Nicholas Christenfeld

Nicholas Christenfeld is a professor of Psychology at the University of California, San Diego. He first joined the department in 1991 and has been a full professor since 2003.

Among other research, he has promulgated the Theory of Deadly Initials and the theory that infants resemble their fathers more closely than they do their mothers.[1] More recently, he studied the tendency of people to choose purebred dogs which resembled them.[2]

Education

  • 1991 Ph.D. Columbia University. Thesis: Speech Disfluencies and the Effects of Mazes, Motives, and Metronomes.
  • 1989 M.Phil. Columbia University.
  • 1988 M.A. Columbia University. Thesis: Predicting Stock Market Predictions.
  • 1985 B.A. Harvard College, cum laude with Highest Honors in Psychology.

References

  1. Christenfeld, N., & Hill, E.A. (1995). Whose baby are you? Nature, 378, 669
  2. Roy, M; N. Christenfeld (2004). "Do dogs resemble their owners?". Psychological Science (15): 361–363.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.