Steven Reiss

Steven Reiss Ph.D.

Steven Reiss (1947–2016) was an American psychologist who contributed original ideas, new assessment methods, and influential research studies to four topics in psychology: anxiety disorders, developmental disabilities, intrinsic motivation (what makes us tick), and the psychology of religion.

Biography

He was born in New York City in 1947 and was educated at Dartmouth College, Yale University, and Harvard University. At Dartmouth he was one of 16 members of his undergraduate class to be awarded Senior Fellow status. He served as a tenured professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago (1972-1991) and at The Ohio State University (1991-2008), where for 16 years he directed the developmental disabilities center at The Ohio State University Medical Center.

Reiss died, 28 October 2016, at age 69.[1]

Anxiety disorders

Reiss led the research team that discovered anxiety sensitivity, eventually overcoming fierce opposition to his idea that the fear of fear arises from beliefs about the consequences of anxiety and not just from Pavlovian associations with panic attacks.[2][3] In the 1990s anxiety sensitivity became one of the most widely studied and important topics in clinical psychology, with more than 1,800 published studies. It changed how therapists evaluate and treat Posttraumatic Stress Disorder[4] and Panic Disorder,[5] disorders that affect 10 million Americans. Therapists now treat anxiety sensitivity cognitions they had erroneously dismissed as unimportant. Anxiety sensitivity sometimes predicts anxiety disorders before clinical symptoms can be observed, thereby creating new opportunities for prevention research. Reiss introduced the term “anxiety sensitivity,” defined the construct in terms of an information processing model, mentored graduate students who went on to study the construct, and wrote the Anxiety Sensitivity Index, which is widely used in the assessment of anxiety disorders.[6]

Developmental disabilities

Reiss is one of the world’s leading scientific authorities on “dual diagnosis” or the co-occurrence of mental illness and intellectual disabilities.[7] About one million Americans have a dual diagnosis, but in severe form the prevalence is closer to about 200,000 people, many of whom also have autism.

In 1980 Reiss founded an outpatient clinic for dual diagnosis in the Chicago metropolitan area,[8] one of the first outpatient programs for dual diagnosis in the nation. Mental health professionals cited the success of this clinic to help justify and fund literally hundreds of new psychiatric services in North America and Europe.

Reiss introduced the now widely used term "diagnostic overshadowing" to refer to the tendency to overlook the mental health needs of people with developmental disabilities.[9] In 1987 he organized the first-ever international conference on the mental health aspects of intellectual disabilities. The Director of the National Institute of Mental Health convened an ad hoc panel to fast track funding for Reiss's conference. In 1987 he published the Reiss Screen for Maladaptive Behavior, which became the leading method in North America for screening for dual diagnosis.[10] The tool greatly reduced the cost of identifying service needs for many thousands of people with a dual diagnosis. This was followed by a children's version the Reiss Scales in 1994.[11]

Reiss gave multiple invited presentations on dual diagnosis and traveled to 44 states and four Canadian provinces to train direct care staff on the needs of people with a dual diagnosis. In 1998 Reiss and Ohio State University Professor Michael Aman convened a panel of 105 physicians and scientists from ten nations to write a consensus handbook of best practices aimed at reducing the abuse of psychiatric overmedication.[12] Twelve national medical, professional, and government organizations formally recognized this effort, including the American Psychiatric Association, American Psychological Association, and the National Institutes of Health.

He was an active member of the generation of scientists, therapists, and advocates who replaced custodial institutional care with community supports and appropriate education. Although Reiss’s efforts were concentrated on dual diagnosis, he also served on official classification and terminology committees, advocated nationally to lessen discrimination for organ transplant operations, and helped build the Human Development Institute in Chicago. His career was recognized with the 2008 Distinguished Research Award from the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (AAIDD), the 2006 Frank J. Menolascino Award for Career Research from the National Association on Dual Diagnosis, the 1991 Distinguished Award for Career Research from the Arc of the United States, and the 1987 Distinguished Services Award from AAIDD.

Intrinsic motivation

Previous scholars answered the question, “What makes people tick,” by observing primitive tribes, studying the unconscious mind, or by embracing armchair philosophical inquiry. Reiss and his colleagues executed the first large-scale, cross-cultural, scientific research surveys of what people say motivates them. More than 6,000 people from four continents were assessed. The results identified 16 psychological needs or "basic desires," which are goals common to everyone and deeply rooted in human nature. Everyone embraces the 16 basic desires, but individuals prioritize them differently.[13] He wrote the Reiss Motivation Profile psychological tool to assess what motivates a person.[14]

In two books Reiss applied these to a new method of life coaching.[15][16] His methods have been used for leadership training and conflict resolution by scores of multinational companies such as Comcast, Kraft, Chrysler, and Siemens. He created an international network of seven training institutes located in Europe and Asia to train business consultants in his methods of life coaching. Reiss applied the 16 basic desires to assessing academic underachievement and motivating students.[17] Many public schools located throughout the United States use the Reiss School Motivation Profile assessment tool.

In 2000 and 2004 Reiss first presented his scientific theory of what motivates religious experiences and practices.[18][19] This theory holds that all religious experiences express one or more of the 16 basic desires.

Reiss and colleague James Wiltz published a seminal and widely publicized study on the popularity of reality television based on the 16 basic desires.[20] This work was discussed on national BBC television in the UK.

Peter Boltersdorf, a German coach, applied Reiss’s 16 basic desires to a comprehensive analysis of sports psychology.[21] Boltersdorf’s clients went on to win an Olympic Gold Medal (Mathias Steiner, Weightlifting, Beijing) and a World Championship (Handball, 2007).

Reiss is an influential critic of the social psychology attack on the profit motive. He has exposed multiple flaws in the underlying science and the failure to consider contradictory data.[22][23] He has argued that the so-called undermining effect of extrinsic reward on intrinsic motivation is actually just a trivial distraction effect of no scientific significance.

Psychology of Religious Experiences

In October 2015 Reiss published The 16 Strivings for God, Reiss’ book-length treatment of his theory on the psychology of religious experiences.[24] In this work Reiss proposed a peer-reviewed, original theory of mysticism, asceticism, spiritual personality, and religious beliefs and practices.

Reiss’ theory of the psychology of religious experiences provides a link between personality, motivation and the often contradictory teachings and practices of the world’s religions. Unlike previous theories that posit a single source and essence of religion such as fear of death, mysticism, sacredness, communal bonding, magic, or peak experiences, Reiss presented detailed support for his theory that religion is about the values motivated by the sixteen basic desires of human nature.

In The 16 Strivings for God Reiss develops the theory that people embrace religion because it provides them with opportunities to satisfy all 16 basic desires both in strong form and in weak form. For example, a person with a weak basic desire for social contact might be attracted to religious retreats, while a person with a strong basic desire for Social Contact might be attracted to religious festivals. A person with a weak basic desire for Vengeance might be attracted to passages in scriptures that speak of peace and forgiveness, while a person with a strong basic desire for Vengeance might be attracted to passages that speak of revenge.

Personal life

In 1971 he married Maggi Musico, and they have two adult children: Michael, a statistician, and Benjamin, a physician.

References

  1. "Steven Reiss Obituary". Columbus Dispatch. 13 November 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  2. Reiss, S. (1980). Pavlovian conditioning and human fear: An expectancy model. Behavior Therapy, 11, 380-396.
  3. Reiss, S., Peterson, R.A., Gursky, D.M., & McNally, R.J. (1986). Anxiety sensitivity, anxiety frequency, and the prediction of fearfulness. Behavior Research and Therapy, 24, 1-8.
  4. Marshall, G. N., Miles, N.V., & Stewart, S. (2010). Anxiety sensitivity and PTSD symptom severity are reciprocally related: evidence from a longitudinal study of physical trauma survivors. J. Abnorm. Psychol. 119,143-150. [NIH open access version].
  5. McNally, R. J. (2006). Anxiety sensitivity and panic disorder. Biological Psychiatry, 52, 938-946.
  6. Reiss, S., Peterson, R.A., Gursky, D.M., & McNally, R.J. (1986). Anxiety sensitivity, anxiety frequency, and the prediction of fearfulness. Behavior Research and Therapy, 24, 1-8.
  7. Reiss, S., Levitan, G.W., & McNally, R.J. (1982). Emotionally disturbed, mentally retarded people: An undeserved population. American Psychologist, 37, 361-367.
  8. Reiss, S. & Trenn, E. (1984). Consumer demand for outpatient mental health services for mentally retarded people. Mental Retardation, 22, 112-115.
  9. Reiss, S., & Szyszko, J. (1983). Diagnostic overshadowing and professional experience with mentally retarded persons. American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 87, 396-402.
  10. Reiss, S. (1990). The development of a screening measure for psychopathology in people with mental retardation. In E. Dibble and D.B. Gray (eds.), Assessment of behavior problems in persons with mental retardation living in the community (pp. 107-118). Rockville, MD: National Institute of Mental Health.
  11. Corcoran, Jacqueline; Walsh, Joseph (1 March 2010). Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis in Social Work Practice. Oxford University Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-19-974146-5. Retrieved 14 November 2016.
  12. Reiss, S., & Aman, M.G. (Eds.) (1998). Psychotropic medications and developmental disabilities: The international consensus handbook. Columbus, OH: The Ohio State University Nisonger Center. 368 pp.
  13. Reiss, S. & Havercamp, S. H. (1998). Toward a comprehensive assessment of fundamental motivation. Psychological Assessment, 10, 97-106.
  14. Reiss, S. (2000). Who Am I? The 16 basic desires that motivate our actions and define our personalities. New York: Tarcher/Putnum. (Translated into German, Swedish, Chinese, Japanese, Dutch, German, and Spanish.)
  15. Reiss, S. (2000). Who Am I? The 16 basic desires that motivate our actions and define our personalities. New York: Tarcher/Putnum. (Translated into German, Swedish, Chinese, Japanese, Dutch, German, and Spanish.)
  16. Reiss, S. (2008). The Normal Personality: A New Way of Thinking about People. New York: Cambridge University Press. (Translated into German and Polish.)
  17. Reiss, S. (2009). Six motivational reasons for low school achievement. Child and Youth Care Forum, 38, 219-225.
  18. Reiss, S. (2004). The 16 strivings for God. Zygon, 39, 303-320.
  19. Reiss, S. (2000). Why people turn to religion: A motivational analysis. Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, 39, 47-52.
  20. Reiss, S., & Wiltz, J. (2004). Why people watch reality TV. Media Psychology, 6, 363-378.
  21. Reiss, S., Wiltz, J., & Sherman, M. (2001). Trait motivational correlates of athleticism. Personality and Individual Differences, 30, 1139-1145.
  22. Reiss, S., & Sushinsky, L.W. (1975). Overjustification, competing responses, and the acquisition of intrinsic interest. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 31, 1116-1125.
  23. Reiss, S. (2013). Myths of Intrinsic Motivation. Columbus, OH: IDS Publishing Corporation.
  24. Reiss, Steven (2015). The Sixteen Strivings for God. Mercer University Press. ISBN 978-0881465570.
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