Background
Miller, Neal was born on August 3, 1909 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. Son of Irving Miller and Lily Miller.
(McGraw-Hill Hardcover, First Edition, Third Impression wi...)
McGraw-Hill Hardcover, First Edition, Third Impression with 488 pages. John Dollard, Research Associate in Psychology (Professor) and Neal E. Miller, Professor of Psychology Institute of Human Relations, Yale University. - What is a neurosis and how does it interfere with the normal use of the mind? How an fear be good as well as bad? Why are early childhood experiences so important? What do the therapist and the patient do in psycholtherapy?
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psychologist emeritus educator
Miller, Neal was born on August 3, 1909 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States. Son of Irving Miller and Lily Miller.
Bachelor of Science, University Washington, 1931. Master of Science, Stanford University, 1932. Doctor of Philosophy, Yale University, 1935.
Doctor of Science, University Michigan, 1965. Doctor of Science, University Pennsylvania, 1968. Doctor of Science, St. Lawrence University, 1973.
Doctor of Science, University Uppsala, Sweden, 1977. Doctor of Science, LaSalle College, 1979. Doctor of Science, Rutgers University, 1985.
Social science research fellow, Institute Psychoanalysis, Vienna, Austria, 1935-1936;
assistant research psychologist, Yale University, 1933-1935;
instructor, assistant professor, research assistant psychological, Institute Human Relations, 1936-1941;
associate professor, research associate, Institute Human Relations, 1941-1942, 46-50;
professor psychology, Institute Human Relations, 1950-1952;
James Rowland Angell professor psychology, Institute Human Relations, 1952-1966;
fellow, Berkeley College, since 1955;
professor, Rockefeller U., New York City, 1966-1981;
professor emeritus, Rockefeller U., since 1981;
research affiliate, Yale University, since 1985. Expert consultant American Institute Research, 1946-1962. Special consultant committee human resources Research and Development Board, Office Secretary Defense, 1951-1953.
Member technical advisory panel Office Assistant Secretary Defense, 1954-1957. Expert consultant Operations ResearchOffice and Human Resources Research Office, 1951-1954. Board of science counsellors National Institute of Aging, 1987-1990.
Board gov.s and member of Executive Committee New York Academy of Sciences, 1987.
(A good read for all psch majors, mental health profession...)
( The authors postulate that aggression is always a conse...)
(McGraw-Hill Hardcover, First Edition, Third Impression wi...)
(Political Science, Psychology, Education)
Chairman board science directors Roscoe B. Jackson Memorial Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Maine, 1962-1976, honorary trustee, since 1980. Board science counsellors National Institute of Mental Health, 1957-1961. Fellowship committee Foundations Fund for Research in Psychiatry, 1956-1961.
Member central council International Brain Research Organization, 1964. Vice president board directors Foote School, 1964-1965. Chairman NAS/National Research Council Committee on Brain Sciences, 1969-1971.
Board science counsellors National Institute Child Health and Human Development, 1969-1972. Vice president Institute for Advancement of Health, 1982-1990. Major United States Army Air Corps., 1942-1946.
Officer in charge research, Psychological Research Unit 1, Nashville 1942-1944. Director psychological research project Headquarters Flying Training Command, Randolph Field, Texas 1944-1946. Fellow American Academy Arts and Sciences (council 1979-1983), British Psychological Society (honorary foreign), International Society Research on Aggression (life).
Member American Philosophical Society, New York Academy of Sciences (honorary life), Spanish Society Psychology (honorary), American Psychological Association (council representatives 1954-1958, president experimental division 1952-1953, president 1960-1961, president division health psychology 1980-1981, Distinguished Science Contribution award 1959, award for Distinguished Contributions to Knowledge 1983, citation for Outstanding Lifetime Contribution to Psychology, 1991, establishment of Neal E. Miller Distinguished Lecturer in Neurosci. since 1995, Division Health Psychology Centennial award for outstanding achievement 1992), Eastern Psychological Association (president 1952-1953), National Research Council (division anthropology and psychology 1950-1953, chairman 1958-1960), National Academy of Sciences (chairman section psychology 1965-1967, chairman committee brain science 1969-1971, senior fellow Institute of Medicine since 1983, board mental health and behavioral medicine 1980-1985), German Society Behavioral Medicine and Behavior Modification (honorary), Society Experimental Psychologists, American Association for the Advancement of Science, Federation biomedical Research (board directors since 1988), Society Neurosci. (president 1971-1972, president award for Career of Outstanding Neurosci. Research Teaching and Service 1994), Biofeedback Society of America (president-elect 1983, president 1984, Outstanding Research award 1987, Distinguished Research award 1995), Academy Behavioral Medicine Research (president 1978-1979, Neal E. Miller New Investigator award established 1989), Mory's Graduate Club (New Haven), Graduate Club Association, Sigma Xi (president Rockefeller University chapter 1968-1969), Phi Beta Kappa.
Married Marion E. Edwards, June 30, 1948. Children: York, Sara.