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David A. Washburn
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    David A. Washburn

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    David A. Washburn

    Ph.D.
    Born
    Birmingham, AL, USA
    Citizenship American
    Education Covenant College
    Georgia State University
    Known for Computer-based testing of human and nonhuman primates using game-like tasks
    Awards Richard M. Griffith Award (1993) and Honorary Member for Life (2018) from the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology (1993); Clifford T. Morgan Distinguished Service to American Psychological Association Division 6 Award (2016); Georgia State University Exceptional Faculty Service Award (2016); Fellow, American Psychological Association Divisions 2, 3, 6 and 26, Association for Psychological Science, Psychonomic Society
    Scientific career
    Fields Psychology
    Institutions Georgia State University
    Covenant College
    Thesis A Cognitive and Comparative Investigation of Attention: The Stimulus Movement Effect (1991)
    Doctoral advisor R. Thompson Putney
    Other academic advisors Duane M. Rumbaugh, James L. Pate, Michael J. Rulon

    David Alan Washburn is an American psychologist and professor emeritus of psychology and neuroscience at Georgia State University. From 2001 to 2019, he also served as the Director of the Georgia State University Language Research Center. In August, 2019, he retired at Georgia State University and joined the faculty of his alma mater as professor of psychology at Covenant College. His research includes studies of individual and group (including primate species) differences in cognitive competencies, particularly attention and its relation to learning, memory, and executive functioning. He is best known for his noninvasive behavioral and cognitive research with monkeys, using game-like computerized tasks.

    Professional affiliations

    Professor Washburn is a Fellow and former President of the American Psychological Association's Society for Experimental Psychology and Cognitive Science (APA Division 3) and Society for Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative Psychology (APA Division 6). He is also a fellow of the Association for Psychological Science and the Psychonomic Society. He was also elected to terms as president and other offices of the Society for Computers in Psychology, the Southern Society for Philosophy and Psychology, and the Southeastern Psychological Association. He co-authored (with Duane M. Rumbaugh) The Intelligence of Apes and Other Rational Beings (Yale University Press, 2003) and edited Primate Perspectives on Behavior and Cognition (American Psychological Association, 2007).

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