Elaine Hatfield

Elaine Hatfield is a professor of Psychology at the University of Hawai'i.[1] She is well known as a scholar who pioneered the scientific study of passionate love and sexual desire.[2]

In 2012, the Association for Psychological Science (APS) will give Elaine an award for a Lifetime of Scientific Achievement. In recent years she has received Distinguished Scientist Awards (for a lifetime of scientific achievement) from the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, the Society for the Scientific Study of Sex, and the University of Hawai‘i, and the Alfred Kinsey Award from the Western Region of SSSS. For the past two decades she has been ranked in citation reviews as the most frequently quoted social psychologist in the world. She has often appeared on national T.V., and has been interviewed by Barbara Walters, Phil Donahue, Hugh Downs, Tom Snyder, and others.

She has written or co-written books based on her research, among them two books which both won the American Psychological Foundation's National Media Award: A New Look at Love[3] and Mirror, Mirror: The Importance of Looks in Everyday Life.

Recently, Hatfield and her husband Richard L. Rapson have collaborated on three books: Love, Sex, and Intimacy: Their Psychology, Biology, and History (HarperCollins), Emotional Contagion (Cambridge University Press), and Love and Sex: Cross-Cultural Perspectives (Allyn & Bacon.)

The Rapsons have also published Dangerous Characters (a collection of short stories), four serious novels: Rosie, Recovered Memories, Darwin’s Law, and Hijacked! and five detective stories: two Kate MacKinnon murder mysteries (Deadly Wager and Vengeance is Mine) and two Firefly mysteries (The Adventures of Firefly: The World’s Tiniest Detective and Take Up Serpents), and The G-string Murders.

Theoretical papers and chapters

Books

References