- Lloyd Humphreys
Lloyd G. Humphreys (
12 December 1913 —7 September 2003 ) was a differential psychologist and methodologist who focused on assessing individual differences inhuman behavior . His work is among the most widely cited in intelligence research, and he received many prestigious awards in this field. Lubinski D (2004). [www.vanderbilt.edu/Peabody/SMPY/HumphreysObit.pdf Lloyd G. Humphreys: Quintessential Scientist (1913–2003)] . (PDF "Intelligence" 32 (2004) 221–226.] Born inLorane, Oregon , Humphreys earned his undergraduate degree at theUniversity of Oregon in 1935, a master's from Indiana University in 1936, where he first learned aboutfactor analysis , then received his doctorate atStanford in 1938, studying under Ernest Hilgard. Hisdissertation on partial reinforcement effect (or the Humphreys effect), is considered a classic in the field.His first position was at
Northwestern University (1939–1945). He was aCarnegie Fellow inAnthropology (1941–1942,Columbia University ) during that time, then taught at theUniversity of Washington (1946–1948) andStanford (1948–1952). He then took a post as Research Director, Personnel Laboratory, for theUnited States Air Force (1951–1957). He then spent the remainder of his career at theUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (1957–1984).Humphreys argued that much psychological research fails to replicate because of inadequate
sample size s, because correlations fluctuate when Ns are small. His own empirical research typically involved large-scale longitudinal studies such as Project TALENT. Flanagan, J. C., Dailey, J. T., Shaycoft, M. F., Gorham, W. A., Orr, D. B., & Goldberg, I. (1962). "Design for a study of American youth." Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin.]In the 1970s, Humphreys chaired the
American Psychological Association 's Task Force on ability and achievement testing. He deemed a generalintelligence test ‘‘the single most important test that can be administered for vocational guidance purposes’’ (Humphreys, 1985, p. 211). He also coined the concept "inadequate learning syndrome" (ILS) and argued it was a more important social problem than the AIDS epidemic (Humphreys, 1988).Amid the controversy generated by publication of "
The Bell Curve " in 1994, Humphreys wrote a target article (Humphreys, 1994), which stimulated a series of comments by a number of prominent scholars in the field. He generated further controversy by accepting money from thePioneer Fund . He was also one of 52 signatories on "Mainstream Science on Intelligence ," an editorial written byLinda Gottfredson and published in the "Wall Street Journal ", which defended the findings onintelligence in "The Bell Curve ". Gottfredson, Linda (December 13, 1994).Mainstream Science on Intelligence . "Wall Street Journal ", p A18.]elected works
* Humphreys LG (1939). The effect of random alternation of reinforcement on the acquisition and extinction of conditioned eyelid reactions. "Journal of Experimental Psychology", 25, 141–158.
* Humphreys, L. G. (1985). General intelligence: An integration of factor, test, and simplex theory. In B. B. Wolman (Ed.), "Handbook of intelligence" ( pp. 201–224). New York: Wiley.
* Humphreys, L. G. (1988). Trends in levels of academic achievement of blacks and other minorities. "Intelligence", 12, 231–260.
* Humphreys, L. G. (1994). Intelligence from the standpoint of a (pragmatic) behaviorist. "Psychological Inquiry", 5, 179–192.References
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