Michael Lewis (psychologist)

Michael Lewis (born January 10, 1937 in Brooklyn, New York) is University Distinguished Professor of Pediatrics and Psychiatry, and director of the Institute for the Study of Child Development at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. He is also professor of psychology, education, and biomedical engineering and serves on the Executive Committee of the Cognitive Science Center at Rutgers. He is also founding director of the Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School Autism Center. He received his PhD in 1962 from the University of Pennsylvania in both clinical and experimental psychology.

Michael Lewis, PhD, psychologist

Research

His research has focused on typical and atypical emotional and intellectual development. By focusing on the normal course of development, he has been able to articulate the sequence of developmental capacities of the child in regard to its intellectual growth and relate this to changes in the organization of its central nervous system functioning.[1] His discoveries of techniques to measure CNS functioning, through the use of the habituation-dishabituation paradigm, are widely used throughout the country and have become the standard measurement system used to predict atypical growth as well as typical development.[2] Using these measurement instruments, he has been able to develop computer-based techniques for enhancing intellectual ability in children suffering from a variety of disorders associated with developmental delays. These include children with Down syndrome, preterm infants, and children with cerebral palsy.[3]


His work on emotional development and consciousness is part of a series of books on the development of consciousness. In his 1979 book co-authored by Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Social Cognition and the Acquisition of Self, he began the research on the use of mirror recognition as a measure of consciousness. His 1983 book, Children's Emotions and Moods, was the first volume devoted to emotional development, and his Handbook of Emotions (1st edition) (1993) was awarded the 1995 Choice Magazine’s Outstanding Academic Book Award. It is now it its 3rd edition (2008). In Altering Fate: Why The Past Does Not Predict The Future (1997), a finalist for the 1998 Eleanor Maccoby Book Award, Lewis attempted to describe various developmental theories and argues for the proposition that early childhood does not seal one's fate. Professor Lewis argues that children's environments, at whatever age, determine how children behave, and he suggests that altering environments should be the major task in effecting social adjustment and mental health.

Besides these books he has authored Language Interaction Intervention Program: A Workshop Curriculum for Parent Training (1991), and two research monographs including A developmental study of information processing within the first three years of life: Response decrement to a redundant signal (1969) and The determinants of children's responses to separation (1977). Many of these books have been translated into German, Italian, Polish, Russian, Danish and Japanese. The most recent of these edited volumes include the Handbook of Developmental Psychopathology: 3rd edition (2014), an Introduction to Infant Development, Canadian Edition (2011), The Cambridge Handbook of Environment in Human Development: A Handbook of Theory and Measurement (2012), and Gender Differences in Prenatal Substance Exposure (2012). In addition, he has had published over 400 articles and chapters in professional journals and scholarly texts.

Usage of new technology

In 2012, Dr. Lewis collaborated with New Jersey technology company WebTeam Corporation to develop EARLYThree, an app designed to periodically evaluate a child’s developmental traits in order to weigh the risk of autism or similar disorders. EARLYThree contains a series of age-specific questions that parents and pediatricians can answer to determine whether or not the examinee has the cognitive abilities appropriate to his/her age. The first screening can be made when the child is 8-month old, followed by subsequent screenings at 12, 15, 18, 24 and 36 months.[4]

Honors

Among his honors, Lewis is a fellow of the New York Academy of Sciences,American Psychological Association, and American Association of the Advancement of Science, as well as the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. In 1995 he was ranked by a University of Notre Dame Study as number 1 in terms of the impact of scientists who are most referenced and productive in the field of developmental sciences, in the top 1.5% of scientists referenced in the Social Science Index.[5] In addition, Dr. Lewis received the 2009 Urie Bronfenbrenner Award for Lifetime Contribution to Developmental Psychology in the Service of Science and Society from the American Psychological Association,[6] as well as the 2012 Hedi Levenback Pioneer Award from The New York Zero-to-Three for his pioneering research in child development.[7] The Society of Research in Child Development, the leading academic child development organization, announced the 2013 award for the Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Child Development, in recognition of Lewis's lifetime contribution to the scientific body of knowledge and understanding of children's development.[8]

Publications

Books and monographs

References

  1. Lewis, Michael (2014). The Rise of Consciousness and the Development of Emotional Life. New York: Guilford Press. ISBN 978-1-46251-252-2.
  2. Michael Lewis, Linda Michalson (1983). Children's Emotions and Moods: Developmental Theory and Measurement. New York: Plenum Press. ISBN 0306412098.
  3. Sullivan, Margaret W.; Michael Lewis (1993). "Contingency, means end skills, and the use of technology in infant intervention". Infants and Young Children. 5: 58–77. doi:10.1097/00001163-199304000-00009.
  4. "New Hope for Detecting World's Fastest Growing Developmental Disorder".
  5. Howard, George S.; Jeanne D. Day (1995). "Individual Productivity and Impact in Developmental Psychology". Developmental Review. 15 (2): 136–149. doi:10.1006/drev.1995.1006.
  6. "UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School Professor Receives 2009 Urie Bronfenbrenner Award for Lifetime Achievement".
  7. "Lifetime of Work in Child Development Leads to National Recognition".
  8. "Distinguished Scientific Contributions to Child Development 2013".
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