Kenrick - Vita - P. 1

Kenrick - Vita - P. 1

Kenrick - vita - p. 1

VITA

Douglas T. Kenrick
Department of Psychology
Arizona State University
Tempe, Arizona 85287-1104

(480) 965-7249)

Educational Background:

1976Ph.D. in Psychology (Social), Arizona State University

1975M.A. in Psychology (Clinical), Arizona State University

1970B.A. in Psychology (minor-Sociology), Dowling College

Academic Positions

1989-Professor, Arizona State University

2001 Visiting Professor, University of British Columbia

1994Visiting Professor, University of Groningen, Netherlands

1987Visiting Scholar, University of Tulsa

1982 - 1989Associate Professor, Arizona State University

1984 - 1985Visiting Associate Professor, Temple University

1980 - 1982Assistant Professor, Arizona State University

1976 - 1980Assistant Professor, Montana State University

Administrative Experience:

1995 - 1997Director of social psychology program, ASU.

1989 - 1994Director of undergraduate studies, ASU psychology.

1982 - 1993University institutional review board, human subjects.

1985 -1986ASU Faculty Senate.

Editorial Experience:

2007Advisory Board, Encyclopedia of Social Psychology

2006Board of Consulting Editors, Evolution & Human Behavior

2006Board of Consulting Editors, Evolutionary Psychology

2003 -Board of Consulting Editors, Personality & Social Psychology Review

1999 -Board of Consulting Editors, Personal Relationships.

1995 -Board of Consulting Editors, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (Interpersonal Relations section)

1997 -2001Board of Consulting Editors, Journal of Gender, Culture, & Health.

1989-1991Board of Consulting Editors, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (Personality Section).

1986, 1995Program Committee (Divisions 8, 34) American Psychological Association.

1979Board of Consulting Editors, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

1976 - present-Ad Hoc Reviewer: American Psychologist, Behavioral & Brain Sciences, Psychological Review, Psychological Bulletin, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, etc.

Professional Associations:

Society for Experimental Social Psychology, Society for Personality & Social Psychology (Fellow), American Psychological Association (Fellow, Division 8), American Psychological Society (Fellow), Human Behavior and Evolution Society (elected member of board of directors, 2004/6).

Teaching:

Graduate courses taught: Advanced Social Psychology: Interpersonal Processes; Evolutionary Psychology, Advanced Evolutionary Psychology, Personality Theory and Research, Environmental Psychology, Advanced Topics in Social Psychology, Teaching Seminar. Have funded 3-4 graduate student lines for each of the last 5 years.

2007 Finalist, ASU Graduate Mentor Award

2008Outstanding Mentor Award

Undergraduate courses taught: General psychology, social psychology, environmental psychology, sexual behavior, tests and measurements, abnormal psychology, psychology of adjustment, research practicum. Students working with me won awards for best undergraduate thesis in psychology for 2003 and 2004. Have funded undergraduate researchers working as “honorary graduate students” for 3 of last 5 years (each has gone on to their top choice graduate school).

2004 - Finalist, ASU Parent’s Association Teacher of the Year Award

2007 - Special Recognition Award, ASU Parent’s Association

2008-Special Recognition Award, ASU Parent’s Association

Publications:

  1. Cialdini, R.B., & Kenrick, D.T. (1976). Altruism as hedonism: A social developmental perspective on the relationship of mood state and helping. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 34, 907-9l4.
  2. Cialdini, R.B., Kenrick, D.T., & Hoerig, J.H. (1976). Victim derogation in the Lerner paradigm: Just World or just justification? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 33, 719-724.
  3. Kenrick, D.T., Reich, J.W., & Cialdini, R.B. (1976). Compensation and justification: Rosier skies for the devalued victim. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 33, 719-724.
  4. Kenrick, D.T., & Cialdini, R.B. (1977). Romantic attraction: Misattribution vs. reinforcement explanations. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, ("featured article"), 35, 381-391.
    • Reprinted in J. C. Brigham & L. S. Wrightsman (Eds.) Contemporary Issues in Social Psychology (4th Edition). Brooks/Cole.
    • Abstracted in Marriage and Family Review.
    • Abstracted in Current contents.
  5. Kenrick, D.T., Cialdini, R.B., & Linder, D.E. (1979). Heterosexual attraction and attributional processes in fear producing situations. In M. Cook & G. Wilson (Eds.), Love and attraction. London: Pergamon Press.
  6. Kenrick, D.T., & Johnson, G.A. (1979). Interpersonal attraction in aversive environments: A problem for the classical conditioning paradigm? Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 37, 572-579.
  7. Kenrick, D.T., Baumann, D., & Cialdini, R.B. (1979). A step in the socialization of altruism as hedonism: Effects of negative mood on children's generosity under public and private conditions. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 37, 747-755.
  8. Kenrick, D.T., Cialdini, R.B., & Linder, D.E. (1979). Misattribution under fear producing circumstances: Four failures to replicate. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 5, 329-334.
  9. Kenrick, D.T. (1979). The science of friendships: A model of friends as scientists. Contemporary Psychology, 24, 505.
  10. Kenrick, D.T., & Gutierres, S. (1980). Contrast effects and judgments of physical attractiveness: When beauty becomes a social problem. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 38, 131-140.
    • Reprinted in Aronson, E. (1992 and 1994). Readings about the Social Animal. (Sixth & Seventh Editions). New York: W.H. Freeman & Co.
  11. Kenrick, D.T., & Stringfield, D.O. (1980). Personality traits and the eye of the beholder: Crossing some traditional philosophical boundaries in the search for consistency in all of the people. Psychological Review, 87, 88-104.
  12. Kenrick, D.T., Stringfield, D.O., Wagenhals, W.L., Dahl, R.H., & Ransdell,H.J. (1980). Sex differences, androgyny, and approach responses to erotica: A new variation on the old volunteer problem. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 38, 517-524.
  13. Baumann, D., Cialdini, R.B., & Kenrick, D.T. (1981). Altruism as hedonism: Helping and self-gratification as equivalent responses. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 40, 1039-1046.
    • Reprinted in: Schroeder, D.A., Johnson, D.E., & Jensen, T.D. (Ed.). (1985). Contemporary Readings in Social Psychology. Chicago: Nelson-Hall.
  14. Cialdini, R.B., Baumann, D.J., & Kenrick, D.T. (1981). The development of altruism as hedonism: A three step model. Developmental Review, 1, 207-223.
  15. Cialdini, R.B., Kenrick, D.T., & Baumann, D. (1982). Mood and altruism: A developmental perspective. In N. Eisenberg (Ed.), The development of prosocial behavior. Academic Press.
  16. Kenrick, D.T., & Braver, S.L. (1982). Personality - idiographic and nomothetic! A rejoinder. Psychological Review, 89, 182-186.
  17. Kenrick, D.T., Dantchik, A., & MacFarlane, S. (1983). Personality, environment, and criminal behavior: An evolutionary perspective. In W.S. Laufer & J.M. Day (Eds.), Personality theory, moral development and criminal behavior. Lexington, Mass: D.C. Heath & Co.
  18. Kenrick, D.T., & Dantchik, A. (1983). Interactions, idiographics, and the social psychological invasion of personality. Journal of Personality, 51, 286-307.
  19. Baumann, D.J., Cialdini, R.B., & Kenrick, D.T. (1983). Mood and sex differences in the development of altruism as hedonism. Academic Psychology Bulletin, 5, 299-207.
  20. Kenrick, D.T., & Keefe, R.C. (1984). Social traits, self-observations, and other hypothetical constructs. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 7, 561-562.
  21. Kenrick, D.T., Montello, D., & MacFarlane, S. (1985). Personality: Social learning, social cognition, or sociobiology? In R. Hogan & W. Jones (Eds.), Perspectives in Personality (Vol. I). Greenwich, CT: JAI Press.
  22. Schutte, N.S., Kenrick, D.T., & Sadalla, E.K. (1985). The search for predictable settings: Situational prototypes, constraint, and behavioral variation. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 49, 121-148.
  23. Kenrick, D.T. (1986). How strong is the case against contemporary social and personality psychology: A response to Carlson. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 50, 839-844.
  24. Kenrick, D.T., & MacFarlane, S. (1986). Ambient temperature and horn honking: A field study of interpersonal hostility. Environment and Behavior, 18, 179-191.
  25. Kenrick, D.T., & Trost, M.R. (1987). A biosocial model of relationship formation. Pp. 59-100 in K. Kelley (Ed.), Females, males and sexuality: Theories and research. Albany: SUNY Press.
  26. Kenrick, D.T. (1987). Gender, genes, and the social environment: A biosocial interactionist perspective. Pp. 14-43 in P. Shaver & C. Hendrick (Eds.), Review of Personality and Social Psychology (Vol. 7). Newbury Park, CA: Sage.
  27. Sadalla, E.K., Kenrick, D. T., & Vershure, B. (1987). Dominance and heterosexual attraction. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 52, 730-738.
  28. Kenrick, D.T. (1988). Biology, Si! Hard-wired ability: Maybe No. Comment on Benbow: "Sex differences in mathematical reasoning. " Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 11, 199-200.
  29. Kenrick, D.T., & Funder, D.C. (1988). Profiting from controversy: Lessons from the person-situation debate. American Psychologist, 43, 23-34.
  30. Kenrick, D.T., Gutierres, S.E., & Goldberg, L. (1989). Influence of erotica on ratings of strangers and mates. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 25, 159-167.
  31. Kenrick, D. T., & Keefe, R. C. (1989). Time to integrate sociobiology and social psychology. Comment on Buss. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 12, 24-26.
  32. Kenrick, D.T., & Trost, M.R. (1989). A reproductive exchange model of heterosexual relationships: Putting proximate economics in ultimate perspective. Pp. 92-118 in C. Hendrick (Ed.), Review of Personality & Social Psychology (Vol. 10). Newbury Park, CA.: Sage.
  33. Kenrick, D.T. (1989). A biosocial perspective on mates and traits: Reuniting personality and social psychology. In D.M. Buss & N. Cantor (Eds.) Personality Psychology: Recent trends and emerging directions. New York: Springer-Verlag.
  34. Allen, J., Kenrick, D.T., Linder, D.E., & McCall, M. (1989). Arousal and attraction: A response facilitation alternative to misattribution and negative reinforcement models. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 57, 261-270.
  35. Kenrick, D.T. (1989). Altruism, Darwinism, and the gift of Josiah Wedgewood. Comment on Rushton. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 12, 531-532.
  36. Hettema, P.J., & Kenrick, D.T. (1989). Biosocial interaction and individual adaptation. In P.J. Hettema (Ed.) Personality and Environment: Assessment of human adaptation. London: John Wiley & Sons.
  37. Kenrick, D.T. (1989). Selflessness examined: Is avoiding tar and feathers nonegoistic? (Comment on Caporeal et al.). Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 12, 711-712.
  38. Kenrick, D. T. (1990). Personality and reproductive behavior: Integrating the social psychological and the evolutionary perspectives. Pp. 5-24 in R.W. Bell & N.J. Bell (Eds.) Sociobiology and the Social Sciences. (Vol. 7 of the Interfaces in Psychology series). Lubbock, TX: Texas Tech University Press.
  39. Kenrick, D.T., Sadalla, E.K., Groth, G., & Trost, M.R. (1990). Evolution, traits, and the stages of human courtship: Qualifying the parental investment model. Journal of Personality, 58, 97-116. (Special Issue on Biological Approaches to Personality).
    • Reprinted in L. Betzig (1997). Human Nature: A critical reader. New York: Oxford University Press.
  40. Kenrick, D.T., McCreath, H.E., Govern, J., King, R., & Bordin, J. (1990). Person-environment intersections: Everyday settings and common trait dimensions. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 58, 685-698.
  41. Kenrick, D.T., & Funder, D.C. (1991). The person-situation debate: Do traits really exist? In V. Derlega, B. Winstead, & W.H. Jones (Eds.), Contemporary Research in Personality. Chicago, IL: Nelson-Hall. (pp. 149-174)
  42. Kenrick, D.T. (1991). Proximate altruism and ultimate selfishness. Psychological Inquiry, 2, 135-137.
  43. Kenrick, D.T. & Hogan, R. (1991). Cognitive psychology. In M. Maxwell (Ed.) The sociobiological imagination. (pp. 171-186). Albany: SUNY Press.
  44. Kenrick, D.T., & Keefe, R.C. (1992). Age preferences in mates reflect sex differences in mating strategies. (target article) Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 15, 75- 91.
  45. Seamon, J.G., & Kenrick, D.T. (1992). Psychology. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
  46. Kenrick, D.T., & Keefe, R.C. (1992). Sex differences in age preferences: Universal reality or ephemeral construction (author's response). Behavioral & Brain Sciences , 15, 119-133.
  47. Trost, M.R., Maass, A., & Kenrick, D.T. (1992). Minority influence: Personal relevance biases cognitive processes and reverses private acceptance. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 28, 234-254.
  48. Hettema, J. & Kenrick, D.T. (1992). Models of person-environment interactions. Pp. 393-417 in G. V. Caprara & G. VanHeck (Eds.) Modern Personality Psychology: Critical Reviews & New Directions. London: Harvester-Wheatsheaf.
  49. Kenrick, D.T., & Khavari, K.A. (1992). Evolutionary theory and applied psychology: The right way and the wrong. New Ideas in Psychology, 10, 385-387.
  50. Trost, M. R., & Kenrick, D.T. (1993). An evolutionary perspective on interpersonal communication. Pp. 120-124 in S. Petronio, J. K. Alberts, M.L. Hecht , & J.L. Buley (Eds.) Contemporary perspectives on interpersonal communication. Madison, WI: Brown & Benchmark.
  51. Kenrick, D.T., Montello, D. R., Gutierres, S.E., & Trost, M.R. (1993). Effects of physical attractiveness on affect and perceptual judgment: When social comparison overrides social reinforcement. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin, 19, 195-199.
  52. Kenrick, D.T., Groth, G.R., Trost, M.R., & Sadalla, E.K. (1993). Integrating evolutionary and social exchange perspectives on relationships: Effects of gender, self-appraisal, and involvement level on mate selection criteria. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 64, 951-969.
  53. Kenrick, D.T. (1993). Do these sociobiologists have an answer for everything? (Comment on Perusse). Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 16, 299-300.
  54. Kenrick, D.T. (1993). Linking biological and cognitive approaches to personality: Evolution, gender, and mate preferences. In Hettema, J., & Deary, I.J. (Eds.) Basic Issues in Personality. Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
  55. Seamon, J.G., & Kenrick, D.T. (1993). Story-telling: the authors speak. Teaching of Psychology, 20, 115-116.
  56. Kenrick, D.T. & Trost, M.R. (1993). The evolutionary perspective. Pp. 148-172 in R.J. Sternberg & A.E. Beall (Eds.) Perspectives on the Psychology of Gender. NY: Guilford Press.
  57. Kenrick, D.T., Keefe, R.C., & Van Heck, G. (1993). Age and mate choice over the life span. In R. Kastenbaum (Ed.) Encyclopedia of Adult Development. Phoenix, AZ: Oryx Press.
  58. Kenrick, D.T. (1994). Evolutionary social psychology: From sexual selection to social cognition. In M.P. Zanna (Ed.) Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, 26. San Diego, CA: Academic Press. Pp. 75-121.
  59. Seamon, J.G., & Kenrick, D.T. (1994). Psychology (2nd ed.). Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
  60. Kenrick, D.T., & Sheets, V. (1994). Homicidal fantasies. Ethology and Sociobiology, 14, 231-246.
  61. Kenrick, D.T., Neuberg, S.L., Zierk, K., & Krones, J. (1994). Evolution and social cognition: Contrast effects as a function of sex, dominance, and physical attractiveness. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin, 20, 210-217.
  62. Green, B. L., & Kenrick, D.T. (1994). The attractiveness of gender-typed traits at different relationship levels: Androgynous characteristics may be desirable after all. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin, 20, 244-253.
  63. Kenrick, D.T., & Keefe, R.C. (1994). Gender and sexual orientation: Why the different age preferences? Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 17, 582-584.
  64. Trost, M.R., & Kenrick, D.T. (1994). Ego-involvement in the minority influence paradigm: The double-edged sword of minority advocacy. In S. Moscovici, A. Mucchi-Faina, & A. Maass (Eds.) Minority Influence. Chicago: Nelson-Hall. Pp. 149-162.
  65. Kenrick, D.T., Keefe, R.C., Bryan, A., Barr, A., & Brown, S. (1995). Age preferences and mate choice among homosexuals and heterosexuals: A case for modular psychological mechanisms. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 69, 1166-1172.
  66. Kenrick, D.T. (1995). Evolutionary theory versus the confederacy of dunces. Psychological Inquiry, 6, 56-61.
  67. Kenrick, D.T. & Brown, S. (1995). Al Capone, discrete morphs, and complex dynamic systems. Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 18, 560-561.
  68. Kenrick, D.T., Trost, M.R., & Sheets, V.L. (1996). The feminist advantages of an evolutionary perspective. Pp. 29-53 in D.M. Buss & N. Malamuth (Eds.) Sex, Power, Conflict: Feminist and Evolutionary Perspectives. New York: Oxford University Press.
  69. Kenrick, D.T. & Trost, M.R. (1996). The evolutionary psychology of relationships. In S. Duck (Ed.) Handbook of Personal Relationships. Orlando, Fla: Academic Press.
  70. Kenrick, D.T., Gabrielidis, C., Keefe, R.C., & Cornelius, J. (1996). Adolescents' age preferences for dating partners: Support for an evolutionary model of life-history strategies. Child Development, 67, 1499-1511.
  71. Kenrick, D.T., & J.A. Simpson (1997). Why social psychology and evolutionary psychology need one another. Pp. 1-20 in J. Simpson, & D.T. Kenrick, D.T. (eds). Evolutionary social psychology. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
  72. Kenrick, D.T., Sadalla, E.K., Groth, G., & Trost, M.R. (1997). Where and when are women more selective than men? Pp. 223-224 in L. Betzig (Ed.). Human Nature: A critical reader. New York: Oxford University Press.
  73. Simpson, J., & Kenrick, D.T. (1997). Evolutionary social psychology. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
  74. Brown, S., & Kenrick, D.T. (1997). Paradoxical self-deception: Maybe not so paradoxical after all. Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 20, 109-110.
  75. Kenrick, D.T. & Keefe, R.C. (1997). Age preferences in mates: An even closer look, without the distorting lenses. Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 20, 140-143.
  76. Kenrick, D.T., Sadalla, E.K., & Keefe, R.C. (1998). Evolutionary cognitive psychology: The missing heart of modern cognitive science. Pp. 485-514 in C. Crawford & D. L. Krebs (Eds.) Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
  77. Buss, D.M., & Kenrick, D.T. (1998). Evolutionary social psychology. In D.T. Gilbert, S.T. Fiske, & G. Lindzey (Eds.) Handbook of Social Psychology (4th edition). New York: Oxford University Press/McGraw Hill. Volume II: Pp. 982-1026.
  78. Kenrick, D.T., & Barr, A. (1998). Testosterone effects on behavior: Why so controversial? Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 21, 379-380.
  79. Kenrick, D.T., Neuberg, S.L., & Cialdini, R.B. (1999). Social psychology: Unravelling the mystery. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
  80. Kenrick, D.T. (1999). Saturday night social constructivism. Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 22, 227-228.
  81. Gutierres, S.E., Kenrick, D.T., & Partch, J. (1999). Contrast effects in self assessment reflect gender differences in mate selection criteria. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin, 25, 1126-1134.
  82. Kenrick, D.T. (1999). Of Hunter-Gatherers, Fundamental Social Motives, and Person-Situation Interactions. Psychological Inquiry, 10, 226-229.
  83. Kenrick, D.T. (2000). The war is over: We all won. Contemporary Psychology, 45, 112-114.
  84. Kenrick, D.T., & Luce, C.L. (2000). An evolutionary life-history model of gender differences and similarities. Pp. 35-64 in T. Eckes & H.M. Trautner (Eds.) The Developmental Social Psychology of Gender. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
  85. Kenrick, D.T. (2000). The role of sexual choice in shaping human intellectual creativity (Review of G. Miller’s The mating mind). International Society for the Study of Personal Relationships Bulletin.
  86. Kenrick, D.T., Li, N., & Butner, J. (2000). Dynamical systems and the mating game. Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 23, 607-608.
  87. Kenrick, D.T., & Li. N. (2000). The Darwin is in the details. American Psychologist, 55, 1060-1061.
  88. Kenrick, D.T. (2001). Evolution, cognitive science, and dynamical systems: An emerging integrative paradigm. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 10, 13-17.
  89. Kenrick, D.T. (2001). Evolutionary social psychology. In N.J. Smelser & P.B. Baltes (Eds.) International encyclopedia of the social and behavioral and sciences. Oxford, England: Pergamon.
  90. Kenrick, D.T., Sundie, J. M., Nicastle, L.D., & Stone, G.O. (2001). Can One Ever Be Too Wealthy or Too Chaste? Searching for Nonlinearities in Mate Judgment. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 80, 462-471.
  91. Buunk, B.P., Dijstra, P., Kenrick, D.T., & Warntjes, A. (2001). Age Differences in Preferences for Mates are related to gender, own age, and involvement level. Evolution and Human Behavior, 22, 241-250.
  92. Kenrick, D.T., Neuberg, S.L., & Cialdini, R.B. (2002). Social psychology: Unraveling the mystery (2nd edition). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
  93. Li, N.P., Bailey, J. M., Kenrick, D.T., & Linsenmeier, J.A. (2002). The necessities and luxuries of mate preferences: Testing the trade-offs. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 82,947-955.
  94. Chen, F., & Kenrick, D.T. (2002). Repulsion or attraction: Group membership and assumed attitude similarity. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 83, 111-125.
  95. Barr, A., Bryan, A., & Kenrick, D.T. (2002). Socially shared cognitions about sexual peak: Perceived desire, frequency, and satisfaction in men and women. Personal Relationships, 9, 287-300.
  96. Kenrick, D. T., Maner, J.K., Butner, J., Li, N.P., Becker, D.V., & Schaller, M. (2002). Dynamic Evolutionary Psychology: Mapping the domains of the new interactionist paradigm. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 6, 347-356.
  97. Kenrick, D. T. (2002). Darwin, Freud, and the Gene Wars (Review of C. Badcock’s “Evolutionary Psychology: A Critical Perspective”). Contemporary Psychology, 47, 686-687.
  98. Buunk, B.P., Dijkstra, P., Fetchenhauer, D., & Kenrick, D.T. (2002). Age and gender differences in mate selection criteria for various involvement levels. Personal Relationships, 9, 271-278.
  99. Kenrick, D.T., Li, N.P., & Butner, J. (2003). Dynamical evolutionary psychology: Individual decision-rules and emergent social norms. Psychological Review, 110, 3-28.
  100. Kenrick, D.T., Ledlow, S., & Ackerman, J. (2003). Mate selection. Pp. 1113-1118 in J. Ponzetti (Ed.) International Encyclopedia of Marriage and Family (2nd ed., Vol. 3). New York: Macmillan Reference.
  101. Kenrick, D.T., Ackerman, J., & Ledlow, S. (2003). Evolutionary social psychology: Adaptive predispositions and human culture. Pp. 103-124 in J. DeLamater (Ed.) Handbook of Social Psychology. New York: Kluwer-Plenum.
  102. Kenrick, D.T., Becker, D.V., Butner, J., Li, N.P., & Maner, J.K. (2003). Evolutionary Cognitive Science: Adding What and Why to How the Mind Works. Pp. 13-38 in K. Sterelney J. Fitness & (Eds). From Mating to Mentality: Evaluating Evolutionary Psychology. New York: Psychology Press.
  103. Kenrick, D.T., & Sundie, J.M. (2003). The Missing Ink: Why Our Ancestors Scribbled on Cave Walls. Contemporary Psychology, 48, 493-495.
  104. Maner, J. K., Kenrick, D. T., & Becker, D. V., Delton, A. W., Hofer, B., Wilbur, C. J., & Neuberg, S. L. (2003). Sexually selective cognition: Beauty captures the mind of the beholder. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 6, 1107-1120.
  105. Kenrick, D.T., & Luce, C.L. (2004). The functional mind: Readings in evolutionary psychology. Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
  106. Kenrick, D.T., Trost, M.R., & Sundie, J.M. (2004). Sex-roles as adaptations: An evolutionary perspective on gender differences and similarities. . Pp. 65-91 in A. H. Eagly, A. Beall, & R. Sternberg (Eds.), Psychology of Gender. New York: Guilford.
  107. Kenrick, D.T., & Trost, M.R. (2004). Evolutionary approaches to relationships. Pp. 65-91 in H. T. Reis & Rusbult, C.E. Close relationships: Key readings. New York: Psychology Press.
  108. Neuberg, S.L, Kenrick, D.T., Maner, J., & Schaller, M. (2004). From evolved motives to everyday mentation: Evolution, goals, and cognition. In J. Forgas & K. Williams (Eds.), Social motivation: Conscious and unconscious processes. (pp. 133-152). Cambridge University Press.
  109. Kenrick, D.T., & Maner, J. (2004). One path to balance and order in social psychology: An evolutionary perspective. Behavioral & Brain Sciences, 27, 346-347.
  110. Schaller, M., Faulkner, J., Park, J. H., Neuberg, S. L., & Kenrick, D. T. (2004). Impressions of danger influence impressions of people: An evolutionary perspective on individual and collective cognition. Journal of Cultural and Evolutionary Psychology, 2, 231-247.
  111. Kenrick, D.T., Neuberg, S.L., & Cialdini, R.B. (2005).