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Volume
19: No. 2, February 2005 Recipients
of 2005 APA Distinguished Scientific Contribution Awards Gross began his career as a pioneer in the study of high-order visual perception and the extrastriate cortex. In a series of studies beginning in the late 1960’s, Gross and his colleagues showed that single neurons in inferior temporal (IT) cortex not only had visual responses but also responded selectively to very complex features of objects, such as their overall shape or texture, and that a few neurons even responded selectively to specific objects, such as faces or hands. This was a revolutionary view at the time, because it indicated that individual neurons in the cortex coded global object features, rather than lines and edges, and that some types of significant objects might even be encoded by specific neurons. Furthermore, Gross was not content to simply study the anatomy and physiology of neurons – he also realized a need to understand the function of these areas in the context of the animal’s perceptual state and behavior. Thus, he conducted many of the first behavioral studies of the effects of IT lesions on perception and memory, which clearly showed the behavioral relevance of the physiological properties he had discovered. The neuroscience field has changed in large part due to Gross’s research and the work he stimulated in other labs. The original findings on extrastriate cortex from his lab have now been replicated innumerable times and appear in undergraduate neuroscience textbooks. An entire field has been spawned by his work, spanning animal physiology and anatomy to human psychological studies and brain imaging, yielding tremendous insights into how the visual system recognizes and remembers objects. His other line of work has been investigating the physiological and perceptual consequences of ablation of primary visual cortex. Gross was involved in some of the early descriptions of “blindsight.” Recently, Gross has been studying how the brain represents visual and tactile space. Gross with Elizabeth Gould and colleagues published one of the first demonstrations that new neurons are born and incorporated into the adult brain. Also, Gross with Michael Graziano and colleagues have published some of the
first work showing that neurons in premotor cortex and other structures not
traditionally thought to be “visual” have visual receptive fields,
and these receptive fields are spatially linked to specific parts of the body
surface. Some receptive fields appear to move with the arm, for example, showing
that the coordinate frame for visually guided arm movements may be the arm itself.
This finding is beginning to transform the field of visuo-motor coordination.
Gross’ career has propelled the formulation and expansion of cognitive
neuroscience. In his early career he made substantial contributions to the study of perceptual processes, learning, and memory in non-human primates. His major influence on the field is his groundbreaking work on the study of human learning and memory. This work began with his influential studies of concepts and categories. He extended his research into similarity processing, reasoning and decision-making. In his current research he is studying cultural models of biological phenomena. He has become one of the leading authorities on culture and cognition and he has developed new paradigms for the study of how higher-order cognitive processes are influenced by culture and expertise. The major overarching theme in Medin’s research is that of concepts and categories. In the 1970’s Medin developed an exemplar model that demonstrated that key phenomena taken as support of prototype models could also be explained by exemplar models. This context theory of classification learning opened the way for a theoretical revolution in our understanding of human cognition, firmly establishing the importance of exemplar or instance-based processes in conceptual structure and the use of categorical knowledge. His 1981 book (Categories and Concepts, co-authored with Ed Smith) provided the classic integration of psychological research on the basic elements of thought processes. This book set the themes for research on concepts that still dominate the field. Medin has explored both exemplar-based models and theory-based models. His contributions range from precise mathematical models to global theoretical frameworks. His research on typicality and feature similarity showed that judgments along one dimension often depend on the values of other dimensions; his findings on family resemblance fundamentally delineated the conditions under which different kinds of conceptual cohesiveness effects apply during encoding; and his current research on category-based inference is showing that ecological knowledge may preempt the use of similarity and category structure in determining induction from exemplars. In the late 1980’s, Medin proposed an account of conceptual structures as theory-based and this work spearheaded another theoretical revolution in cognitive research. One outgrowth of this approach was the development of the notion of psychological essentialism—the view that people have an implicit theory that category membership is governed by an immutable inner essence. This notion has gained influence in developmental and social psychology, as well as cognitive psychology, as researchers attempt to understand the nature of lay conceptualizations of the natural and social worlds and their implications for judgment and action. His current work explores the ways in which expertise and culture-bound experiences shape the nature of concepts, reasoning, and decision making. Medin is looking at how expertise and culture influence the conceptual organization of biological categories. He is looking at how the correlational structure of things in the world interacts with theories, goals, and belief systems to determine categorization. Medin’s work shows that different kinds of expertise in the same domain lead to systematic differences in categorization and reasoning. Medin’s work has helped us to understand human thought processes, and its integration of the natural (biological) world and the cultural environment within the workings of the human mind. Robert S. Siegler, Teresa Heinz Professor of Cognitive Psychology,
Carnegie Mellon University Over the course of his career, Siegler has investigated the development of many fundamental mathematical and scientific concepts, including conservation, counting, basic arithmetic, estimation, formal scientific reasoning, and biological concepts. His work has yielded important insights and valuable data about children's thinking and about developmental change. He has also paid attention to the educational implications of his research, focusing on issues such as the relations between conceptual and procedural knowledge of mathematics, and the importance of psychological tools, such as the mental number line, in thinking and reasoning. Taken as a whole, Siegler's work has greatly increased understanding of cognitive development. Award for Distinguished Scientific Applications of Psychology Karen A. Matthews, Professor of Psychology, Psychiatry and Epidemiology;
Director of the Pittsburgh Mind-Body Center; Program Director of the Cardiovascular
Behavioral Medicine Research Training Program, University of Pittsburgh She is well known for her research on psychosocial factors linked to risk for cardiovascular disease. She was trained in psychology and in epidemiology and has been able to use the tools of both disciplines to conduct cutting-edge research that is highly regarded in both fields. Using epidemiological methods, she has been effective in identifying risk factors, and then using psychological methods, she has determined the mechanisms by which these factors may act to influence health. Matthews was the first to break apart the Type A construct to identify the key components related to coronary risk. She reported that only some Type A characteristics (notably hostility) were associated with coronary risk. This helped stimulate research that documented the link between hostility and cardiovascular disease. She contributed further to this work by suggesting models of how the toxic elements of Type A could operate to result in cardiovascular disease. She showed that hostile individuals were more autonomically reactive to acute stressors, engaged in more health damaging behaviors, and exhibited a number of biological risk factors associated with sympathetic nervous system activation. Matthews’ work has been strong in delineating developmental processes in risk factors. This work has been important not only in increasing understanding of the biological pathways, but also of the psychological effects of early family experiences. Her work demonstrated that the link between hostility and autonomic reactivity to stress occurred even in childhood. She showed that the development of hostile traits and cardiovascular reactivity in children results in part from conflictual family interactions, genetic factors, and propensity to interpret ambiguous information in a negative way. She has also done work in how race and SES moderate psychosocial risk including work on how persons of low SES perceive ambiguous situations as threatening. Matthews is also known for her work in women’s health. She has systematically demonstrated gender differences in cardiovascular reactivity to stress, and has evaluated hormonal, dispositional, and environmental factors accounting for those gender differences. She has described the interactive effects of behavior and reproductive hormones in women’s risk of coronary heart disease, and has shown how cigarette smoking and contraceptive use influence women’s lipid, lipoprotein, and cardiovascular response to stressors. One of her studies, the Pittsburgh Healthy Women Study, is the first intensive study of the psychological, social and biological changes in healthy women as they traverse the perimenopause. Matthews’ work has had a broad impact on psychology. She has asked key
questions at the intersection of health and biology in areas that are not necessarily
in the mainstream of psychological research. Her work on the development of
hostility in children and her recent work on socioeconomic status in children
has important implications for developmental psychology. Her work on hostility
has implications for personality and cognitive psychology. Her work has had
an impact on social epidemiology and medicine and women’s health. She
has been able to convince the health disciplines, including medicine, to appreciate
and accept the importance of psychosocial factors in physical health. Award for
Distinguished Scientific Early Career Contribution to Psychology Robert F. Krueger, Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota Award for
Distinguished Scientific Early Career Contribution to Psychology Morgeson is recognized for his contributions to the area of job analysis and
design, personnel selection, and theory development. His research on job analysis
inaccuracy represents the first attempt to systematically describe inaccuracy
in job analysis, taking job analysis research in a completely new direction.
His research in personnel selection is likely to shape research for years to
come. In particular, his meta-analysis on situational judgment tests and narrative
review of the employment interview are likely to be very influential as scholars
continue to conduct research in these areas. Morgeson developed a model that
offers guidelines for developing multilevel theories. Prior to his work, there
was little guidance about how to link constructs across levels. This model has
already been cited by scholars in the development and testing of new theories
across a diverse set of research topics. The influence of this paper is likely
to increase as scholars recognize the importance of multilevel theorizing. Morgeson
earned his PhD at Purdue University in 1998. Return to Psychological Science Agenda Homepage |
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