Monitor on Psychology - October 2011 - (Page 84)

Performance), and Ilke Öztekin, PhD (Learning, Memory and Cognition) Div. 5 (Evaluation, Measurement and Statistics) Anne Anastasi Early Career Award: Li Cai, PhD Samuel J. Messick Distinguished Scientific Contributions Lloyd Wolf Award: Robert Charles MacCallum, PhD Jacob Cohen Award for Distinguished Contributions to Teaching and Mentoring: Gregory R. Hancock, PhD Distinguished Dissertation Award: Sarah Depaoli, PhD Div. 6 (Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative) D.O. Hebb Award for Distinguished Scientific Contribution: Ed Wasserman, PhD Brenda A. Milner Award for Best Paper by a Young Investigator: Holly Miller, PhD Clifford T. Morgan Award for Distinguished Service: Chana Akins, PhD D.G. Marquis Award for Best Paper in Behavioral Neuroscience: Sara N. Burke, PhD, Jenelle L. Wallace, PhD, Saman Nematollahi, PhD, Ajay R. Uprety, PhD, and Carol A. Barnes, PhD Frank A. Beach Award for Best Paper in Journal of Comparative Psychology: Walter T. Herbranson, PhD, and Julia Schroeder, PhD Div. 7 (Developmental) G. Stanley Hall Award for Distinguished Contribution to Developmental Psychology: Marc Bornstein, PhD Urie Bronfenbrenner Awards for Lifetime Contribution to Developmental Psychology in the Service of Science and Society: Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, PhD, Roberta Golinkoff, PhD Mentor Award in Developmental Psychology: Susan GoldinMeadow, PhD Boyd McCandless (Early Career) Award: Daniel Ansari, PhD Eleanor Maccoby Book Award in Developmental Psychology: Susan Carey, PhD Dissertation Award in Developmental Psychology: Kiley Hamlin, PhD A champion for social justice, minority education APA presented an Outstanding Lifetime Contributions to Psychology Award to James M. Jones, PhD, for his 30 years of leadership of APA’s Minority Fellowship Program. Throughout his tenure, Jones secured millions of dollars in federal grant money to advance the education and training of generations of minority psychologists. “There are few individuals within and outside of APA who have been personally and institutionally Dr. James M. Jones accepted an Outstanding Lifetime Contributions to Psychology Award for his work to expand ethnic-minority training in psychology. Div. 8 (Society for Personality and Social Psychology) Henry A. Murray Award: Jefferson Singer, PhD Div. 9 (Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues) Kurt Lewin Award: Michelle Fine, PhD Distinguished Service to SPSSI Awards: Allen Omoto, PhD, Ann Bettencourt, PhD Div. 10 (Society for the Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity and the Arts) Rudolf Arnheim Award for Outstanding Achievement in Psychology and the Arts: Jeffrey Smith, PhD Daniel E. Berlyne Award: Liane Gabora, PhD Frank X. Barron Awards: Valorie Salimpoor, PhD, Pablo Tinio, PhD responsible for the selection and funding of more racial and ethnic-minority psychologists within our field” reads the citation. Jones, a professor of psychology and director of the Black American Studies Program at the University of Delaware, also has a tremendous commitment to social justice. He served as president of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues in 2004, and that year he helped organize a SPSSI conference to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the Brown vs. Board of Education case. Scholars consider him to be one of the field’s leading experts on prejudice and racism in academia. 84 MONITOR ON PSYCHOLOGY • OCTOBER 2011

Table of Contents for the Digital Edition of Monitor on Psychology - October 2011

Monitor on Psychology - October 2011
President’s Column
Subtle and stunning slights
Contents
From the CEO
Live science on the showroom floor
Zimbardo re-examines his landmark study
Ready, set, mentor
Attention students and ECPs: Self-care is an ‘ethical imperative’
Suicide risk is high among war veterans in college, study finds
Psychotherapy is effective and here’s why
From toilet to tap: getting people to drink recycled water
What’s ahead for psychology practice?
A push for more accountability is changing the accreditation process
Peer, parental support prove key to fighting childhood obesity
Popular media’s message to girls
Bullying may contribute to lower test scores
A consequence of cuckoldry: More (and better) sex?
Manatees’ exquisite sense of touch may lead them into dangerous waters
Building a better tomato
How will China’s only children care for their aging parents?
‘Spice’ and ‘K2’: New drugs of abuse now on the market
Many suspects don’t understand their right to remain silent
In Brief
Boosting minority achievement
Where’s the progress?
And social justice for all
Helping new Americans find their way
Segregation’s ongoing legacy
A new way to combat prejudice
Retraining the biased brain
Suppressing the ‘white bears’
How to eat better — mindlessly
Protect your aging brain
Must babies always breed marital discontent?
Outing addiction
Flourish 2051
The danger of stimulants
Keys to making integrated care work
Is technology ruining our kids?
Facebook: Friend or foe?
The promise of Web 3.0
NIMH invests in IT enhanced interventions
Science Directions
Science Directions
PsycAdvocates work to safeguard key programs
The psychology of spending cuts
APA’s strategic plan goes live
Visionary leaders
Bravo!
Vote on bylaws amendments

Monitor on Psychology - October 2011

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