personality: An International Journal, Journal of Applied Social Psychology, Psychonomic Science, Sociometry, Journal of Personality, Memory & Cognition, Motivation and Emotion, Review of Personality and Social Psychology, Annual Review of Sex Research, Journal of Sex Research, and Social Behavior and Personality: An International Journal.
Co-Editor of the Sexual Behavior Series, SUNY Press
1. Abramson, P. R. (1984). Sarah: A sexual biography. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
2. Hatfield, E., & Sprecher, S. (1986). Mirror, mirror…The
Importance of looks in everyday life. Albany, NY: SUNY
Press.
3. Kelley, K. (Ed.). (1987). Females, males, and sexuality.
Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
Miscellaneous Honors:
Program Chair, Southwestern Psychological Association, 1969
Panel Member, N.S.F. Graduate Fellowship Program, National Research Council, 1972
Senator, Faculty of Humanities, Social Science, and Education, Purdue University, 1973-1974
N.I.H. Award, Institute for Sex Research Summer Program, Indiana University, 1974
Invited to present G. Stanley Hall Lecture, American Psychological Association, Los Angeles, 1981
Invited to present State of the Science Address, Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality, New York, 1981
Invited to present Distinguished Research Lecture, University at Albany, SUNY, 1983
Consultant, Attorney General Meese’s Commission on Pornography, U.S. Justice Department, Houston, 1985
Invited to participate in Surgeon General Koop’s Workshop on Pornography and Health, Arlington, Virginia, 1986
Excellence in Research Award, University at Albany, SUNY, 1987
Distinguished Scientific Achievement Award, Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality, Toronto, 1989
Festschrift honoring the scientific contributions of Donn Byrne – Affect, Attraction, and Their Conceptual Children, University of Connecticut, Storrs, 2002.
Listed in Who’s Who in America, Who’s Who in the World, Who’s Who in the 21st Century, American Men and Women of Science, World Who’s Who in Science, Who’s Who in the South and Southwest, Who’s Who in Texas Today, Contemporary Authors, 1970 Creative and Successful Personalities of the World, Dictionary of International Biography, International Scholars Directory, Directory of British and American Writers, Writers Directory, Personalities of the West and Midwest, World Who’s Who of Authors, Community Leaders and
(Miscellaneous Honors continued)
Noteworthy Americans, Who’s Who in the Midwest, International Authors and Writers Who’s Who, Men of Achievement, Who’s Who in Frontier Science and Technology, Who’s Who in American Education, Community Leaders of America, Who’s Who in Medicine and Healthcare, International Who’s Who of Intellectuals, 5,000 Personalities of the World, 2,000 Outstanding People of the 20th Century, Who’s Who in the East, and International Personalities of the Year for 2001.
Invited Colloquia:
1. University of Texas, Austin, May 1959
2. Jarvis Christian College, Hawkins, Texas, March 1963
3. University of Kentucky, Lexington, January 1967
4. Stanford University, Palo Alto, April 1967
5. University of Nevada, Reno, April 1967
6. University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, September 1967
7. University of Hawaii, Honolulu, July 1968
8. University of Southern California, Los Angeles, November 1968
9. Purdue University, West Lafayette, December 1968
10. Kansas State University, Manhattan, April 1969
11. University of South Carolina, Columbia, October 1969
12. Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, May 1970
13. Connecticut College, New London, October 1970
14. Indiana University Medical School, Indianapolis, November
1970
15. University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, November 1970
16. University of Montana, Missoula, May 1971
17. Ohio State University, Columbus, December 1970
18. Indiana University Northwest, Gary, March 1972
19. Lawrence University, Appleton, Wisconsin, May 1972
20. University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, November 1972
21. University of Delaware, Newark, March 1973
22. Taylor University, Upland, Indiana, April 1973
23. Indiana University, Bloomington, September 1973
24. University of Illinois – Chicago Circle, November 1973
25. University of Southern Illinois, Carbondale, April 1974
26. Indiana State University, Terre Haute, January 1975
27. University of Western Ontario, London, January 1975
28. Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana, April 1975
29. Central University of Venezuela, Caracas, February 1976
30. Iowa State University, Ames, March 1976
31. Fordham University, New York, July 1976
(Invited Colloquia continued)
32. Southwest Texas State University, San Marcos, February
1977
33. State University of New York, College at Fredonia, April 1977
34. Planned Parenthood Association, Chicago, November 1977
35. University of Connecticut, Storrs, November 1977
36. Marquette University, Milwaukee, March 1978
37. University of Tulsa, May 1978
38. Planned Parenthood Association, Chicago, September 1978
39. University of Western Ontario, London, November 1978
40. University at Albany, State University of New York, February
1979
41. University of Houston, April 1979
42. University of Dayton, April 1979
43. Adrian College, Adrian, Michigan, April 1979
44. North Adams State College, Massachusetts, April 1979
45. Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, November 1980
46. State University of New York Agricultural and Technical
College, Cobleskill, April 1981
47. Human Services Planning Council, Schenectady, February
1982
48. New York State Museum, Albany, March 1983
49. Albany Medical College, April 1983
50. Union College (Ichabod Spencer Lecture in Psychology),
Schenectady, April 1983
51. Marquette University Power of Imagination Conference,
Arlington, Virginia, May 1983
52. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, October 1983
53. Veterans Administration Hospital, Albany, February 1984
54. Temple University, Philadelphia, January 1985
55. Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, February 1985
56. Syracuse University, March 1985
57. Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia, March 1985
58. College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, April
1985
59. Clarion University, Clarion, Pennsylvania, April 1985
60. Union College, Schenectady, January 1986
61. Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts, September
1986
62. Scripps College (Marion Jane Girard Memorial Lecture),
Claremont, California, April 1987
63. Veterans Administration Hospital, Albany, January 1991
64. College of St. Rose, Albany, March 1993
65. University at Albany, SUNY, Psi Chi, December 1996
66. University of Massachusetts, Amherst, September 2000
Convention Presentations:
1. Radio-TV Guild – San Francisco, May 1959
2. Western Psychological Association – San Francisco, May 1967
3. Southwestern Psychological Association – Galveston, March
1960; Fort Worth, April 1962; Dallas, April 1963; Arlington,
April 1966; New Orleans, April 1968; Austin, April 1969
4. American Psychological Association – New York, August
1961; September 1979; August 1987; St. Louis, September 1962; Philadelphia, August 1963; Los Angeles, September 1964; August, 1981; Washington, September 1969; September 1977; Montreal, August 1973; September 1980;
Chicago, August 1975; Toronto, September 1978; August 1984
5. Psychonomic Society -- St. Louis, October 1968; November
1969; November 1973; Washington, November 1977
6. Midwestern Psychological Association – Cincinnati, May
1970; Detroit, May 1971; May 1981; Cleveland, May 1972; Chicago, May 1973, 1974, 1976, 1977, 1978; St. Louis, May 1980
7. Society of Experimental Social Psychology – Minneapolis,
October 1970; Lawrence, Kansas, October 1972; Champaign-Urbana, October 1974; Princeton, November 1978
8. Inter American Society of Psychology – Bogota, Colombia,
October 1974; Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, June 1981
9. Speech Communication Association – San Francisco,
December 1976
10. International Conference on Love and Attraction – Swamsea.
Wales, September 1977
11. Indiana Psychological Association – Indianapolis, November
1977
12. Association for Behavior Analysis – Dearborn, Michigan, June 1976
13. Eastern Psychological Association – New York, April 1981;
Baltimore, April 1982; Boston, March 1985; April 1989; April, 1995; Arlington, Virginia, April 1987; Philadelphia, April 1996
14. Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality – Philadelphia,
April, 1981, April 1992; New York, November 1981; Chicago, November 1983, June 1985, November 1993; Toronto, November 1989; Minneapolis, November 1990; Kansas City, November 1991; New Orleans, November 1994; San Diego, November 1992
15. International Conference on Authoritarianism – Potsdam,
New York, October 1984
(Convention Presentations continued)
16. Association for Psychological Science – Arlington, Virginia, June1989; Dallas, June 1990
17. International Network of Personal Relationships – Seattle,
June 1996
Grants:
1. Air Force Office of Scientific Research for the study of the
Effect of monotony on aggression (with Philip Worchel), 1960
2. University of Texas Research Institute for the construction and validation of a measure of psychological defenses, 1960
3. University of Texas Research Institute for the study of
attitude similarity and interpersonal attraction, 1960-1961
4. Hogg Foundation for Mental Health for the study of the
relationship between personality characteristics and racial
intolerance, 1961-1962
5. Air Force Office of Scientific Research for the study of
interpersonal attraction and repulsion (with Philip Worchel),
1963-1965
6. National Institute of Mental Health for the study of
interpersonal attraction and reinforcement variables, 1965-1969
7. National Science Foundation for the study of a reinforcement
model of evaluative responses, 1969-1973
8. President’s Commission on Obscenity and Pornography for
the study of the effects of erotic stimuli, 1969-1970
9. National Science Foundation for the study of the implications
of a reinforcement model of evaluative responses, 1973-1974
10. National Science Foundation for the study of the
psychological determinants of contraceptive behavior, 1974-
1977
Books:
1. Lindgren, H.C., & Byrne, D. (1961). Psychology: An introduction
to the study of human behavior. New York: Wiley.
Lindgren, H.C., Byrne, D., & Petrinovich, L. (1966). Psychology:
An introduction to a behavioral science (2nd ed. ). New York: Wiley.
Lindgren, H.C., & Byrne, D. (1971). Psychology: An introduction to a behavioral science (3rd ed. ). New York: Wiley.
(Books continued)
Lindgren, H.C., & Byrne, D. (1975). Psychology: An introduction to a behavioral science (4th ed.). New York: Wiley.
Lindgren, H.C., & Byrne, D. (1977). Psicologia: Tratado sobre las ciencias de la conducta. Barcelona : Editorial Labor, S.A.
Lindgren, H.C., Byrne, D., & Petrinovich, L. (1986). Hsin li hsueh: Hsing wei ko hseuth tao yin. Tipei, Taiwan. Cheng Chung Book Co.
2. Worchel, P., & Byrne, D. (Eds.). (1964). Personality change. New
York: Wiley.
3. Byrne, D. (1966). An introduction to personality: A research
approach. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Byrne, D. (1974). An introduction to personality: Research, theory, and applications (2nd ed. ). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Byrne, D., & Kelley, K. (1981). An introduction to personality (3rd ed. ). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
4. Byrne, D., & Hamilton, M.L. (Eds.). (1965). Personality research:
A book of readings. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
5. Byrne, D. (1971). The attraction paradigm. New York: Academic
Press.
6. Lindgren, H.C., Byrne, D., & Lindgren, F. (Eds.). (1971), Current
research in psychology: A book of readings. New York: Wiley.
7. Baron, R. A., Byrne, D., & Griffitt, W. (1974). Social psychology:
Understanding human interaction. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1977). Social psychology:
Understanding human interaction (2nd ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1981). Social psychology:
Understanding human interaction (3rd ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1984). Social psychology:
Understanding human interaction (4th ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1987). Social psychology:
Understanding human interaction (5th ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
(Books continued)
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1991). Social psychology:
Understanding human interaction (6th ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1994). Social psychology:
Understanding human interaction (7th ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1997). Social psychology (8th ed. ).
Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (2000). Social psychology (9th ed. ).
Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (2003). Social psychology (10th ed. ).
Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (2004). Social psychology (10th ed. ).
A translated collection of famous works in modern psychology. Shanghai: East China Normal University Press.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (2004). Psikologi sosial (10th ed.). Jakarta: Indonesia: Penerbit Urlangga.
Baron, R. A., & Byrne, D. (2005). Psicologia social (10th ed.). Madrid: Pearson Education.
Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Branscombe, N.R. (2006). Social psychology (11th ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., Branscombe, N.R., & Byrne, D. (2008 ). Social psychology (12th ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
8. Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Kantowitz, B.H. (1977). Psychology:
Understanding behavior. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.
Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Kantowitz, B.H. (1980). Psychology:
Understanding behavior. (2nd ed. ). New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Kantowitz, B.H. (1981). Psichologia: Un enfoque conceptual. Mexico City : Nueva Editorial Interamericana.
9. Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Kantowitz, B.H. (1978). Psychology:
Understanding behavior. Concise / basic edition. Philadelphia: W.B. Saunders.
10. Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1979). Exploring social psychology.
Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., & Byrne, D. (1982). Exploring social psychology
(2nd ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Suls, J. (1969). Exploring social psychology (3rd ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Johnson, B.T. (1998), Exploring social psychology (4th ed. ). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Johnson, B.T. (2003). Social psychology: Key ideas (4th ed. ). Moscow: Piter.
11. Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Branscombe, N.R. (2007). Mastering
social psychology. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Baron, R.A., Byrne, D., & Branscombe, N.R. (2009). Mastering social psychology. CHINESE TRADITIONAL language edition published by
Psychological Publishing Company LTD.
12. Byrne, D., & Byrne, L.A. (Eds.). (1977). Exploring human
sexuality. New York: Harper and Row.
13. Byrne, D., & Fisher, W.A. (Eds.). (1983). Adolescence, sex, and contraception. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
14. Byrne, D., & Kelley, K. (Eds.), (1986). Alternative approaches to the study of sexual behavior. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
15. Kelley, K., & Byrne, D. Exploring human sexuality. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
16. Byrne, D. (in preparation). Getting rich (or, at least richer) slowly: Why, when, and how to invest.
Chapters:
1. Byrne, D. (1964). Assessing personality variables and their
alteration. In P. Worchel & D. Byrne (Eds.), Personality change (pp. 38-69). New York: Wiley.
(Chapters continued)
2. Byrne, D. (1964). Repression-sensitization as a dimension of
Personality. Progress in Experimental Personality Research, 1, 169-220.
3. Lindzey, G., & Byrne, D. (1968). Measurement of social choice
and interpersonal attractiveness. In G. Lindzey & E. Aronson (Eds.), Handbook of social psychology (Vol. 2, pp. 452-525). Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.
4. Byrne, D. (1969). Attitudes and attraction. Advances in
Experimental Social Psychology, 4, 35-89.
5. Byrne, D., & Lamberth, J. (1971). Cognitive and reinforcement
theories as complementary approaches to the study of attraction. In B.I.
Murstein (Ed.), Theories of attraction and love (pp. 59-84). New York: Springer.
6. Byrne, D., & Griffitt, W. (1973). Interpersonal attraction. Annual
Review of Psychology, 24, 317-336.
7. Clore, G.L., & Byrne, D. (1974). A reinforcement-affect model of
attraction. In T.L. Huston (Ed.), Foundations of interpersonal attraction (pp. 143-170). New York: Academic Press.
8. Cherry, F., & Byrne, D. (1977). Authoritarianism. In T. Blass (Ed.),
Personality variables in social behavior (pp. 109-133). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
9. Byrne, D. (1977). The imagery of sex. In J. Money & H. Musaph
(Eds.), Handbook of sexology (pp. 327-350). Amsterdam: North Holland.
10. Clore, G.L., & Byrne, D. (1977). The process of personality
interaction. In R.B. Cattell & R.M. Draper (Eds.), Handbook of modern personality theory (pp. 530-548). Washington, DC: Hemisphere.
11. Byrne, D. (1977). Sexual changes in society and in science. In
D. Byrne & L.A. Byrne (Eds.), Exploring human sexuality (pp. 12-23). New York: Harper and Row.
12. Byrne, D., Jazwinski, C., DeNinno, J.A., & Fisher, W.A. (1977).
Negative sexual attitudes and contraception. In D. Byrne & L.A. Byrne
(Eds.), Exploring human sexuality (pp. 331-342). New York: Harper and Row.
(Chapters continued)
13. Bell, P.A., & Byrne, D. (1976). Repression-sensitization. In H. London & J.E. Exner, Jr. (Eds.), Dimensions of personality (pp. 449-485). New York: Wiley.
14. Byrne, D. (1979). Sexual attitudes and contraceptive practices. In M. Cook & G. Wilson (Eds.), Love and attraction: An international conference (pp. 301-307). New York: Pergamon.
15. Fisher, W.A., & Byrne, D. (1981). Social background, attitudes, and sexual attraction. In M. Cook (Ed.), The bases of human sexual attraction (pp. 23-63). London: Academic Press.
16. Przybyla, D.P.J., & Byrne, D. (1981). Human sexual relationships. In S. Duck & G. Gilmour (Eds.), Personal relationships 1: Studying personal relationships (pp. 109-130). London: Academic Press.
17. Byrne, D. (1982). Predicting human sexual behavior. The
G. Stanley Hall Lecture Series, 2, 107-254.
18. Kelley, K., & Byrne, D. (1983). Assessment of sexual
responding: Arousal, affect, and behavior. In J. Cacioppo & R. Petty (Eds.), Social psychophysiology (pp. 467-490). New York: Guilford.
19. Przybyla, D.P.J., Byrne, D., & Kelley, K. (1983). The role of imagery in sexual behavior. In A.A. Sheikh (Ed.), Imagery: Current theory, research, and application (pp. 436-467). New York: Wiley.
20. Byrne, D. (1983). Sex without contraception. In D. Byrne & W.A. Fisher (Eds.), Adolescents, sex, and contraception (pp. 3-31). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
21. Fisher, W.A., Byrne, D., & White, L.A. (1983). Emotional barriers to contraception. In D. Byrne & W.A. Fisher (Eds.), Adolescents, sex, and contraception (pp. 207-239). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
22. Byrne, D. (1983). The antecedents, correlates, and consequences of erotophobia-erotophilia. In C.M. Davis (Ed.), Challenges in sexual science (pp. 53-75). Philadelphia: Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality.
23. Byrne, D., & Kelley, K. (1984). The role of case histories in psychosexology. In P.R. Abramson, Sarah: A sexual biography (pp. 1-12). Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
(Chapteers continued)
24. Byrne, D., & Kelley, K. (1984). Pornography and sex research.
In N.M. Malamuth & E. Donnerstein (Eds.),Pornography and sexual aggression (pp. 1-15). New York: Academic Press.
25. Byrne, D. (1986). The study of sexual behavior as a multidisciplinary venture. In D. Byrne & K. Kelley (Eds.), Alternative approaches to the study of sexual behavior (pp. 1-12). Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
26. Byrne, D., & Murnen, S.K. (1988). Maintaining loving relationships. In R.J. Sternberg & M.L. Barnes (Eds.), The psychology of love (pp. 293-310). New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
27. Smeaton, G., & Byrne, D. (1988). The Feelings Scale: Positive and negative affective responses. In C.M. Davis, W.L. Yarber, & S.L.Davis (Eds.), Sexually related measures: A compendium (pp. 88-90). Lake Mills, IA: Graphic Printing.
28. Byrne, D., & Kelley, K. (1989). Basing legislative action on research data: Prejudice, prudence, and empirical limitations. In D. Zillman & J. Bryant (Eds.), Pornography: Research advances and policy considerations (pp. 363-385). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
29. Byrne, D., & Schulte, L. (1990). Personality dispositions as mediators of sexual responses. Annual Review of Sex Research, 1, 93-117.
30. Byrne, D., & Neuman, J.H. (1992). The implications of attraction research for organizational issues. In K. Kelley (Ed.), Issues, theory, and research in industrial/organizational psychology (pp. 29-70). Amsterdam: North Holland.
31. Hogben, M., Byrne, D., & Hamburger, M.E. (1996). Coercive heterosexual sexuality in dating relationships of college students: Implications of differential male-female relationships. In E.S. Byers & L.F. O’Sullivan (Eds.), Sexual coercion in dating relationships (pp. 69-78). New York: Haworth.
32. Byrne, D. (1997). Why would anyone conduct research on sexual behavior? In G.G. Brannigan, E.R. Allgeier, & A.R. Allgeier (Eds.), The sex scientists (pp. 15-30). New York: Addison Wesley Longman.
(Chapters continued)
33. Byrne, D., & Smeaton, G. (1998). The Feelings Scale: Positive and negative affective responses. In C.M. Davis, W.L. Yarber, R. Bauseman, G. Schreer, & S.L. Davis (Eds.), Handbook of sexuality-related measures (pp. 50-52). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.
34. Byrne, D., & Osland, J. A. (2000). Sexual fantasy and erotica/pornography: Internal and external imagery. In L.T. Szuchman & F. Muscarella (Eds.), Psychological perspectives on human sexuality (pp. 283-305). New York: Wiley.
35. Hogben, M., Byrne, D., McGowan, S., & Hamburger, M.E. (2002). From conversation to construct: Development of legitimized aggression in the psychological domain. In S.P, Shohov (Ed.). Advances in psychology research, Vol. 11 (pp. 153-181). Binghamton, NY: Nova Science Publishers.
36. Byrne, D. (2003). Interpersonal dissimilarity as an initiator of fear and anger: Reasons that once enhanced reproductive success now facilitate interpersonal hate and violence. In M.E. Sutherland, B. Mathies, & C.A. Bailey (Eds.), Psychology and Caribbean development. Kingston, Jamaica: Ian Randle Press.
Articles Reprinted in Books of Readings:
1. Byrne, D., & Holcomb, J. The reliability of a response measure:
Differential recognition-threshold scores.
In W.L. Barnette, Jr, (Ed.). (1964). Readings in psychological
tests and measurements. Homewood, IL: Dorsey.
In D. Byrne & M.L. Hamilton (Eds.). (1966). Personality
Research: A book of readings. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-
Hall.
2. Byrne, D. Anxiety and the experimental arousal of affiliation
need.
In R.N. Haber (Ed.). (1965). Research in motivation. New York:
Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
(Articles Reprinted in Books of Readings continued)
3. Byrne, D. Parental antecedents of authoritarianism.
In D. Byrne & M.L. Hamilton (Eds.). (1966). Personality research: A book of readings. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
In H.C. Lindgren (Ed.). (1969). Contemporary research in social psychology. New York: Wiley.
4. Byrne, D. The effect of a subliminal food stimulus on verbal responses.
In E.A. Fleishman (Ed.). (1967). Studies in personnel and industrial psychology. Homewood, IL: Dorsey.
5. Byrne, D. Interpersonal attraction and attitude similarity.
In J.A. Dyal (Ed.). (1967). Readings in social psychology: Understanding human behavior (2nd ed.).New York: McGraw-Hill.
In W.A. Lesko (Ed.). (1991). Readings in social psychology: General, classic, and contemporary selections. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
In W.A. Lesko (Ed.). (1994). Readings in social psychology: General, classic, and contemporary selections (2nd ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
6. Byrne, D., & Lindgren, H.C. Interpreting research in educational psychology.
In H.C. Lindgren (Ed.). (1968). Readings in educational psychology. New York: Wiley.
In H.C. Lindgren & F. Lindgren (Eds.). (1971). Current readings
in educational psychology (2nd ed.). New York: Wiley.
7. Byrne, D., & Sheffield, J. Response to sexually arousing stimuli as a function of repressing and sensitizing defenses.
In H.C. Lindgren (Ed.). (1969). Readings in personal development. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold.
(Articles Reprinted in Books of Readings continued)
8. Byrne, D., & McGraw, C. Interpersonal attraction toward
Negroes.
In H.C. Lindgren (Ed.). (1969). Contemporary research in social
psychology. New York: Wiley.
In H.C. Lindgren (Ed.). (1973). Contemporary research in social
psychology. (2nd ed.). New York: Wiley.
9. Byrne, D. Interpersonal attraction as a function of affiliation
need and attitude similarity.
In J.C. Mancuso (Ed.). (1970). Readings for a cognitive theory of
personality. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
10. Byrne, D. The Repression-Sensitization Scale: Rationale,
reliability, and validity.
In W.S. Sahakian (Ed.). (1970). Psychopathology today. Itasca,
IL: Peacock.
In W.G. Dahlstrom & L. Dahlstrom (Eds.). (1980). Basic
readings on the MMPI: A new selection on personality
measurement. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
11. Byrne, D., & Griffitt, W. Similarity versus liking: A clarification.
In J. Crandall (Ed.). (1970). Facets of psychology. New York:
Simon and Schuster.
12. Byrne, D., & Nelson, D. Attaction as a liner function of
proportion of positive reinforcements.
In E. McGinnies & C.B. Ferster (Eds.). (1971), The
reinforcement of social behavior. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
In C.A. Insko & J. Schopler (Eds.). (1972), Experimental social
psychology: Text with illustrative readings. New York:
Academic Press.
In XIP readings in psychology. (1973). Lexington, MA: Xerox
College Publishing.
(Articles Reprinted in Books of Readings continued)
In E. Aronson & A.R. Pratkanis (Eds.). (1993). Social psychology.
(Vol. 3). New York: New York University Press.
In D. Eckenman (Ed.). (1996). Psychology lab manual. Dubuque,
IA: Kendall/Hunt.
13. Golightly, C., & Byrne, D. Attitude statements as positive and
negative reinforcements.
In E. McGinnies & C.B. Ferster (Eds.). (1971). The reinforcement
of social behavior: Selected readings. Boston: Houghton
Mifflin.
14. Byrne, D. & Rhamey, R. Magnitude of positive and negative
reinforcements as a determinant of attraction.
In R.M. Liebert & R.A. Baron (Eds.). (1971). Human social
behavior: A contemporary view of experimental research.
Homewood, IL: Dorsey.
In Readings. Lexington, MA: Ginn Custom Publishing.
15. Byrne, D., Bond, M.H., & Diamond, M.J. Response to political
candidates as a function of attitude similarity-dissimilarity.
In H.C. Lindgren, D. Byrne, & F. Lindgren (Eds.). (1971).
Current research in psychology: A book of readings. New
York: Wiley.
In J.H. Hamsher & H. Sigall (Eds.). (1973). Psychology and
social issues. New York: MacMillan.
16. Byrne, D., Ervin, C.R., & Lamberth, J. Continuity between the
experimental study of attraction and real-life computer dating.
In A. Snakowsky (Ed.). (1972). Social psychology research:
Laboratory-field relationships. New York: Free Press.
In S. Duck (Ed.). (1977). Theory and practice in interpersonal
attraction. London: Academic Press.
In C. Mayo & M. LaFrance (Eds.). (1977). Evaluating research
in social psychology. Monterey, CA: Brooks/Cole.
(Articles Reprinted in Books of Readings continued)
In D. Byrne & L.A. Byrne (Eds.). (1977). Exploring human
sexuality. New York: Harper and Row.
In Readings. Lexington, MA: Ginn Custom Publishing.
In H.T. Reis & C. Rusbult (Eds.). (2004). Key readings in close
relationships. New York: Psychology Press.
17. Griffitt, W., & Byrne, D. Procedures in the paradigmatic study
of attitude similarity and attraction.
In W.S. Sahakian (Ed.). (1972). Social psychology:
Experimentation, theory, research. Scranton, PA: Intext
Educational Publishing.
18. Byrne, D. Learning from Andy Hardy.
In L. Gross (Ed.) (1974). Sexual behavior. Flushing, NY:
Spectrum.
19. Mitchell, H.E. & Byrne, D. The defendant’s dilemma: Effect of
jurors’ attitudes and authoritarianism on judicial decisions.
In T. Blass (Ed.). (1976). Contemporary social psychology:
Representative readings. Itasca, IL: Peacock.
20. Spellman, C.M., Baskett, G.D., & Byrne, D. Manifest anxiety as
a contributing factor in religious conversion.
In H.N. Malony (Ed.). (1977). Current perspectives in the
psychology of religion. Grand Rapids, MI: William B.
Eerdmans.
21. Byrne, D., Fisher, J.D., Lamberth, J., & Mitchell, H.E.
Evaluations of erotica: Facts or feelings?
In D. Byrne & L.A. Byrne (Eds.). (1977), Exploring human
sexuality. New York: Harper and Row.
22. Byrne, D. The imagery of sex.
In D. Byrne & L.A. Byrne (Eds.). (1977). Exploring Human
sexuality. New York: Harper and Row.
(Articles Reprinted in Books of Readings continued)
In C. Gustavson (Ed.). (1980). Reader. Lexington, MA: Ginn
Custom Publishing.
23. Byrne, D. A pregnant pause in the sexual revolution.
In J.R. Barbour (Ed.). (1980). Human sexuality 80/81. Guilford,
CT: Dushkin.
24. Fisher, J.D., & Byrne, D. Too close for comfort.
In J.W. Reich (Ed.). (1982). Experimenting in society. Chicago:
Scott Foresman.
25. Smeaton, G., Byrne, D., & Murnen, S.K. The repulsion
hypothesis revisited: Similarity irrelevance or dissimilarity bias?
In W.A. Lesko (Ed.). (1991). Readings in social psychology: general, classic, and contemporary selections. Boston: Allyn
& Bacon.
26. Byrne, D. The transition from controlled laboratory
experimentation to less controlled settings. Surprise! Additional variables are operative.
In W.A. Lesko (Ed.). (1997). Readings in social psychology:
General, classic, and contemporary selections (3rd ed.). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
27. Byrne, D., Golightly, C., & Capaldi, E.J. Construction and
validation of the Food Attitude Scale.
In M. Bolt (Ed.). (1998). Instructor’s resources. New York: Worth.
28. Fisher, W.A., Byrne, D., White, L.A., & Kelley, K. Erotophobia-
erotophilia as a dimension of personality.
In M. Bolt (Ed.). (1998). Instructor’s resources. New York:
Worth.
(Articles Reprinted in Books of Readings continued)
29. Byrne, D. An overview (and underview) of research and theory
within the attraction paradigm.
In W.A. Lesko (Ed.). (2000). Readings in social psychology: General, classic, and contemporary selections. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
In S. Duck & W. Dragon (Eds.). (2008). The human relationships reader. London: Sage.
In M.L. Knapp & J.A. Daly (Eds.) (2010). Interpersonal communication. London: SAGE.
Articles:
1. Byrne, D., & Buehler, J.A. ( 1955). A note on the influence of propinquity upon acquaintanceships. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 51, 147-148.
2. Byrne, D. (1956). The relationship between humor and the expression of hostility. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 53, 84-89.
3. Byrne, D. (1958). Drive level, response to humor, and the cartoon sequence effect. Psychological Reports, 4, 439-442.
4. Byrne, D. (1959). The effect of a subliminal food stimulus on verbal responses. Journal of Applied Psychology, 43, 249-252.
5. Byrne, D. (1961). Some inconsistencies in the effect of motivation arousal in humor preferences. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 62, 158-160.
6. Byrne, D., Terrill, J., & McReynolds, P. (1961). Incongruency as a predictor of response to humor. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 62, 435-438.
7. Byrne, D. (1961). The influence of propinquity and opportunities for interaction on classroom relationships. Human Relations, 14, 63-69.
8. Byrne, D. (1961). The Repression-Sensitization Scale: Rationale, reliability, and validity. Journal of Personality, 29, 334-349.
(Articles continued)
9. Byrne, D. (1961). Interpersonal attraction and attitude similarity. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 62, 713-715.
10. Byrne, D. (1961). Anxiety and the experimental arousal of
affiliation need. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology,
63, 660-662.
11. Byrne, D. (1961). Interpersonal attraction as a function of
affiliation need and attitude similarity. Human Relations, 14,
283-289.
12. Byrne, D., & Holcomb, J. (1962). The reliability of a response
Measure: Differential recognition threshold scores.
Psychological Bulletin, 59, 70-73.
13. Byrne, D. (1962). Response to attitude similarity as a function
of affiliation need. Journal of Personality, 30, 164-177.
14. Byrne, D., & Wong, T.J. (1962). Racial prejudice,
interpersonal attraction, and assumed dissimilarity of
attitudes. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 63,
246-253.
15. Byrne, D., McDonald, R.D., & Mikawa, J. (1963). Approach and
avoidance affiliation motives. Journal of Personality, 31, 21-37.
16. Byrne, D., Golightly, C., & Capaldi, E.J. (1963). Construction
and validation of the Food Attitude Scale. Journal of Consulting
Psychology, 27, 215-222.
17. Byrne, D., Barry, J., & Nelson, D. (1963). The relation of the
revised Repression- Sensitization Scale to measures of self-
description. Psychological Reports, 13, 323-334.
18. Byrne, D., & Blaylock, B. (1963). Similarity and assumed
similarity of attitudes among husbands and wives. Journal of
Abnormal and Social Psychology, 67, 635-640.
19. Byrne, D., & McGraw, C. (1964). Interpersonal attraction
toward Negroes. Human Relations, 17, 201-213.
20. Byrne, D., & Nelson, D. (1964). Attraction as a function of
attitude similarity-dissimilarity: The effect of topic
importance. Psychonomic Science, 1, 93-94.
(Articles continued)
21. Byrne, D., & Bounds, C. The reversal of F Scale items.
Psychological Reports, 14, 216.
22. Byrne, D., & Andres, D. (1964). Prejudice and interpersonal
expectancies. Journal of Negro Education, 33, 441-445.
23. Byrne, D. (1964), Child-rearing antecedents of repression-
sensitization. Child Development, 35, 1033-1039.
24. Golightly, C., & Byrne, D. (1964). Attitude statements as
positive and negative reinforcements. Science, 146, 798-
799.
25. Byrne, D. (1965). Authoritarianism and response to attitude
similarity-dissimilarity. Journal of Social Psychology, 66,
251-256.
26. Byrne, D. (1965). Parental antecedents of authoritarianism.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1, 369-373.
27. Byrne, D., & Nelson, D. Attraction as a linear function of
proportion of positive reinforcements. Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology, 1, 659-663.
28. Golightly, C., Byrne, D., & Capaldi, E.J. (1965). The
publication of psychological research among Ph.D.-granting
institutions: 1952-1961. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 20, 87-
95.
29. Byrne, D., & Sheffield, J. (1965). Response to sexually
arousing stimuli as a function of repressing and sensitizing
defenses. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 70, 114-118.
30. Byrne, D., Golightly, C., & Sheffield, J. (1965). The
Repression-Sensitization Scale as a measure of adjustment:
Relationship with the CPI. Journal of Consulting Psychology,
29, 586-589.
31. Byrne, D., & Rhamey, R. (1965). Magnitude of positive and
negative reinforcements as a determinant of attraction.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2, 884-889.
32. Byrne, D., & Nelson, D. (1965). The effect of topic
importance and attitude similarity-dissimilarity on
attraction in a multi-stranger design. Psychonomic Science,
3, 449-450
(Articles continued)
33. Worchel, P., Byrne, D., & Young, R.K. (1966). Evaluation of
an obstacle detector for the blind. Journal of Applied
Psychology, 50, 225-228.
34. Byrne, D., Nelson, D., & Reeves, K. (1966). Effects of
consensual validation and invalidation on attraction as a
function of verifiability. Journal of Experimental Social
Psychology, 2, 98-107.
35. Byrne, D., Blaylock, B., & Goldberg, J. (1966). Dogmatism
and defense mechanisms. Psychological Reports, 18, 739-
742.
36. Byrne, D., Clore, G.L., & Worchel, P. (1966). The effect of
economic similarity-dissimilarity on interpersonal attraction. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 4,
220-224.
37. Byrne, D., Griffitt, W., & Golightly, C. (1966). Prestige as a
factor in determining the effect of attitude similarity-
dissimilarity on attraction. Journal of Personality, 34, 434-
444.
38. Byrne, D, Young, R.K., & Griffitt, W. (1966). The
reinforcement properties of attitude statements. Journal of
Experimental Research in Personality, 1, 266-276.
39. Byrne, D., & Griffitt, W. (1966). A developmental
investigation of the law of attraction. Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology, 4, 699-702.
40. Byrne, D., & London, O. (1966). Primacy-recency and the
sequential presentation of attitudinal stimuli. Psychonomic
Science, 6, 193-194.
41. Byrne, D. & Griffitt, W. (1966). Similarity versus liking: A
clarification. Psychonomic Science, 6, 295-296.
42. Sheffield, J., & Byrne, D. (1967). Attitude similarity-
dissimilarity, authoritarianism, and interpersonal
attraction. Journal of Social Psychology, 71, 117-123.
(Articles continued)
43. Byrne, D., Griffitt, W., & Stefaniak, D. (1967). Attraction
and similarity of personality characteristics. Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology, 5, 82-90.
44. Byrne, D., Clore, G.L., & Griffitt, W. (1967). Response
discrepancy versus attitude similarity as determinants of attraction. Psychonomic Science, 7, 397-398.
45. Byrne, D., & Clore, G.L. (1967). Effectance arousal and
attraction. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 6, No. 4 (Whole No. 638).
46. Byrne, D., Steinberg, M.A., & Schwartz, M.S. (1968). The
relationship between repression-sensitization and physical illness. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 72, 154-155.
47. Byrne, D., London, O., & Reeves, K. (1968). The effect of
physical attractiveness, sex, and attitude similarity on interpersonal attraction. Journal of Personality, 36, 259-271.
48. Byrne, D., London, O. & Griffitt, W. (1968). The effect of
topic importance and attitude similarity-dissimilarity on attraction in an intrastranger design. Psychonomic Science, 11, 303-304.
49. Byrne, D., Grifffitt, W. & Clore, G.L. (1968). Attitudinal
reinforcement effects as a function of stimulus homogeneity-heterogeneity. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 7, 962-964.
50. Bond, M. H., Byrne, D., & Diamond. M.J. (1968). Effect of
occupation on attraction as a function of assumed similarity of attitudes. Psychological Reports, 23, 1167-1172.
51. Byrne, D., Griffitt, W., Hudgins, W., & Reeves, K. (1969).
attitude similarity-dissimilarity and attraction: Generality beyond the college sophomore. Journal of Social Psychology, 79, 155-161.
52. Byrne, D., Bond, M.H., & Diamond, M.J. (1969). Response tp
political candidates as a function of attitude similarity-dissimilarity. Human Relations, 22, 251-262.
(Articles continued)
53. Byrne, D., & Griffitt, W. (1969). Similarity and awareness of
similarity of personality characteristics as determinants of
attraction. Journal of Experimental Research in Personality, 3, 179-186.
54. Byrne, D., Lamberth, J., Palmer, J. & London, O. (1969).
Sequential effects as a function of explicit and implicit interpolated attraction responses. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 13, 70-78.
55. Byrne, D., & Ervin, C.R. (1969). Attraction toward a Negro
stranger as a function of prejudice, attitude similarity, and the stranger’s evaluation of the subject. Human Relations, 22, 397-404.
56. Byrne, D., & Clore, G.L. (1970). A reinforcement model of
evaluative responses. Personality: An international Journal, 1, 103-128.
57. Palmer, J., & Byrne, D. (1970). Attraction toward dominant
and submissive strangers: Similarity versus complementarity. Journal of Experimental Research in Personality, 4, 108-115.
58. Sachs, D.H., & Byrne, D. (1970). Differential conditioning of
evaluative responses to neutral stimuli through association with attitude statements. Journal of Experimental Research in Personality, 4, 181-185.
59. Griffitt, W., & Byrne, D. (1970). Procedures in the
paradigmatic study of attitude similarity and attraction.
Representative Research in Social Psychology, 1, 33-48.
60. Byrne, D., Ervin, C.R., & Lamberth, J. (1970). Continuity
between the experimental study of attraction and real-life computer dating. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 16, 157-165.
61. Spellman, C.M., Baskett, G.D., & Byrne, D. (1971). Manifest
anxiety as a contributing factor in religious conversion. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 36, 245-247.
(Articles continued)
62. Lamberth, J., & Byrne, D. Similarity-attraction or demand
characteristics? Personality: An International Journal, 2,
77-91.
63. Byrne, D., Gouaux, C., Griffitt, W., Lamberth, J., Murakawa,
N., Prasad, M.B., Prasad, A., & Ramirez, M.III. (1971). The ubiquitous relationship: Attitude similarity and attraction: A cross-cultural study. Human Relations, 24, 201-207.
64. Byrne, D., Baskett, G.D., & Hodges, L.A. (1971). Behavioral
indicators of interpersonal attraction. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 1, 137-149.
65. Byrne, D. (1971). Can Wright be wrong? Let me count the
ways. Representative Research in Social Psychology, 2, 12-18.
66. Schwartz, M.S., Krupp, N.E., & Byrne. (1971). Repression-
sensitization and medical diagnosis. Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 78, 286-291.
67. Singh, R., & Byrne, D. (1971). Cognitive certainty and
affective neutrality as a function of stimulus homogeneity-heterogeneity. Psychonomic Science, 25, 207-208.
68. Hodges, L.A., & Byrne, D. (1972). Verbal dogmatism as a
potentiator of intolerance. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 21, 312-317.
69. Golightly, C., Huffman, D.M., & Byrne, D. (1972). Liking and
loaning. Journal of Applied Psychology, 56, 521-523.
70. Mitchell, H.E., & Byrne, D. (1973). The defendant’s dilemma:
Effects of jurors’ attitudes and authoritarianism. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 25, 123-129.
71. Allgeier, A.R., & Byrne, D. (1973). Attraction toward the
opposite sex as a determinant of physical proximity. Journal of Social Psychology, 90, 213-219.
72. Byrne, D., Clore, G.L., Griffitt, W., Lamberth, J., & Mitchell,
H.E. (1973). When research paradigms converge: Confrontation or integration? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 28, 313-320.
(Articles continued)
73. Byrne, D., Clore, G.L., Griffitt, W., Lamberth, J., & Mitchell,
H.E. (1973), One more time. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 28, 323-324.
74. Byrne, D., Cherry, F., Lamberth, J., & Mitchell, H.E. (1973).
Husband-wife similarity in response to erotic stimuli. Journal of Personality, 41, 385-394.
75. Bleda, P.R., Bell, P,A., & Byrne, D. (1973). Prior induced
affect and sex differences in attraction. Memory & Cognition, 1, 435-438.
76. Byrne, D., Fisher, J.D., Lamberth, J., & Mitchell, H.E. (1974). Evaluations of erotica: Facts or feelings? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 29, 111-116.
77. Singh, R., Byrne, D., Gupta, N.C., & Clouser, M. (1974).
Informational set size as a determinant of interpersonal judgment in a between subjects design. Representative Research in Social Psychology, 5, 17-25.
78. Byrne, D., Lamberth, J., Mitchell, H.E., & Winslow, L. (1974).
Sex differences in attraction: Response to the needs of the
opposite sex. Journal of Social and Economic Studies, 2,
79-86.
79. Byrne, D., Rasche, L., & Kelley, K. (1974). When “I like you”
indicates disagreement: An experimental differentiation of
information and affect. Journal of Research in Personality,
8, 207-217.
80. Moss, M.K., Byrne, D., Baskett, G.D. , & Sachs, D.H.
(1975). Informational versus affective determinants of
interpersonal attraction. Journal of Social Psychology, 95,
39-53.
81. Byrne, D., Allgeier, A.R., Winslow, L., & Buckman, J.
(1975). The situational facilitation of interpersonal
attraction: A three- factor hypothesis. Journal of Applied
Social Psychology, 5, 1-15.
82. Fisher, J.D., & Byrne, D. (1975). Too close for comfort:
Sex differences in response to invasions of personal space.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 32, 15-21.
(Articles continued)
83. Cherry, F., Byrne, D., & Mitchell, H.E. (1976). Clogs in the
Bogus pipeline: Demand characteristics and social
desirability. Journal of Research in Personality, 10, 69-75.
84. Bleda, P.R., Bleda, S.E., Byrne, D., & White, L.A. (1976).
When a bystander becomes an accomplice: Situational
determinants of reactions to dishonesty. Journal of
Experimental Social Psychology, 12, 9-25.
85. Kelley, K., & Byrne, D. (1976), Attraction and altruism:
With a little help from my friends. Journal of Research
in Personality, 10, 59-68.
86. Krivonos, P.D., Byrne, D., & Friedrich, G.W. (1976). The
effect of attitude similarity on task performance.
Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 6, 307-313.
87. Kelley, K., & Byrne, D. (1977). Strength of instigation
as a determinant of the aggression-attraction
relationship. Motivation and Emotion, 1, 29-38.
88. Schonemann, P.H., Byrne, D., & Bell, P.A. (1977).
Statistical aspects of a model for interpersonal
attraction. Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society, 9, 243-
246.
89. Byrne, D. (1977). Social psychology and the study of
sexual behavior. Personality and Social Psychology
Bulletin, 3, 3-30.
90. Fisher, W.A., Fisher, J.D., & Byrne, D. (1977). Consumer
reactions to contraceptive purchasing. Personality and
Social Psychology Bulletin, 3, 293-296.
91. Byrne, D. (1977). Interpersonal attraction: Do we know
anything and are we going anywhere? Interamerican
Journal of Psychology, 11, 48-55.
92. Byrne, D., & Cherry, F. (1978). A plumber’s friend in need
is a plumber’s friend indeed. Journal of Research in
Personality, 12, 193-196.
(Articles continued)
93. Fisher, W.A., & Byrne, D. (1978). Sex differences in
response to erotica? Love versus lust. Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology, 36, 119-125.
94. Fisher, W.A., & Byrne, D. (1978). Individual differences
In affective, evaluative, and behavioral responses to an
erotic film. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 8, 355-
365.
95. Kelley, K., & Byrne, D. (1978). The function of imaginative
fantasies in sexual behavior. Journal of Mental Imagery,
2, 139-146.
96. Byrne, D. (1978), Separation, integration, or parallel play?
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 4, 498-499.
97. Jazwinski, C., & Byrne, D. (1978). The effect of a
contraceptive theme on response to erotica. Motivation
and Emotion, 2, 287-297.
98. Allgeier, A.R., Byrne, D., Brooks, B., & Revnes, D. (1979).
The waffle phenomenon: Negative evaluation of those who
shift attitudinally. Journal of Applied Social Psychology,
9, 170-182.
99. Byrne, D. (1979). The people glut: Societal problems and
the sexual behavior of individuals. Journal of Sex
Research, 15, 1-5.
100. Fisher, W.A., Byrne, D., Edmunds, M., Miller, C.T.,
Kelley, K., & White, L.A. (1979). Psychological and
situation-specific correlates of contraceptive behavior
among university women. Journal of Sex Research, 15,
38-55.
101. Fisher, W.A., Miller, C.T., Byrne, D., & White, L.A.
(1980). Talking dirty: Responses to communicating a
sexual message as a function of situational and
personality factors. Basic and Applied Social Psychology,
1, 115-126.
(Articles continued)
102. Miller, C.T., Byrne, D., & Fisher, W.A. (1980). Order
effects on responses to sexual stimuli by males and
females. Journal of Sex Research, 16, 131-147.
103. Byrne, D., & Przybyla, D.P.J. (1980). Authoritarianism
and political preferences in 1980. Bulletin of the
Psychonomic Society, 16, 471-472.
104. Kelley, K., Pilchowicz, E., & Byrne, D. (1981). Response
of males to female-initiated dates. Bulletin of the
Psychonomic Society, 17, 195-196.
105. Miller, C.T., & Byrne, D. (1981). Effects of dominance
cues on attributions of sexual behavior. Journal of
Research in Personality, 15, 135-146.
106. Mitchell, H.E., & Byrne, D. (1982). Minimizing the
influence of irrelevant factors in the courtroom: The
defendant’s character, judge’s instructions, and
authoritarianism. In K.M. White & J.C. Speisman (Eds.).
Research approaches to personality (pp. 174-183).
Monterey, CA: Brooks/Cole.
107. Lipson, A.L., Przybyla, D.P.J., & Byrne,D. (1983).
Physical attractiveness, self-awareness, and mirror-
gazing behavior. Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society,
21, 115-116.
108. Kelley, K., Miller, C.T., Byrne, D., & Bell, P.A. (1983).
Facilitating sexual arousal via anger, aggression, or
dominance. Motivation and Emotion, 7, 191-202.
109. Kelley, K., Byrne, D., & Baldwin-Pietak, B. (1983).
Hiring decisions versus interpersonal attraction
toward applicant: Qualifications, similarity, and
evaluator authoritarianism. Academic Psychology
Bulletin, 5, 389-396.
110. Przybyla, D.P.J., & Byrne, D. (1984). The mediating role
of cognitive processes in self-reported sexual arousal.
Journal of Research in Personality, 18, 95-107.
(Articles continued)
111. Becker, M.A., & Byrne, D. (1984). Type A behavior and
Daily activities of young married couples. Journal of
Applied Social Psychology, 14, 82-88.
112. Aguero, J.E., Bloch, L., & Byrne, D. (1984). The
relationships among sexual beliefs, attitudes,
experience, and homophobia. Journal of
Homosexuality, 10, 95-107.
113. Becker, M.A., & Byrne, D. (1985). Self-regulated
exposure to erotica, recall errors, and subjective
reactions as a function of erotophobia and Type A
coronary-prone behavior. Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, 48, 760-767.
114. Kelley, K., Byrne, D., Przybyla, D.P.J., Eberly, C.C.,
Eberly, B.W., Greendlinger, V., Wan, C.K., & Gorsky, J.
(1985). Chronic self-destructiveness :
conceptualization , measurement, and initial validation
of the construct. Motivation and Emotion, 9, 135-151.
115. Miller, A., & Byrne, D. (1985). Husband and wife
arousal in response to erotica and marital adjustment.
KACD Journal, 5, 4-12.
116. Byrne, D., Clore, G.L., & Smeaton, G. (1986). The
attraction hypothesis: Do similar attitudes affect
anything? Journal of Personality and Social
Psychology, 51, 1167-1170.
117. Greendlinger, V., & Byrne, D. (1987), Coercive
sexual fantasies of college men as predictors of self-
reported likelihood to rape and overt sexual
aggression. Journal of Sex Research, 23, 1-11.
118. Kelley, K., Smeaton, G., Byrne, D., Przybyla, D.P.J., &
Fisher, W.A. (1987). Sexual attitudes and
contraception among females across five college
samples. Human Relations, 40, 237-254.
(Articles continued)
119. Smeaton, G., & Byrne, D. (1987). The effects of
R-rated violence and erotica, individual differences,
and victim characteristics on acquaintance rape
proclivity. Journal of Research in Personality, 21, 171-
184.
120. Przybyla, D.P.J., Byrne, D., & Allgeier, E.R. (1988).
Sexual attitudes as correlates of sexual details in
human figure drawing. Archives of Sexual Behavior,
17, 99-105.
121. Fisher, W.A., Byrne, D. White, L.A., & Kelley, K.
(1988). Erotophobia-erotophilia as a dimension of
personality. Journal of Sex Research, 25, 123-151.
122. Becker, M.A., & Byrne, D. (1988). Type A behavior,
distraction, and sexual arousal. Journal of Social
and Clinical Psychology, 6, 472-481,
123. Smeaton, G., Byrne, D., & Murnen, S.K. (1989). The
revulsion hypothesis revisited: Similarity irrelevance
or dissimilarity bias? Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, 56, 54-59.
124. McCaffrey, R.J., Nelles, W.B., & Byrne, D. (1989).
Criteria for tenure and promotion in doctoral
programs in psychology: Perceptions of departmental
chairs and heads. Bulletin of the Psychonomic
Society, 27, 77-80.
125. Murnen, S.K., Perot, A., & Byrne, D. (1989). Coping
with unwanted sexual activity: Normative responses,
situational determinants, and individual differences.
Journal of Sex Research, 26, 85-106.
126. Byrne, D. (1990). Research and social psychology.
Contemporary Social Psychology, 14, 28-32.
127. Murnen, S.K., & Byrne, D. (1991. Hyperfemininity:
Measurement and initial validation of the construct.
Journal of Sex Research, 28, 479-489.
(Articles continued)
128. Byrne, D. (1991). Perspectives on research classics:
This ugly duckling has yet to become a swan.
Contemporary Social Psychology,15, 84-85.
129. Byrne, D., & Kelley, K. (1992). Differential age
preferences: The need to test evolutionary versus
alternative conceptualizations. Behavioral and Brain
Sciences,15, 96.
130. Byrne, D. (1992). The transition from controlled
laboratory experimentation to less controlled
settings. Surprise! Additional variables are operative.
Communication Monographs, 59, 190-198.
131. Byrne, D. (1992). What do defense mechanisms,
attraction, and sexual attitudes have in common? The
role of meta-theory in social psychological research.
International Society for the Study of Personal
Relationships Bulletin, 9, 1-3.
132. Byrne, D., Kelley, K., & Fisher, W.A. (1993).
Unwanted teenage pregnancies: Incidence,
interpretation, and intervention. Applied &
Preventive Psychology, 2, 101-113.
133. Smith, E.R., Byrne, D., Becker, M.A., & Przybyla,
D.P.J. (1993). Sexual attitudes of males and females
as predictors of interpersonal attraction and marital
compatibility. Journal of Applied Social Psychology,
23, 1011-1034.
134. Smith, E.R., Byrne, D., & Fielding, P.J. (1995).
Interpersonal attraction as a function of extreme
gender role adherence. Personal Relationships, 2,
161-172.
135. Pierce, C.A., Byrne, D., & Aguinis, H. (1996).
Attraction in organizations: A model of workplace
romance. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 17, 5-
32.
(Articles continued)
136. Hogben, M., Byrne, D., & Hamburger, M.E. (1996).
Coercive sexuality in dating relationships of college
students: Implications of differential male-female
experiences. Journal of Psychology & Human
Sexuality, 8, 69-78.
137. Kelley, K., Byrne, D., Greendlinger, V., & Murnen,
S.K. (1997). Content, sex of viewer, and
dispositional variables as predictors of affective and
evaluative responses to sexually explicit films.
Journal of Psychology & Human Sexuality, 9, 53-71.
` 138. Byrne, D. (1997). An overview (and underview) of
research and theory within the attraction paradigm.
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 14,
417-431.
139. Hogben, M., & Byrne, D. (1998). Using social
learning theory to explain individual differences in
human sexuality. Journal of Sex Research, 35, 58-
71.
140. Hogben, M., Byrne, D., Hamburger, M.E., & Osland,
J. (2001). Legitimized aggression and sexual
coercion: Individual differences in cultural
spillover. Aggressive Behavior, 29, 26-43.
Miscellaneous Publications:
1. Byrne, D. (1965). Everyone a theorist. Review of L.J. Bischof,
Interpreting personality theories. Contemporary Psychology, 10, 149-150.
2. Byrne, D. (1967). Coming of age in Division 8. Review of B.A.
Maher (Ed.), Progress in experimental personality research (Vol. 2). Contemporary Psychology, 12, 591-592.
3. Byrne, D. (1969). In favor of integration. Review of B.A. Maher
(Ed.), Progress in experimental personality research (Vol. 3).
Contemporary Psychology, 14, 353-354.
4. Byrne, D. (1971, February). Interpersonal behavior processes:
An overview. U.S. Office of Education.
(Miscellaneous Publications continued)
5. Byrne, D., & Lamberth, J. (1971). The effect of erotic stimuli on
sex arousal, evaluative responses, and subsequent behavior. In Technical report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography (Vol. 8. pp. 41-67). Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
6. Byrne, D. (1971). What makes people sexually appealing? Sexual
Behavior, 1(3), 76-77.
7. Byrne, D. (1972). Learning from Andy Hardy. Sexual Behavior,
1(2), 34.
8. Byrne, D. (1974). Me and you and other folks, too. Review of R.C.
Ziller, The social self. Contemporary Psychology, 19, 520-521.
9. Byrne, D. (1977). A pregnant pause in the sexual revolution.
Psychology Today, 11(2), 67-68.
10. Byrne, D. (1977), Sexual attractiveness of face vs. body. Medical
Aspects of Human Sexuality,11(11), 101.
11. Byrne, D. (1978). Sexual attitudes and contraceptive practices.
USA Today, 107(2398), 28-30.
12. Byrne, D. (1978). “Aphrodisiac” effect of wife’s changed
appearance. Medical Aspects of Human Sexuality, 12(10), 7.
13. Miller, C.T., & Byrne, D. (1978). Review of L.A. Peplau & C.L.
Hammen )Eds.), Sexual behavior: Social psychological issues.
Journal of Sex Research, 14, 214-216.
14. Byrne, D. (1979, February 12). This week’s citation classic.
Current Contents, 16.
15. Byrne, D. (1980). Threat of overpopulation. Medical Aspects of
Human Sexuality, 14(1), 121, 125.
16. Byrne, D., & Kelley, K. (1986, August 4). Psychological research
and public policy: Taking a long, hard look before we leap. In
E.P. Mulvey & J.L. Havgaard (Eds.), Report of the Surgeon
General’s workshop on pornography and public health.
Washington, DC. U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services.
(Miscellaneous Publications continued)
17. Byrne, D. (1991, February). Double standard or macho myopia?
Playboy, 42.
18. Byrne, D. (1992, January). What’s it all about, SSSS? Society for
the Scientific Study of Sexuality Newsletter, 1.
19. Byrne, D. (1992). Sexual Opinion Survey (HAPI online database
record). Pittsburgh, PA: Behavioral Measurement Database
Services (Producer). McLean, VA: BR’s Search Service (online
Vendor).
20. Byrne, D. (1992, August). Vox populi, for goodness sake. Society
for the Scientific Study of Sexuality Newsletter, 4.
21. Byrne, D. (1992, September-October). Let’s hear it for the
second S in SSSS. Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality
Newsletter, 3.
22. Byrne, D. (1993). Part two of the Sexual revolution: Replacing
dogmatism with pluralism Review of I.L. Reiss, An end to
shame: Shaping our next sexual revolution. Contemporary
Psychology, 38, 98.
23. Byrne, D. (1999). Chocolate marble cake. In M.L. King (Ed.), The
Academy cooks (p.116). Kearney, NE: Morris Press.
24. Byrne, D. (1999). Chewy choc-oat-chip cookies. In M.L. King
(Ed.), The Academy cooks (p. 133). Kearney, NE: Morris Press.
25. Byrne, D. (2002). Foreword. In D. Chadee. Trial by peers: Social
and psychological assessment of the jury (pp. XV-XVI).
Kingston, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press.
26. Byrne, D. (2007), How sexual attitudes affect sex-related
behavior. Written for the Indianapolis meeting of the Society for
the Scientific Study of Sexuality.
27. Byrne, D. (2008). Getting rich (or, at Least Richer) Slowly: Why,
When, and How to Invest. (work in progress).
Doctoral Students – University of Texas:
1. Roy David McDonald, Ph.D., 1962
The Effect of Reward-Punishment and Affiliation Need on Interpersonal Attraction
Professor of Psychology
San Diego State University
San Diego, CA 92182
2. James Kennosuke Mikawa, Ph.D., 1963
The Effect of Affiliation Need and Approval-Rejection Feedback on Feelings of Hostility toward Self and Others
Professor of Psychology
University of Nevada, Reno
[Deceased – November, 1993]
3. Vernon Lester Joy, Ph.D., 1963
Repression-Sensitization, Personality, and Interpersonal Behavior
Professor of Psychology
Western Illinois University
Macomb, IL
[Deceased – January, 2003]
4. Charles Evans Bounds, Ph.D., 1964
Authoritarianism and Authoritarian Aggression
Psychologist
Austin, Texas
[Deceased – March, 2006]
5. Marshall Lee Hamilton, Ph.D., 1964
Affiliative Behavior as a Function of Approach and Avoidance Affiliation Motives, Opinion Evaluation, and Birth Order
[current location unknown]
6. Carole Calvert Golightly Eberly, Ph.D., 1966
The Reinforcement Properties of Attitude Similarity-Dissimilarity
Psychologist
McGuire Veterans Administration Hospital
Broad Rock Road and Woodstock Avenue
Richmond, VA 23219
(Doctoral Students – University of Texas continued)
7. Don Arthur Nelson, Ph. D., 1965
The Effect of Differential Magnitudes of Reinforcement on Interpersonal Attraction
Professor of Psychology
Roosevelt University
403 South Michigan Avenue
Chicago, IL 60605
8. Lewis Picher, Ph.D., 1966
Attraction toward Negroes as a Function of Prejudice, Emotional Arousal, and the Sex of the Negro
Psychologist
Department of Veterans Affairs
Eastern Colorado Health Care System
1055 Clemont Street
Denver, CO 80220
9. Mark Stephen Schwartz, Ph.D., 1966
Prediction of Individual Differences in the Arousal of the Effectance Motive and in Interpersonal Attraction toward a Stranger Identified with the Arousal of the Effectance Motive
Emeritus, Mayo Clinic
4500 San Pablo Road
Jacksonville, FL 32224
10. Gerald L. Clore, Ph.D., 1966
Discrimination Learning as a Function of Awareness and Magnitude of Attitudinal Reinforcement
Professor of Psychology
University of Virginia
Charlottesville, VA 22903
11. William Griffitt, Ph.D., 1967
Personality Similarity, Self-Concept, and Positiveness of Personality Description as Determinants of Interpersonal Attraction
Editor, Journal of Research in Personality
Professor of Psychology
Kansas State University
Manhattan, KS
[Deceased – July, 1999]
(Doctoral Students – University of Texas continued)
12. Glen Dale Baskett, Ph.D., 1968
Interpersonal Attraction as a Function of Attitude Similarity-
Dissimilarity and Cognitive Complexity
Professor of Psychology
Coordinator. Department of Psychology
School of Education
Tuskegee Institute
Tuskegee, AL 36088
13. Lois Myrtle Mueller, Ph.D., 1969
Interpersonal Attraction as a Function of Inferred Similarity-
Dissimilarity : A Reversal Effect
[current location unknown]
14. Deveraux Maitland Huffman, Ph.D., 1969
Interpersonal Attraction as a Function of Behavioral Similarity
[current location unknown]
15. John Albert Palmer, Ph.D., 1969
Vindication, Evaluation, and the Effect of the Stranger’s
Competence on the Attitude Similarity-Attraction Function
[current location unknown]
16. Daniel Julian Wiener, Ph.D., 1969
Effectance Arousal and Interpersonal Attraction Relating to a Perceptual Task: Effects of Certainty, Consensual Validation, and Availability of Verification
Clinical Director
Rehearsals for Growth
251 5th Avenue
3rd Floor
New York, NY 10016
Assistant Professor
Central Connecticut State University
New Britain, CT
17. Michael Gary Efran, Ph.D., 1969
Visual Interaction and Interpersonal Attraction
Organization Development & Custom Training Programs
253 West 72nd Street
Suite 1808
New York, NY 10023
Doctoral Students – Purdue University:
18. Victor Charles Gouaux, Ph.D., 1970
The Influence of Induced Affective States on the Effectiveness of
Social and Non-Social Reinforcers in an Instrumental Learning
Task
[current location unknown]
19. John Charles Lamberth, Ph.D., 1970
The Effect of Sequential Variables on Performance Using
Attitudinal Reinforcers
Professor of Psychology
Temple University
Philadelphia, PA 19122
20. Donald H. Sachs, Ph.D., 1972
Attraction and Aggression: A Study in Paradigm Linking
[current location unknown]
21. Ramadhar Singh, Ph.D., 1973
Affective Implications of the Weighting Coefficient in Attraction Research
Distinguished Professor of Management
Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore
Bannergatta Road
Bangalore 560 076, India
22. John Harvey Brink, Ph.D., 1974
The Modification of Interpersonal Attraction through Verbal
Responses to Attitudinal Agreement and Disagreement
Professor of Psychology
Calvin College
3201 Burton Street, S.E.
Grand Rapids, MI 49546
23. Albert Richard Allgeier, Ph.D., 1974
The Effects of Differential Amounts of Talkativeness on
Interpersonal Judgments
Psychologist
Bowling Green, OH
[Deceased – November, 2005]
(Doctoral Students – Purdue University continued)
24. Paul Allan Bell, Ph.D., 1975
(Robert A. Baron, Co-Chair of Doctoral Committee)
High Ambient Temperatures and Human Aggression: The
Mediating Role of Negative Affect
Professor of Psychology
Colorado State University
Fort Collins, CO 80523
25. Jeffrey David Fisher, Ph.D., 1975
Effect of Donor-Recipient Sexual Composition and Helping Task Sex-Relatedness to Reactions to Aid
Professor of Psychology
Director, Center for Health, Intervention, and Prevention
University of Connecticut
406 Babbidge Road
Storrs, CT 06269-1020
26. Paul Richard Bleda, Ph.D., 1975
Affect, Attraction, and Group Member Responsiveness to an Intergroup Transgression
[Current Location Unknown]
27. Elizabeth Rice Allgeier, Ph.D., 1976
The Influence of Sex Roles on Heterosexual Attitudes and Behavior
Former President, Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality
Former Editor, Journal of Sex Research
Professor of Psychology
Former Head, Social Psychology Program
Bowling Green State University
Bowling Green, OH
Grass Valley, CA (retired)
28. Kathryn Kelley, Ph.D., 1977
Affective Predictors of Sexual Attitudes
[current location unknown]
29. Christine Helen Jazwinski, Ph.D., 1977
Disinhibition of Verbal Behavior in Males and Females: The Effects of Audience Presence, Audience Attitude, and White Noise
Professor of Psychology
Saint Cloud State University
Saint Cloud. MN 56301
(Doctoral Students – Purdue University continued)
30. Leonard Anthony White, Ph.D., 1977
Affective Response to Erotic Stimulation and Human Aggression
Research Psychologist
Selection and Classification Technical Area
U.S. Army Research Institute
5001 Eisenhower Avenue
Room 6526
Alexandria VA 22333-5002
31. William Arthur Fisher, Ph.D., 1978
Affective, Attitudinal, and Normative Determinants of Contraceptive Use among University Men
Distinguished University Professor
Department of Psychology
Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology
University of Western Ontario
London Ontario N6A 5C2
Canada N6A 5C2
De Facto Doctoral Students – Purdue University
Herman E. Mitchell, Ph.D., 1979
Senior Research Scientist
Rho, Inc.
100 Eastowne Drive
Chapel Hill, NC 27514
Carol T. Miller, Ph.D., 1979
Professor of Psychology
University of Vermont
Burlington, VT 05401
Doctoral Students – University at Albany, State University of New York
32. Michael A. Becker, Ph. D.,1984
Type A Coronary-Prone Behavior and Sexual Interactions of 56
Married Couples
Associate Professor of Psychology
Coordinator, Department of Psychology
Pennsylvania State University at Harrisburg
Middletown, PA 17057
(Doctoral Students – University at Albany continued)
33. Virginia Greendlinger, Ph.D., 1985
Dispositional and Situational Variables as Predictors of Rape Proclivity in College Men
Psychologist
12 Bluestone Road
Woodstock, NY 12498
34. David P.J. Przybyla, Ph.D., 1985
The Facilitating Effects of Exposure to Erotica on Male Prosocial
Behavior
Associate Professor of Psychology
Director, Oganizational Studies Program
Denison University
Granville, OH 43023
35. Narendra Dixit, Ph.D., 1985
Effect of Verbal Contact and Spatial Positioning on Job Satisfaction, Job Performance, and Interpersonal Attraction: An Experimental Investigation
Associate Professor of Business Administration
Eastern Mediterranean University
Gazimagusa, Turkish Republic of North Cyprus
Via Mersin 10, Turkey
[Deceased – August, 1999]
36. George Smeaton, Ph.D., 1987
The Impact of Job Preview Realism, Opportunity to Socialize, Employee-Organization Value Similarity, and Dispositional Variables on Organizational Satisfaction, Commitment, and Employee Behavior: A Revision of the Investment Model
Dean
Walden University
Camden, ME 04843
37. Sarah K. Murnen, Ph.D., 1988
Traditional Gender Role Attitudes and Interpersonal Attraction
Professor of Psychology
Chair, Department of Psychology
117 Samuel Mather Hall
Kenyon College
Gambier, OH 43022
(Doctoral Students – University at Albany continued)
38. Eleanor R. Smith, Ph.D., 1989
Interpersonal Attraction as a Function of Similarity and Assumed Similarity to Traditional Gender Role Adherence
Psychologist
New Britain, CT 06053
39. Joel H. Neuman. Ph.D., 1989
The Role of Decision Framing, Job Offer Attractiveness, and Message Elaboration in Job Offer Acceptance
Associate Professor of Management
Business Administration
State University of New York, College at New Paltz
New Paltz, NY 12561
40. Jane E. Gordon, Ph.D., 1992
The Effect of Prejudice, Speech Style, and Attitude Similarity on Attraction
Psychology Faculty
The McGregor School of Antioch University
Yellow Springs, OH
[Deceased – 2004]
41. Lisa J. Schulte, Ph.D., 1993
A Test of Two Models of Homosexism
Associate Professor of Psychology
Chair, Department of Psychology
Xavier University of Louisiana
New Orleans, LA 70125
42. Patricia A. Cotch, Ph.D., 1993
Health Self-Efficacy and Knowledge of Urinary Tract Infection
[current location unknown]
43. Merle E. Hamburger, Ph.D., 1995
Assessing the Validity of a Multidimensional Model of Sexual Coercion in College Men
Epidemiologist
Division of Violence Prevention
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
4770 Bulford Highway, NE
Mail Stop F-64
Atlanta, GA 30341
(Doctoral Students – University at Albany continued)
44. Charles A. Pierce, Ph.D., 1995
Attraction in the Workplace: An Examination of Antecedents and Consequences of Organizational Romance
Suzanne D. Palmer Research Professor
OB/HR Management
Coordinator, Ph.D. Program
Department of Management
Fogelman College of Business
University of Memphis
Memphis, TN 38152-3120
45. Matthew Hogben, Ph.D., 1996
The Social Cognitive Structure and Modeling of the
Psychological Construct of Legitimzed Aggression
Research Psychologist
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
1600 Clifton Road
Mail Stop E-44
Atlanta, GA 30333
46. Stephanie McGowan, Ph.D., 1999
Mental Representations in Stressful Situations: The Calming
Effect of Significant Others
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Lasell College
Aubumdale, MA 02166
47. Stephen D. O’Rourke, Ph.D., 2000
Self-Discrepancy Theory and the Big Five: Relationships among Personality Factors, Anxiety, and Depression
Assistant Professor of Psychology
College of New Rochelle
New Rochelle, NY 10801
48. Julie A. Osland, Ph.D., 2001
Theoretical Models of the Relationships among Attachment,
Empathy, and Relationship Satisfaction
Assistant Professor of Psychology
Jesuit University
Wheeling, WV 26003
(Doctoral Students – University at Albany continued)
49. Lisa K. Daniels, Ph.D., 2001
“ It’s Just as Easy to Fall in Love with a Rich Man… “ The Impact
of Social Messages on Human Mate Preferences
Director of Institutional Research
Excelsior College
7 Columbia Circle
Albany, NY 12203
50. Michele Van Volkom, Ph.D., 2002
Cigarette Smoking among College Students: Trends and Implications for Smoking Cessation and Smoking Prevention Programs
Lecturer in Psychology
Monmouth University
400 Cedar Avenue
West Long Beach, NJ 07764
51. John R. McCarthy, Ph.D., 2002
Antecedents of Compliance Rates in Internet Derived Samples
and Their Representativeness
Principal Programs Associate
New York State Assembly
Albany, NY 12224
52. Hsiu-Ju Lin, Ph.D., 2003
Adherence to Cancer Screening: An Integrative Model
Data Analyst
Connecticut Department of Mental Health and Addiction
Services, Research Division
410 Capital Avenue
Hartford, CT 06134
Current Interests
Family, Investing, Reading, Movies, Theater, Politics, and Health
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