Background
McCarty grew up in Portsmouth, Virginia, and earned both his bachelor"s and his master"s degrees from Old Dominion University.
McCarty grew up in Portsmouth, Virginia, and earned both his bachelor"s and his master"s degrees from Old Dominion University.
McCarty grew up in Portsmouth, Virginia, and earned both his bachelor"s and his master"s degrees from Old Dominion University. He earned his Doctor of Philosophy in pathobiology from what is now the Bloomberg School of Public Health at in Maryland in 1976.
Prior to serving as provost, he was dean of Vanderbilt"s College of Arts and Science. He also served as a lieutenant commander in the United States. Public Health Service. In 1978, he was appointed assistant professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, where he remained until 1998.
During his tenure at Virginia, he eventually was named chair of the Department of Psychology.
In 1998, McCarty was named Executive Director for Science at the American Psychological Association in Washington, District of Columbia, where he helped the APA launch the "Decade of Behavior". The Decade of Behavior, a nickname for the 2000s and successor to the 1990s" "Decade of the Brain", is a public education campaign—endorsed by more than 70 professional associations across a variety of disciplines—to bring attention to the importance of behavioral and social research.
McCarty also spent time visiting universities and regional psychological associations to discuss how the APA might better represent psychologists nationally. Vanderbilt"s College of Arts and Science named McCarty as its new dean in 2001.
In addition to his decanal duties, McCarty taught a psychology seminar for first-year undergraduate students entitled "Stress, Health, and Human Behavior" and had a dual appointment in the Department of Pharmacology in the School of Medicine.
On May 6, 2008, McCarty was elevated to the university provostship, replacing Nicholas South. Zeppos, who was himself elevated to the university chancery. McCarty stepped down from the position on June 30, 2014. He intends to rejoin the Vanderbilt faculty after a yearlong leave.
Much of McCarty"s research has centered on behavioral and physiological adaptations to stress and on the development of hypertension, and he has written more than 30 chapters and 150 articles for various publications.
In addition, McCarty served as the editor of American Psychologist and was the founding editor-in-chief of Stress.