Observation
2013 Society for Personality and Social Psychology Award Recipients
Congratulations to 23 APS members who are 2013 Society for Personality and Social Psychology award recipients. The following scientists will be honored at the 15th Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology to take place February 13–15, 2014, in Austin, Texas:
APS Fellow Robert R. McCrae, National Institute on Aging
Jack Block Award
APS Fellow Timothy D. Wilson, University of Virginia
Donald T. Campbell Award
APS Fellow James H. Sidanius, Harvard University
Career Contribution Award
APS Fellows Judith Harackiewicz and Janet S. Hyde and APS Student Affiliate Christopher S. Rozek, University of Wisconsin–Madison; and Chris Hulleman, James Madison University, for the Psychological Science paper “Helping Parents to Motivate Adolescents in Mathematics and Science: An Experimental Test of a Utility-Value Intervention.”
Robert B. Cialdini Award
APS Fellow Andrew Elliot, University of Rochester
Carol and Ed Diener Award in Personality Psychology
APS Fellow Nalini Ambady, Stanford University
Carol and Ed Diener Award in Social Psychology
APS James McKeen Cattell Fellow Carol Dweck, Stanford University
Distinguished Scholar Award
APS Fellow Jonathan Haidt, New York University, for The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion
Media Book Prize for the Promotion of Social and Personality Science
APS William James Fellow Anthony Greenwald, University of Washington
Methodological Innovation Award
APS Fellows Wendi Gardner, Northwestern University, and George (Al) Goethals, University of Richmond
SPSP Awards for Distinguished Service to the Society
APS Past President Kay Deaux, CUNY Graduate Center, and APS Fellow Hazel Markus, Stanford University
SPSP Awards for Service on Behalf of Personality & Social Psychology
Kurt Gray, University of Maryland, College Park, Laine Young, Boston College, and Adam Waytz, Northwestern University, for the Psychological Inquiry paper “Mind Perception is the Essence of Morality”
Theoretical Innovation Prize
Nina Mazar, University of Toronto; Francesca Gino, Harvard University; Dan Ariely, Duke University; and APS Fellow Max Bazerman, Harvard University, for the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper “Signing at the Beginning Makes Ethics Salient and Decreases Dishonest Self-Reports in Comparison to Signing at the End”
Robert B. Cialdini Honorable Mention
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