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Dudley McGlynn, Ph.D. Dudley McGlynn completed his PhD (1968) in clinical psychology at the University of Missouri. Dudley McGlynn is a professor at Auburn University. Dudley has been a tenured professor at 4 universities and was the Founding chairperson of the Department of Behavioral Science at the UMKC School of Dentistry. He is an author/co-author of over 100 publications, has served on 7 editorial boards and been awarded numerous teaching/mentoring awards for work with both graduate and undergraduate students. More information on Dr. McGlynn and his work may be found at: http://www.auburn.edu/~mcglyfd/ |
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Douglas L. Chute, Ph.D. Douglas L. Chute completed his PhD (1973) in experimental psychology at the University of Missouri. "As you will see from the biographies of the other alumni and alumnae I found myself in a talented milieu of students in the midst of what seemed like a Golden Age in the history of this illustrious Department. I was more than a bit of a jerk, but some of these fellow students have persevered through my personality disorders and become life-long friends. The most amazing result of my graduate student days were the academic gifts most generously given by the faculty of the day... shared publications, grant opportunities, teaching and research ideas, techniques and technologies. Dennis Wright, Bob Daniel, Russ Geen, Dave MacDonald, Don Kausler, John Mueller, June Chance, Mel Marx, Irwin Nahinsky, Lee Becker, and Mark Thelan freely provided me with the essential professional components that I still use in my career today. Ironically, as a Department like that at Missouri grows and develops in exciting new directions, it is natural for the legacy of these faculty and their generous mentorship to diminish and be forgotten in their home environment. But their legacy lives on elsewhere. My own former students call me "professor of professors" as so many of them have taken up academic posts around the country and the world. So there are academic "grand children" and even academic "great grand children" who carry on the legacies of scholarship and pedagogy from the faculty of the Golden Age of the Department of Psychology at the University of Missouri. I can personally attest that the academic gifts from the Department of my day later gave rise to one of APA's leading publications, Neuropsychology, the first Ph.D training programs in Clinical Neuropsychology, the first technologies to present experiments and control fMRI machines in Cognitive Neuroscience, the first optical brain imaging technologies (fNIRS), the first on-line continuing professional education programs, and the first virtual reality assessments and interventions in driving." - Douglas Chute More information on Dr. Chute and his work may be found at: www.drexel.edu/coas/psychology/faculty/chute_douglas/. |
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Gerald P. Koocher, Ph.D. Gerald P. Koocher completed his PhD (1972) in clinical psychology at the University of Missouri. From 1971 through 2001 he held positions as an intern, post-doctoral fellow, and ultimately as Chief of Psychology at Boston's Children's Hospital and Judge Baker Children's Center. During this period he also served as a full time faculty member (Associate Professor) at Harvard Medical School. In June, 2001 Dr. Koocher became Professor and Dean of the School of Health Sciences at Simmons College (Boston). He currently holds appointment as Lecturer in Psychology at Harvard Medical School and Senior Associate in Psychology at Children’s Hospital Boston and is Editor of the journal Ethics & Behavior. Dr. Koocher was president of the APA in 2006. More information on Koocher and his work may be found at: www.ethicsresearch.com. |
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