- Lee Willerman
Lee Willerman (
26 July 1939 —10 January 1997 ) was an American psychologist known for his work ontwin studies .He was born and grew up in
Chicago . Willerman received BA and MA degrees fromRoosevelt University in 1961 and 1964 respectively, and his Ph.D. fromWayne State University in 1967. After a three-year stint at theNational Institutes of Health , Willerman completed a post-doctoral year at theUniversity of Michigan in the Department of Human Genetics. In 1971 he took a position at theUniversity of Texas at Austin , where he remained until his death. Freeman, Karen (January 31, 1997). Lee Willerman, 57, Authority On Genes' Role in Intelligence. "New York Times "]In 1974, Willerman joined the
American Eugenics Society , at a time when this society had already moved away fromeugenics and towards the study ofmedical genetics , behavior genetics, and social biology. He also was an active member of theBehavior Genetics Association and his work over the remainder of his life involved behavior genetics. His first study examinedIQ and birth weight differences betweenidentical twins , finding that the twin who had been heavier at birth tended to be higher in IQ. Willerman worked withJoseph M. Horn andJohn C. Loehlin on a major study of adoptive families, theTexas Adoption Project . Much of his work involvedpsychometrics and research into neuroanatomical predictors of intelligence.In 1994 he was one of 52 signatories on "
Mainstream Science on Intelligence ", an opinion piece written byLinda Gottfredson and published in the "Wall Street Journal ", which defended the findings onrace and intelligence in "The Bell Curve ". Gottfredson, Linda (December 13, 1994).Mainstream Science on Intelligence . "Wall Street Journal ", p A18.]References
External links
* [http://www.utexas.edu/faculty/council/1999-2000/memorials/Willerman/willerman.html Lee Willerman obituary] via University of Texas at Austin
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