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Topic: Peter Salovey


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In the News (Wed 23 Dec 09)

  
  Peter Salovey, Yale Psychology Faculty
Mayer, J.D., Salovey, P., Caruso, D.R., and Sitarenios, G. Measuring emotional intelligence with the MSCEIT V2.0.
Salovey, P., and Grewal, D. The science of emotional intelligence.
Salovey, P., and Williams-Piehota, P. Field experiments in social psychology: Message framing and the promotion of health protective behaviors.
www.yale.edu /psychology/FacInfo/Salovey.html   (411 words)

  
 Peter Salovey - Member Emotional Intelligence Consortium
Peter Salovey, Dean of Yale College at Yale University, is the Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology and a Professor of Management and of Epidemiology and Public Health at Yale.
Salovey's research has focused on the psychological significance and function of human moods and emotions, and the application of social psychological principles to motivate people to adopt behaviors that protect their health.
Salovey, who has taught the Introductory Psychology course since his first days on the faculty, was awarded the William Clyde DeVane Medal for Distinguished Scholarship and Teaching in Yale College in 2000 and the Lex Hixon Prize for Teaching in the Social Sciences at Yale in 2002.
www.eiconsortium.org /members/salovey.htm   (1285 words)

  
 NexusEQ Conferences
Researcher, author, and educator, Peter Salovey is one of the pioneering scientists in the field of EI; together with Jack Mayer, he published the seminal articles in the field in 1990.
Peter Salovey, Ph.D. Peter Salovey and his colleague Jack Mayer defined and tested the concept of emotional intelligence; they wrote the seminal papers in the field in the early 1990s that launched the international scientific EQ movement.
Salovey is Dean of Yale College, Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology and a former chair of the Psychology Department at Yale University.
www.nexuseq.com /speakers/salovey.html   (438 words)

  
 Emotional Intelligence
Peter is the Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences at Yale University.
Professor Salovey is a leading authority on the psychological consequences of mood and emotion, and he has applied his work to fostering health, especially those healthy behaviors relevant to the prevention of cancer and HIV/AIDS.
Peter and David met in 1983 when Peter was a graduate student and David was a post-doc.
www.emotionaliq.org /About.htm   (718 words)

  
 The Yale Herald - Feb 27, 2004 - Two new Deans have big shoes to fill
Though Salovey is no grouch by comparison—he is a member of a student band, the Professors of Bluegrass—it will be his ability to approach the Deanship from a new and progressive standpoint that will distinguish him as an effective administrator.
Salovey stressed that he and Butler, having both chaired large departments and worked on behalf of the College, would be able to combine their resources in accomplishing this objective.
While Salovey said it is too early to provide detailed plans for his goals as Dean of Yale College, it is evident that he, along with Butler, will be well-equipped to tackle the upcoming challenges of providing the best college experience for every student.
www.yaleherald.com /article-p.php?Article=3018   (1409 words)

  
 SPN Professional Profile: Peter Salovey
Mayer, J. D., Salovey, P., Caruso, D. R., & Sitarenios, G. Measuring emotional intelligence with the MSCEIT V2.0.
Salovey, P., & Grewal, D. The science of emotional intelligence.
Salovey, P., Rothman, A. J., Detweiler, J. B., & Steward, W. Emotional states and physical health.
salovey.socialpsychology.org   (608 words)

  
 Nexus 2000: Peter Salovey -- featured speaker.
Peter Salovey, Ph.D. After completing his undergraduate education at Stanford University, Peter Salovey received his Ph.D. in clinical psychology from Yale University in 1986.
The program of research conducted in Professor Salovey’ s laboratory concerns two general issues: (a) the psychological significance and function of human moods and emotions and (b) the application of principles derived from research in social/personality psychology to the promotion of health protective behaviors.
Professor Salovey is a recipient of the National Science Foundation’s Presidential Young Investigator Award, and he has served on the NSF Social Psychology Advisory Panel.
www.nexuseq.com /00/presenters/salovey.html   (492 words)

  
 How 'emotional intelligence' emerged
Salovey presented an overview of the emotional intelligence framework that he and colleague John D. Mayer, PhD, published in 1990 on the interaction between emotions and reasoning.
Salovey said this might be because sadness leads people to focus on details and worry more about missing pieces of evidence.
And, in turn, Salovey said, people might be able to better monitor and discriminate among their feelings, and use that information to think and act more effectively.
www.apa.org /monitor/oct03/emotional.html   (411 words)

  
 Emotional Intelligence - Annotated References   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Salovey, P., Hsee, C., and Mayer, J. Emotional intelligence and the self-regulation of affect.
Salovey, P., Mayer, J. D., Goldman, S., Turvey, C, and Palfai, T. Emotional attention, clarity, and repair: Exploring emotional intelligence using the Trait Meta-Mood Scale.
This chapter elaborates on the Mayer and Salovey (1997) model and, in particular, discusses how it fits with long-standing debates in the field of emotion concerning whether emotion facilitates rational problem solving and adaptive behavior or interferes with these processes.
www.cjwolfe.com /refer.htm   (1041 words)

  
 Power Line: Why Taliban Man at Yale?
Salovey first argues that Taliban spokesman Sayed Rahmatullah Hashemi isn't really a student at Yale, even though allowed "to take courses for college credit." Well, if he is allowed to take courses, and those courses are for credit, Mr.
Salovey further states "that universities are places that must strive to increase understanding, especially of the most difficult issues that face the nation and the world." If only this were true.
Salovey's university is openly hostile to ROTC, an institution that trains young men and women to tackle some of the most intractable issues, and will not allow its presence on campus.
powerlineblog.com /archives/013776.php   (1610 words)

  
 Yale Medicine Summer 2003: Faculty
As dean, Peter Salovey hopes to bridge a gap that is cultural as well as geographic.
Salovey hopes that graduate students will be increasingly likely to trek over from the medical campus to take part in the McDougal Center’s activities, and also will encourage the center to offer programs on Cedar Street.
Salovey foresees an expanded role for the McDougal Center as a sponsor of public service programs, which already offer opportunities for graduate students to meet one another and to get involved in the larger New Haven community.
info.med.yale.edu /external/pubs/ym_su03/faculty.html   (1330 words)

  
 Salon Books | Promotional intelligence   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Salovey says he and Mayer labeled their set of interactions an intelligence "to be provocative, to really challenge this idea that emotions are irrational," but there's no doubt that calling it thus also romanced America's love-hate relationship with the cerebral.
Salovey and Mayer contend that such programs often take a simplistic "emotions are good" stance, while at the same time suggesting that there is a single "right" way of dealing with them.
Salovey and Mayer, on the other hand, speak a more diffident and complicated language, full of qualifications and conditionals.
www.salon.com /books/it/1999/06/28/emotional/index3.html   (1729 words)

  
 Yale Daily News - Salovey, Butler to assume deanships
Salovey, one of the developers of the "emotional intelligence" psychological framework, chaired the Psychology Department from 2001-2003.
"Peter Salovey is a brilliant, charismatic administrator who has been a big success in the Graduate School deanship in just one year," Gaddis said.
Salovey and Butler have been active participants of the Committee on Yale College Education, which completed a comprehensive undergraduate curricular review last spring.
www.yaledailynews.com /Article.aspx?ArticleID=25188   (1141 words)

  
 Yale Daily News - Salovey to become College dean   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Salovey said he could not comment before Yale President Richard Levin's announcement, but announced the turnover in a closed-door meeting with Graduate School administrators and staff at 2 p.m.
Salovey, who is in his mid-40s, has served as Graduate School dean since last January, when he replaced Susan Hockfield, who is now Yale's Provost.
Salovey, Butler and Bailyn served on the Committee on Yale College Education, which last spring produced Yale's first comprehensive undergraduate academic review in 30 years.
www.yaledailynews.com /Article.aspx?ArticleID=25177   (1011 words)

  
 The Socially Savvy
Salovey agrees that like musical talent, EI is partially innate but he argues, "I'm optimistic that people can learn a richer emotional vocabulary and that they can self-regulate emotions better."
Salovey, the dean of Yale College, points to high school programs that teach students social skills, impulse control and anger management.
Mayer and Salovey say the debate is complicated because the definition of EI has been snatched away from researchers and diluted in ways that they never intended.
www.ediets.com /news/article.cfm/cmi_972087/cid_1/code_17552   (575 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Emotional Development and Emotional Intelligence: Educational Implications: Books: Peter Salovey,David J. ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Peter Salovey and his colleague, John Mayer, were apparently the first to use the term "emotional intelligence" in their academic research.
Peter Salovey by the way, seems to be more concerned with making a positive difference in the world, while Daniel Goleman seems to be more concerned with making a fortune and a name for himself.
Salovey is, for example, is working with educators while Goleman is pandering to the corporations with his new book on EQ for business.
www.amazon.com /Emotional-Development-Intelligence-Educational-Implications/dp/0465095879   (1860 words)

  
 Emotional Intelligence
Some of those with fabulous IQ scores were doing poorly in life; one could say that they were wasting their potential by thinking, behaving and communicating in a way that hindered their chances to succeed.
One of the major missing parts in the success equation is emotional intelligence, a concept made popular by the groundbreaking book by Daniel Goleman, which is based on years of research by numerous scientists such as Peter Salovey, John Meyer, Howard Gardner, Robert Sternberg and Jack Block, just to name a few.
The term ‘Emotional Intelligence’ was first coined by Peter Salovey of Yale University and John Mayer of the University of New Hampshire in 1990.
www.a2zpsychology.com /articles/eq_and_iq.htm   (1254 words)

  
 CIRA - Yale Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS
In January 2003, Professor Salovey was appointed as Yale's 18th Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and on July 1, 2004, he became Dean of Yale College.
The program of research conducted in Professor Salovey's laboratory concerns two general issues: (a) the psychological significance and function of human moods and emotions and (b) the application of social psychological principles to motivating health protective behaviors.
Salovey, P., Schneider, T.R. and Apanovitch, A.M. Message Framing in the Prevention and Early Detection of Illness.
cira.med.yale.edu /about_us/bios.asp?PID=495   (944 words)

  
 Yale School of Management - Faculty - Peter Salovey   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
After completing his undergraduate education at Stanford University, Peter Salovey received his PhD in clinical psychology from Yale University in 1986 and was appointed to the faculty in the same year.
Professor Salovey is also the director of the Department of Psychology's Health, Emotion, and Behavior (HEB) Laboratory and deputy director of the Yale Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS (CIRA).
Professor Salovey has published about 200 articles in the scientific literature and is a recipient of the National Science Foundation's Presidential Young Investigator Award, and has served on the NSF Social Psychology Advisory Panel.
mba.yale.edu /faculty/profiles/salovey.shtml   (828 words)

  
 Yale Medicine Summer 2004: Faculty
Salovey, the Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology, is deputy director of the Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS based at the School of Public Health, where he is also a professor.
Salovey has served on the National Science Foundation Social Psychology Advisory Panel and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Behavioral Science Working Group, and is presently a member of the NIMH National Advisory Mental Health Council.
Salovey has been chair of the psychology department and director of undergraduate studies and graduate studies.
info.med.yale.edu /external/pubs/ym_su04/faculty.html   (1350 words)

  
 EQ Today: Emotional WHAT? Perspectives on Emotional Intelligence by Peter Salovey, Six Seconds, Reuven Bar-On, Candace ...
There is ongoing discussion about the origins of “EQ,” but consensus is that the seminal publication was an article called “Emotional Intelligence”; by Peter Salovey and John “Jack” Mayer in 1990.
The article defined EQ as a scientifically testable “intelligence.” Salovey says he and Jack were equal coauthors, and he got his name first because of a coin toss.
Daniel Goleman drew on the research of Salovey and Mayer, as well as several other key researchers and practitioners, for his bestselling book, Emotional Intelligence.
www.eqtoday.com /02/emotional.php   (1373 words)

  
 BRIAN T
Salovey, P., Detweiler, J.B., Steward, W., and Bedell, B.T. Affect and health-relevant cognition.
Salovey, P., Bedell, B.T., Detweiler, J.B., and Mayer, J.D. Coping intelligently: Emotional intelligence and the coping process.
Salovey, P., Bedell, B.T., and Detweiler, J.B. Are the effects of message framing on health behaviors mediated by anticipated affect?
www.lclark.edu /~psych/dbgoodies/BrianWEBvita2.htm   (1039 words)

  
 People - CENTURY
Peter Jatlow, M.D.—Professor and Chairman of the Department of Laboratory Medicine, and Professor of Psychiatry.
Peter Salovey, Ph.D.—Dean of Yale College, Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology; Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, the Institution for Social and Policy Studies, and the Yale School of Management.
Salovey was the principal investigator for Framing Message for Smoking Cessation with Buproprion study.
www.quitwithyale.org /people/index.html   (2404 words)

  
 Emotional Intelligence
“Why is it,” wondered Peter Salovey, “that some of the smartest people we know are so stupid?” At the time, Salovey, Yale professor of psychology, was painting his house with the help of his friend John Mayer, a fellow psychologist with training in the field of intelligence.
Peter Salovey thinks that we owe our neglect of emotions to the fact that “the last 2000 years of Western thought have always pitted passion against reason.” Emotions have traditionally been thought of as disruptions that should be minimized and regulated because they disturb the thought process.
Meanwhile, Peter Salovey is working on a book of his own.
www.jaydixit.com /writing/eq.htm   (1647 words)

  
 EI
Mayer and Salovey have cited previous publications that used the term emotional intelligence and they generally do not credit themselves with inventing the term.
Nevertheless, their publications in the field have been extremely influential and have formed the basis for much of the academic research and thinking in the field.
Salovey and Mayer defined emotional intelligence as the: "Ability to monitor one's own and other's feelings and emotions, to discriminate among them and to use this information to guide one's thinking and actions." (1990).
www.emotionaliq.org /EI.htm   (1650 words)

  
 Emotional Intellgence: Key Readings on the Mayer and Salovey Model   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
Peter Salovey, Ph.D., Marc A. Brackett, Ph.D., & John D. Mayer, Ph.D. Format:
This book of readings, collected and edited by the co-founders of Emotional Intelligence, Dr. Peter Salovey and Dr. John Mayer, introduces the theory, measurement, and applications of the EI ability model.
Salovey and Mayer carefully selected their most up-to-date book chapters and peer-reviewed articles to present the transition from origination, development, and present stage of Emotional Intelligence.
www.nprinc.com /emot_itl/eikr.htm   (411 words)

  
 Publisher-supplied biographical information about contributor(s) for Library of Congress control number 2003027933   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-10)
The Chris Argyris Professor of Psychology at Yale University, Peter Salovey published the first scientific articles on emotional intelligence (with John D. Mayer), introducing the concept to the field of psychology.
Salovey also serves as dean of Yale's Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and has additional faculty appointments in the School of Management and the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health.
Salovey was founding editor of the Review of General Psychology and served as an associate editor of the APA journals Emotion and Psychological Bulletin.
www.loc.gov /catdir/bios/wiley047/2003027933.html   (325 words)

  
 Message Framing Motivates Beach-Goers To Use Sunscreen
Washington - New research shows the best way to motivate beach-goers to use sunscreen to protect themselves from the harmful effects of the sun is to emphasize the good things that will happen if you do use sunscreen rather than the bad consequences that will happen if you don't.
Psychologist Peter Salovey, Ph.D., of Yale University, along with four other researchers, writing in the March issue of the American Psychological Association's (APA) journal of Health Psychology, conducted an American Cancer Society funded study that demonstrated how people responded differently to sunscreen messages depending on how those messages were framed.
Peter Salovey, Ph.D., can be reached at 203-432-4546.
www.apa.org /releases/sunscreen.html   (483 words)

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