Sidney Irwin Perloe

CURRICULUM VITAE
April 1995

I am the primate holding the clipboard. Click here for a description of my teaching goals and interests.

Education

New York University, B.A., June,1953.
Harvard University, Sept. 1953-June 1954.
University of Michigan, Ph.D. Social Psychology, Jan. 1959.

Appointments

July, 1965-June, 1978 Chairman, Department of Psychology, Haverford College.
July, 1980-June, 1985
July, 1987-June, 1989.

July, 1969 - Professor of Psychology, Haverford College.

July, 1985-June, 1986 Visiting Scientist, Department of Comparative and Developmental Psychology, Osaka University, Japan.

July, 1978-June, 1979 Visiting Behavioral Biologist, California Primate Research Center, University of California at Davis.

July, 1972-June, 1973 Visiting Scholar, Haifa University, Israel.

Sept., 1972-Feb., 1973 Research Consultant, Institute of Research in Kibbutz Education, Oranim, Israel.

Sept., 1967-June,1968 National Science Foundation, Science Faculty Fellow at The University of Michigan.

July, 1965-June, 1969 Associate Professor of Psychology, Haverford College.

Sept. 1961-June, 1965 Assistant Professor of Psychology, Haverford College.

Sept. 1958-July, 1961 Assistant Professor of Psychology, Yale University.

Professional Societies

American Psychological Society, American Society of Primatologists

Human Behavior and Evolution Society, International Primatological Society International Society for Human Ethology, Eastern Psychological Association Society of the Sigma Xi.

Recent Work

1. Conflict affiliation and mating and the effects of spatial confinement in a captive group of squirrel monkeys. D. M. Taub and F. A. King (Eds.)Current Perspectives in Primate Social Dynamics, 1986, pp. 89-98.

2. Loneliness at the top: Mating failure among high status Japanese macaque males. (Paper presentation) American Journal of Primatology, 1987, 12, 365.

3. Monkeys of Minoo. Part I Social Organization and Mating Behavior. VHS videotape documentary, 1988, 45 min. (Available through Audio-visual Librbary, Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center)

4. With M. Chen (Class of '89), The effect of the imagined presence of others on the facial expression of emotion. (Paper presentation) Eastern Psychological Association April, 1990.

5. With M. Kane (Class of '89). Sex differences in implicit personality theory: implications for the five factor model. (Poster) American Psychological Society, June, 1990.

6. Mate Selection and reproductive success among Japanese macaque males at Minoo. (Paper presentation) XIIIth Congress of the International Primatological Society, July 1990.

7. Male mating competition, female choice and dominance in a free ranging group of Japanese Macaques (Macaca fuscata). Primates, 1992, 33, 289-304.

8. Exploring the boundary between the minds of monkeys and humans. (Review) Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1992, 15, 163-164.

9. Joining a group on Cayo Santiago: a case study. (Paper presentation) American Journal of Primatology, 1993, 30, 340-341.

10. Searching for the cognitive origins of human culture. (Review) American Journal of Primatology, 1995, 35, 331-334.