Shelly Chaiken

Shelly Chaiken is a social psychologist. She first received her BS from the University of Maryland, College Park in 1971 for mathematics. She later earned her MS (in 1975) and her PhD (in 1978) at the University of Massachusetts Amherst in social psychology. She was a professor of psychology at New York University, but is now retired.[1]

Chaiken is a member of many psychological organizations including the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, the American Psychological Association (Fellow, Div. 8), and the American Psychological Society.[2]

Research

She completed work involving attitude, persuasion, and social cognition. She researched phenomena such as heuristic and systematic processing. Chaiken completed a study researching interracial contact. The study found that participant who were exposed to more white faces in a positive way, had a more negative view or increased prejudice toward black faces. Chaiken edited many psychological books including Attitude Research in the 21st Century: The Current State of Knowledge, and Dual-Process Theories in Social Psychology. Dual-Process Theories in Social Psychology conglomerates the theories of informational processing in an organized way, along with reviews and research of these theories. Much of her work involving persuasion has been helpful to conflict resolution centers and negotiations with their patients.

For her work on dual process theories of attitudes, on October 17, 2009 Chaiken was a co-recipient of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology's Scientific Impact Award, which "[h]onors the author(s) of a specific article or chapter that has proven highly influential over the last 25 years."[3]

gollark: I did. Obviously I'm already aware of such technology.
gollark: Before making assertions about group theory, I always make sure to check if I'm dreaming, just in case.
gollark: Or put in the neat thing for positive numbers with a conditional. Although I guess you'd still need both code paths.
gollark: Just use the magic incantation "without loss of generality".
gollark: Negative numbers can safely be ignored if inconvenient.

References

  1. "Profile entry of Shelly Chaiken". Department of Psychology New York University. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  2. "Profile Shelly Chaiken". Social Psychology Network. 26 November 1999. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
  3. "Scientific Impact Award Recipients". Society of Experimental Social Psychology. Archived from the original on 13 May 2009. Retrieved 5 August 2014.
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