On the psychobiology of personality : essays in honor of Marvin Zuckerman
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Bibliographic Information
On the psychobiology of personality : essays in honor of Marvin Zuckerman
Elsevier, 2004
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Zuckerman received his Ph.D. in psychology from New York University, Graduate School of Arts and Science in 1954 with a specialization in clinical psychology. After graduation, he worked for three years as a clinical psychologist in state hospitals in Norwich, Connecticut and Indianapolis, Indiana. While in the latter position the Institute for Psychiatric Research was opened in the same medical center where he was working as a clinical psychologist. He obtained a position there with a joint appointment in the department of psychiatry. This was his first interdisciplinary experience with other researchers in psychiatry, biochemistry, psychopharmacology, and psychology. His first research areas were personality assessment and the relation between parental attitudes and psychopathology. During this time, he developed the first real trait-state test for affects, starting with the Affect Adjective Check List for anxiety and then broadening it to a three-factor trait-state test including anxiety, depression, and hostility (Multiple Affect Adjective Check List). Later, positive affect scales were added. Toward the end of his years at the institute, the first reports of the effects of sensory deprivation appeared and he began his own experiments in this field. These experiments, supported by grants from NIMH, occupied him for the next 10 years during his time at Brooklyn College, Adelphi University, and the research labs at Albert Einstein Medical Center in Philadelphia. This last job was his second interdisciplinary experience working in close collaboration with Harold Persky who added measures of hormonal changes to the sensory deprivation experiments. He collaborated with Persky in studies of hormonal changes during experimentally (hypnotically) induced emotions. During his time at Einstein, he established relationships with other principal investigators in the area of sensory deprivation and they collaborated on the book Sensory Deprivation: 15 years of research edited by John Zubek (1969). His chapter on theoretical constructs contained the idea of using individual differences in optimal levels of stimulation and arousal as an explanation for some of the variations in response to sensory deprivation. The first sensation seeking scale (SSS) had been developed in the early 1960's based on these constructs. At the time of his move to the University of Delaware in 1969, he turned his full attention to the SSS as the operational measure of the optimal level constructs. This was the time of the drug and sexual revolutions on and off campuses and research relating experience in these areas to the basic trait paid off and is continuing to this day in many laboratories. Two books have been written on this topic: Sensation Seeking: Beyond the Optimal Level of Arousal, 1979; Behavioral Expressions and Biosocial Bases of Sensation Seeking, 1994. Research on sensation seeking in America and countries around the world continues at an unabated level of journal articles, several hundred appearing since the 1994 book on the subject. The theoretical model of sensation seeking changed as a consequence of research on the biological correlates of sensation seeking which included biochemical as well as psychophysiological variables. Genetic studies also indicated that sensation seeking was a major trait with a strong genetic/ biological basis. Zuckerman and his colleagues conducted research on the psychophysiological correlates of sensation seeking. One of these areas, augmenting/reducing of the cortical evoked potential, has provided a well replicated model of brain functioning in high and low sensation seekers, and Siegel has extended this into a model for sensation seeking in cats and rats. This animal model provides a link between sensation seeking and behavioral, genetic, physiological, and biochemical bases for the trait in other species. Investigators at other universities, Bardo at the University of Kentucky and LeMoal and Simon at the University of Bordeaux, have used the sensation seeking model to investigate the psychobiological basis of novelty seeking in rats. Zuckerman's interest in the biological basis of the trait of sensation seeking broadened into a more general interest in the biological bases of personality, culminating in his book: Psychobiology of Personality, 1991 and many book chapters and articles on the subject. His perspective in the area was broadened by sabbaticals spent with leaders in the field in England: Hans Eysenck, Jeffrey Gray, and Robert Plomin. More recent research attempted to place sensation seeking within the context of new structural models for personality traits. Factor analytic studies showed that a combined factor of impulsivity and sensation seeking formed one of five, robust and replicable factors of personality. Research on this new measure of the basic trait is ongoing.
Table of Contents
E.S. Barratt, L.F. Orozco-Cabal, and F.G. Moeller, Impulsivity and sensation seeking: A historical perspective on current challenges.
R.M. Stelmack, On personality and arousal: A historical perspective on Eysenck and Zuckerman.
J. Strelau and M. Kaczmarek, Warsaw studies on sensation seeking.
J. Joireman and D.M. Kuhlman, The Zuckerman-Kuhlman Personality Questionnaire: Origin, development, and validity of a measure to assess an alternative Five-Factor Model of personality.
P. Schmitz, On the alternative Five-Factor Model: Structure and correlates.
A. Angleitner, R. Riemann, and F. Spinath, Investigating the ZKPQ-III-R: Psychometric properties, relations to the Five-Factor Model, and genetic and environmental influences on its scales and facets.
S.B.G. Eysenck, How the impulsiveness and venturesomeness factors evolved after the measurement of psychoticism.
P.G. Bazana and R.M. Stelmack, Stability of personality across the life span: A meta-analysis.
A.M. Johnson and P.A. Vernon, The genetic basis of substance abuse: Mediating effects of sensation seeking.
A. Furnham, Personality and leisure activity: Sensation seeking and spare-time activities.
M. Goma-i-Freixanet, Sensation seeking and participation in physical risk sports.
S.A. Ball, Personality traits, disorders, and substance abuse.
L. Donohew, M.T. Bardo, and R.S. Zimmerman, Personality and risky behavior: Communication and prevention.
G.D. Matthews, Neuroticism from the top down: Psychophysiology and negative emotionality.
B. Brocke, The multilevel approach in sensation seeking: Potentials and findings of a four-level research program.
V. De Pascalis, On the psychophysiology of extraversion.
R. Haier, Brain imaging studies of personality: The slow revolution.
J. Siegel, Electrophysiological correlates of sensation seeking behavior in rats, cats, and humans.
P. Netter, Personality and hormones.
J. Hennig, Personality, serotonin, and noradrenaline.
T.H. Rammsayer, Extraversion and the dopamine hypothesis.
B. af Klinteberg, L. von Knorring, and L. Oreland, On the psychobiology of impulsivity.
Allan D. Pickering, The neuropsychology of impulsive antisocial sensation seeking personality traits: From dopamine to hippocampal function?
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