Boaz Kahana

Boaz Kahana is an American psychologist.

Education

Kahana completed a doctor of philosophy in human development at University of Chicago in 1967.[1]

Career

In 1958, Kahana worked as a summer research psychologist at the Kings County Hospital Center before working there as an intern in clinical psychology through 1959. He was a part-time consulting school psychologist for the Jewish Education Committee in New York City. He was a part-time clinical psychologist for the Brooklyn Association for Rehabilitation of Offenders from 1959 to 1960. From 1959 to 1963, Kahana was a clinical and supervising psychologist at the Kings County Hospital, working under chief psychologist Solomon Machover. Kahana was a part-time clinical psychologist and psychotherapist at the Harbor Light Clinic in Chicago. He was a National Institute of Mental Health predoctoral research fellow from 1964 to 1966. He joined the faculty at Washington University in St. Louis as an assistant professor in the departments of psychology and child psychiatry in 1966, later being promoted to an associate professor. He was the Director of Research at the Child Development Center at Washington University School of Medicine. From 1971 to 1974, Kahana worked as an associate professor at Oakland University. He served as the department of psychology, chair from 1971 to 1976. He was a visiting scholar at the Brookdale Institute from 1977 to 1978. We was promoted to professor in 1974. From 1984 to 1987, Kahana was the a professor and chair of the department of psychology at Cleveland State University (CSU). From 1987 to 1996, he served as the professor of psychology and director of the Center on Applied Gerontological Research at CSU.[1]

Research

Kahana researches the normal aging and the long-term impacts of trama. Populations he specializes in are survivors from the attack on Pearl Harbor and Holocaust survivors from three countries.[2]

Awards and honors

Kahana is a Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science and the Gerontological Society of America. The Ohio Research Council on Aging and the Ohio Network of Educational Consultants in the Field of Aging presented Kahana with an Excellence in Gerontological Research Award.[2]

Personal life

Kahana is married to sociologist Eva Kahana.[3] He is a Holocaust survivor.[4]

gollark: I also wrote a chat program in about 30 lines of easily memorable python which uses that convenient IPv4 broadcast address, because I wanted a version of my multicast chat thing which was less ridiculously fragile. So you could also plausibly cheat using that.
gollark: You could actually just use the HTTP thing to download code off pastebin too I guess.
gollark: No, you don't have access to your usual network drive.
gollark: So in theory (I said this to them, and apparently I wouldn't have enough time to cheat so it didn't matter, which would have been wrong as I in fact had lots of spare time) you could access the internet by manually sending HTTP requests from python and parsing the HTML, yes.
gollark: They "block internet access" by stopping the browsers opening. However, we can access python for obvious reasons, and python has built-in HTTP libraries.

References

  1. "Boaz Kahana". College of Sciences and Health Professions. Cleveland State University. Retrieved 2018-11-29.
  2. Gerrity, Ellen; Keane, Terence M.; Tuma, Farris (2012-12-06). The Mental Health Consequences of Torture. Springer Science & Business Media. ISBN 9781461512950.
  3. Kessler, Rebecca (December 2012). "Q&A Eva Kahana: Ageing proactively". Nature. 492 (7427): S9. doi:10.1038/492S9a. ISSN 0028-0836. PMID 23222674.
  4. Cohen, Sharon Kangisser (2013). "Choosing "a heim" : survivors of the Holocaust and post-war immigration". European Judaism. 46 (2): 32–54. doi:10.3167/ej.2013.46.02.04. JSTOR 42751137.
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