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Kenneth D. Craig
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    Kenneth D. Craig

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    Kenneth Craig
    Born 1937 (age 85–86)
    Calgary, Alberta, Canada
    Alma mater Sir George Williams College; University of British Columbia; Purdue University; Oregon Health Sciences University
    Scientific career
    Fields Clinical psychology, pain
    Institutions University of British Columbia

    Kenneth D. Craig (born 1937) is a Canadian psychologist, educator and scientist whose research primarily concerns pain assessment, understanding pain in children and populations with communication limitations, and the social dimensions of pain.

    Career

    Kenneth Craig was born in Calgary in 1937. He obtained his BA from Sir George Williams College (now Concordia University) in Montreal in 1958 followed by an MA from the University of British Columbia in 1960. He then went to Purdue University from which he graduated in 1964 with a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology. This included a research fellowship and internship at the University of Oregon Medical School where he became interested in the study of pain which has remained the focus of his research for more than 40 years. He has served as editor-in-chief of the Canadian Journal of Behavioural Science (1985–89) and Pain Research & Management (2006–17). He has received many honours and distinctions, including appointment as an Officer of the Order of Canada in 2016.

    He was appointed to the faculty at the University of British Columbia in 1963 and has remained there throughout his academic career, with sabbaticals at Oxford University and the University of Calgary. He served as Director of the Graduate Programme in Clinical Psychology and Associate Dean in the Faculty of Graduate Studies. He also served as a Canadian Institutes of Health Research Senior Investigator and a Canada Council I.W. Killam Research Fellow. He was appointed in 2003 as Emeritus Professor of Psychology.

    Research

    His research addresses psycho-social features of pain with a focus on pain assessment, particularly in populations with communication limitations, including infants, children and people with cognitive impairments. This work has compelled greater understanding of the importance of the social context in understanding pain experience and expression, the challenges of self-presentation and observer bias in understanding the pain of others, leading to the Social Communication Model of Pain. He pioneered development of measurement tools for pain in infants, young children, people with intellectual disabilities and persons with dementia, primarily focusing upon nonverbal behaviour and facial expression. His contributions to development of a facial expression measure of pain in the mouse led to burgeoning interest in measurement of pain in nonhuman animals. He has authored a large number of journal articles and chapters and authored or edited 11 books. He has a Google Scholar count of over 20,000 and a H index of 82.

    Publications

    Awards

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