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Date: May 23, 2002 PSYCHOLOGISTS RECEIVE PROFESSION'S LARGEST MONETARY PRIZE FOR RESEARCH ON THE EFFECT POSITIVE TRAITS SUCH AS OPTIMISM HAVE ON PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PHYSICAL HEALTHTempleton Positive Psychology Prizes Totaling $200,000 Awarded To Four Top Researchers To Promote A Science Of Human Strengths PHILADELPHIA - A University of Kentucky researcher has received psychology's largest monetary prize for her research showing the health benefits of optimism. Suzanne C. Segerstrom, Ph.D., an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Kentucky is the first place winner of the 2002 Templeton Positive Psychology Prize. The $100,000 award is divided as a cash prize of $30,000 to be used any way Dr. Segerstrom chooses, and a grant of $70,000 to support her research in the positive psychology field. The American Psychological Association (APA), with underwriting support from the John Templeton Foundation (JTF), created the awards program. Now in its third year, the prizes are intended to encourage first-rate mid-career scientists to devote their best efforts to positive psychology topics, such as optimism, moral identity, self-control, goal-focused living, thrift, courage and future-mindedness. Dr. Segerstrom's research is aimed at understanding the processes behind optimistic dispositions and beliefs and, in particular, how these processes relate to the functioning of the immune system. "Like pessimists, optimists attend to negative information and process it consciously," said Dr. Segerstrom. "However, they differ from their pessimistic counterparts in their equal or greater attention to positive stimuli and they show signs of immune suppression as a consequence of working harder to achieve their goals." The positive effects of optimism are sometimes viewed with skepticism both in the scientific community and in the broader culture, noted Dr. Segerstrom, "with some saying optimists are naive and vulnerable to disappointment when they come face to face with reality. My evidence suggests that optimists are not naive; they are however, wiser in expending their energies and better at directing their attention to and elaborating positive information." Three other researchers also received Templeton Positive Psychology Prizes during today's ceremony in Philadelphia. Sonja Lyubomirsky, Ph.D., an associate professor of psychology at the University of California, Riverside won the second place award of $50,000 ($15,000 cash prize and $35,000 grant) for her work on developing a "science of human happiness." Her research addresses such questions as 1) What makes people happy?; 2) Is happiness a good thing?; and 3) How can we make people even more happy? Dr. Lyubomirsky has found that exceptionally happy people construe themselves, their peers and life events in ways that seem to maintain their happiness, such as reacting to life circumstances in relatively more positive and more adaptive ways than unhappy people. The third place award of $30,000 ($10,000 cash prize and $20,000 grant) was won by Kennon M. Sheldon, Ph.D., an assistant professor of psychology at the University of Missouri. Dr. Sheldon's research focuses on personal goals and how these goals affect people's growth, development and well-being. One of his recent studies looked at what makes people the happiest and found it wasn't money or attaining popularity, but autonomy (feeling that your activities are self-chosen and self-endorsed), competence (feeling that you are effective in your activities), relatedness (feeling a sense of closeness with others) and self-esteem that made people the happiest. And the fourth place award of $20,000 ($7,500 cash prize and $12,500 grant) was won by Laura D. Kubzansky, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the Department of Health and Social Behavior at the Harvard School of Public Health. Dr. Kubzansky's research centers around the role of resilience in health and disease prevention. She studies whether psychological factors may prevent the development of disease and maintain healthy functioning. She has found that optimism may influence both physiology and behaviors, and through them, major health outcomes. Dr. Kubzansky's research also shows that resilience factors like optimism or a sense of control are influenced by the social environment, with socioeconomic status, gender and race/ethnicity strongly associated with resilience. The Templeton Positive Psychology Prize is open to researchers from any country in all the social sciences, not just psychology. To be eligible, candidates must not be more than 40 years of age, or if older than 40, not more than 12 years past receiving their doctoral degree.
The American Psychological Association (APA), in Washington, DC, is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States and is the world's largest association of psychologists. APA's membership includes more than 155,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 53 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance psychology as a science, as a profession and as a means of promoting human welfare. The mission of The John Templeton Foundation is to pursue insights at the boundary between theology and science through a rigorous, open-minded, and empirically focused methodology, drawing together talented representatives from a wide spectrum of fields of expertise. The Templeton Prize for Positive Psychology recognizes scientific excellence in the new science of positive psychology by encouraging the most visionary of today's young researchers to devote their work to a better understanding of what makes life worth living. # # # |
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