{"title":"2021年库利米德奖获得者Neil J.MacKinnon介绍","authors":"Amy Kroska, David R. Heise, L. Smith-Lovin","doi":"10.1177/01902725221085332","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"We are honored to introduce Neil MacKinnon as the 2021 recipient of the Cooley-Mead Award. Neil has influenced sociological social psychology with pathbreaking theoretical and empirical work that has helped shape contemporary understandings of impression formation, emotions, identities and the self, social institutions, and culture. Neil grew up in Nova Scotia, Canada, and did his undergraduate work at the University of Windsor, graduating in just three years, with a double major in sociology and philosophy. He then began graduate studies in sociology at the University of Illinois, where he made intensive use of that university’s powerful computers and its faculty resources on multivariate analyses. In 1970, after just three years, Neil completed his doctoral dissertation on the structure of role expectations. He was Dr. MacKinnon just six years after graduating from high school! After two years at the University of Minnesota, Neil moved back to Canada and began working at the University of Guelph, where he spent the remainder of his career. During the early years of his career, he published social psychological work on role expectations and role strain and more macro-oriented studies of urban migration and educational attainment. In 1978, Neil used a sabbatical to go to the Department of Sociology at the University of North Carolina as a visiting scholar. He connected with all of the prominent scholars of advanced statistical methods that had attracted him there, but he soon concentrated his activities in the group working on affect control theory (ACT), led by David Heise with Lynn Smith-Lovin as a core graduate student. Results of a large National Institute of Mental Health study were pouring in, and Neil took on the task of analyzing perceived likelihoods of interpersonal events, the first comprehensive test of the theory’s predictions. A few years after his sabbatical, Neil initiated a massive cross-cultural replication of all the basic empirical work in ACT, including the development of Canadian impression-formation equations. He identified cross-cultural differences in impression-formation processes and laid the groundwork for other scholars to","PeriodicalId":48201,"journal":{"name":"Social Psychology Quarterly","volume":"85 1","pages":"1 - 5"},"PeriodicalIF":2.1000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Introduction of Neil J. MacKinnon, 2021 Cooley-Mead Award Recipient\",\"authors\":\"Amy Kroska, David R. Heise, L. 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After two years at the University of Minnesota, Neil moved back to Canada and began working at the University of Guelph, where he spent the remainder of his career. During the early years of his career, he published social psychological work on role expectations and role strain and more macro-oriented studies of urban migration and educational attainment. In 1978, Neil used a sabbatical to go to the Department of Sociology at the University of North Carolina as a visiting scholar. He connected with all of the prominent scholars of advanced statistical methods that had attracted him there, but he soon concentrated his activities in the group working on affect control theory (ACT), led by David Heise with Lynn Smith-Lovin as a core graduate student. Results of a large National Institute of Mental Health study were pouring in, and Neil took on the task of analyzing perceived likelihoods of interpersonal events, the first comprehensive test of the theory’s predictions. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
我们很荣幸地介绍Neil MacKinnon为2021年Cooley Mead奖的获得者。尼尔以开创性的理论和实证工作影响了社会学社会心理学,帮助塑造了当代对印象形成、情绪、身份和自我、社会制度和文化的理解。Neil在加拿大新斯科舍省长大,在温莎大学读本科,仅用三年时间就毕业了,主修社会学和哲学。然后,他开始在伊利诺伊大学攻读社会学研究生,在那里,他充分利用了该大学强大的计算机及其教师资源进行多元分析。1970年,仅仅三年后,Neil就完成了关于角色期望结构的博士论文。高中毕业六年后,他就是MacKinnon博士!在明尼苏达大学两年后,Neil搬回加拿大,开始在圭尔夫大学工作,在那里度过了他职业生涯的剩余时间。在职业生涯的早期,他发表了关于角色期望和角色压力的社会心理学著作,以及关于城市移民和教育程度的更宏观的研究。1978年,Neil利用休假前往北卡罗来纳大学社会学系做访问学者。他与吸引他去那里的所有著名的高级统计方法学者建立了联系,但他很快就将活动集中在由David Heise领导的情感控制理论(ACT)小组中,Lynn Smith Lovin是该小组的核心研究生。美国国家心理健康研究所的一项大型研究结果纷至沓来,尼尔承担了分析人际事件感知可能性的任务,这是对该理论预测的第一次全面测试。休假几年后,Neil开始了对ACT所有基本实证工作的大规模跨文化复制,包括加拿大印象形成方程的开发。他发现了印象形成过程中的跨文化差异,并为其他学者奠定了基础
Introduction of Neil J. MacKinnon, 2021 Cooley-Mead Award Recipient
We are honored to introduce Neil MacKinnon as the 2021 recipient of the Cooley-Mead Award. Neil has influenced sociological social psychology with pathbreaking theoretical and empirical work that has helped shape contemporary understandings of impression formation, emotions, identities and the self, social institutions, and culture. Neil grew up in Nova Scotia, Canada, and did his undergraduate work at the University of Windsor, graduating in just three years, with a double major in sociology and philosophy. He then began graduate studies in sociology at the University of Illinois, where he made intensive use of that university’s powerful computers and its faculty resources on multivariate analyses. In 1970, after just three years, Neil completed his doctoral dissertation on the structure of role expectations. He was Dr. MacKinnon just six years after graduating from high school! After two years at the University of Minnesota, Neil moved back to Canada and began working at the University of Guelph, where he spent the remainder of his career. During the early years of his career, he published social psychological work on role expectations and role strain and more macro-oriented studies of urban migration and educational attainment. In 1978, Neil used a sabbatical to go to the Department of Sociology at the University of North Carolina as a visiting scholar. He connected with all of the prominent scholars of advanced statistical methods that had attracted him there, but he soon concentrated his activities in the group working on affect control theory (ACT), led by David Heise with Lynn Smith-Lovin as a core graduate student. Results of a large National Institute of Mental Health study were pouring in, and Neil took on the task of analyzing perceived likelihoods of interpersonal events, the first comprehensive test of the theory’s predictions. A few years after his sabbatical, Neil initiated a massive cross-cultural replication of all the basic empirical work in ACT, including the development of Canadian impression-formation equations. He identified cross-cultural differences in impression-formation processes and laid the groundwork for other scholars to
期刊介绍:
SPPS is a unique short reports journal in social and personality psychology. Its aim is to publish cutting-edge, short reports of single studies, or very succinct reports of multiple studies, and will be geared toward a speedy review and publication process to allow groundbreaking research to be quickly available to the field. Preferences will be given to articles that •have theoretical and practical significance •represent an advance to social psychological or personality science •will be of broad interest both within and outside of social and personality psychology •are written to be intelligible to a wide range of readers including science writers for the popular press