James Jerome Jenkins | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1923-07-29)July 29, 1923 St. Louis, Missouri, U.S. |
| Died | November 17, 2012(2012-11-17) (aged 89) |
| Alma mater | University of Chicago (BS) William Jewell College (BA) University of Minnesota (PhD) |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Psycholinguistics |
| Institutions | University of Minnesota,University of South Florida,City University of New York |
| Doctoral advisor | Donald G. Paterson |
James J. Jenkins (July 29, 1923 – November 17, 2012[1]) was an American psychologist who played a significant role in the development ofcognitive psychology.[2]
Trained as an industrial psychologist, his early career was shaped by his Fellowship at theSocial Science Research Council’s 1953 summer meeting that established the discipline ofpsycholinguistics.[3] He initially attempted to apply a modified version ofbehaviorism to the problems oflanguage behavior, and while his “mediational” approach was very influential, he became convinced that it could not provide an adequate account of the structural nature of language as articulated byNoam Chomsky.[2][4][5] He continued research on language andcognition, eventually focusing on topics concerningspeech perception (in collaboration with his wife, Winifred Strange). His research was marked by an interest in new and even radical ideas (e.g., those advocated byJames J. Gibson), a keen appreciation of the value of studying real-world problems (as in his early research onaphasia[6]), and a willingness to give up cherished theories when the facts drove him to do so.[7] "If you're not making any progress toward understanding the problem," he said, "you've got to change."[2] He had an infectious enthusiasm for both research and teaching, and his impact on young psychologists was tremendous. He supervised 46 PhD students in his first academic position at the University of Minnesota[8] and through his career served as advisor or co-advisor of 82 PhD's.[9][10] He is beloved by his students, whom he encouraged to follow their own diverse interests. His students made many important contributions to psychological research (as just one example, the influential work on abstraction in memory done by his studentsJohn Bransford and Jeffrey Franks[2][11]).
Jenkins enlisted in the Army in 1942 and was trained as a meteorologist, receiving a B.S. in physics from theUniversity of Chicago in 1944. After serving as a weatherman in theArmy Air Forces in the U.S and the South Pacific, he returned toWilliam Jewell College to earn an A.B. in psychology in 1947. He then earned a Ph.D. in psychology at theUniversity of Minnesota in 1950, studyingindustrial psychology under Donald G. Paterson (who trained even more Ph.D.’s in his career than Jenkins did[8]). He remained at the University of Minnesota as a professor in the Psychology Department from 1950 to 1982. From 1965 to 1973, he was founding Director of the newly established Center for Research in Human Learning of the University of Minnesota, where he remained as Director of Training until 1982. In that year, he moved to theUniversity of South Florida, first as Chair of the Department of Psychology, and then as Distinguished Research Professor until he becameEmeritus in 2000. He served as an Adjunct Research Professor at theCity University of New York from 2000 through 2008. He was a Fellow at theCenter for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences in 1957–58 and 1964–65 (where he and a group of distinguished scholars ended a night-long celebration of their year together by attempting to watch the sun rise over thePacific Ocean), and a visiting professor at theUniversity of Colorado,Yale University, and the City University of New York.
Jenkins is a Fellow of theAmerican Association for the Advancement of Science, theAmerican Psychological Society/Association for Psychological Science, theAmerican Psychological Association and theAcoustical Society of America. He is a member of theSociety of Experimental Psychologists and thePsychonomic Society, the Midwestern and Southeastern Psychological Associations, the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, and the International Society for Ecological Psychology. He served as chairman of the Society of Experimental Psychologists (1972–73), chairman of the Psychonomic Society Board of Governors (1978–79), chairman of the Board of Scientific Affairs of the American Psychological Association (1969–1971), president of the Midwestern Psychological Association (1967–68), president of Division 3 (Experimental) of the American Psychological Association (1973–74), among other contributions to professional societies. He was consulting editor, associate editor, or editor of several major professional journals and member of severalNIH and NIE grant panels, member of theNational Research Council for four years, and chairman of the Social Science Research Council Committee on Linguistics and Psychology (1960–1962). His academic honors include the previously mentioned Fellowships at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences and the Social Science Research Council Fellowship at the seminal 1953 Social Science Research Council Summer Institute in Psycholinguistics, as well as an SSRC Faculty Fellowship, aFord Foundation Faculty Grant, a Citation for Achievement from William Jewell College (1968), aPhi Kappa Phi (University of South Florida Chapter) Artist/Scholar Award (1985), aSigma Xi (USF Chapter) Outstanding Research Award (1987), and an Outstanding Alumni Achievement Award from the University of Minnesota (2001).[12]
(From over 200 books, chapters, journal articles, and technical reports; see footnote 8 for a complete bibliography).