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European Association of Experimental Social Psychology
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The Jaspars Lecture was established by the Association in 1990 in recognition of Jos Jaspars' outstanding contribution to the EAESP. In 2005 the Jaspars Lecture had been replaced by three early career awards bearing the same name. The associated lecture disappears. The three Jos Jaspars Awards will go to young scholars who have made an outstanding research contribution. As a tribute to Jos Jaspars' influential editorship of the European Journal of Social Psychology, the publishers of the Journal are sponsoring the Awards financially. This Funding will cover the registration fees of the awardees for the General Meeting
They should be full members of EAESP by the time of the award ceremony (i.e. the General Meeting). Recipients of the Jos Jaspars awards will be decided by a four-person panel comprising one member of the Executive Committee and three external members. Candidates are asked to submit their curriculum vitae, and two references, one of the referees should be a member of the Association. These items should be sent by e-mail to the Executive Officer, before October 1 st of the year preceding the General Meeting. Members of the Association are asked to encourage suitable candidates to apply at the appropriate time. (By Roel W. Meertens, University of Amsterdam) In 1970 Jos Jaspars accepted a chair in social psychology at Nijmegen University. The next five years were both a period of growth and of stagnation. He supervised 13 Ph. D. theses and published more than twenty articles. As to growth, at first he conducted research on nonverbal communication, especially on eye contact. Later he became involved in the at that time vigorous debate on the relative effects of hereditary and environmental factors on intelligence. Jos reanalysed existing data sets and he developed new models of genetic and environmental covariance. As to stagnation, as chairman of the social psychology department Jos Jaspars had to live with a burden of administrative responsibilities and with an academic climate poisened by radical Marxist students. Worn out and disappointed, in 1976 he returned to Leiden, where he held a special exchange chair in behaviour genetics and comparative social sciences. In 1977 Jos Jaspars became Lecturer in psychology in the Department of Psychology at Oxford University and Fellow of St. Edmund Hall. He would occupy these positions until his sudden death on July 31th, 1985. These eight years in Oxford were extremely productive in terms of supervised Ph. D. theses (24) and publications (about 40). Most publications came about as a product of cooperative research with co-workers and former students, like Frank Fincham, Miles Hewstone, Bea Jaspars, Mansur Lalljee, and many others. After the 1967 European Summer School Jos Jaspars served the EAESP in many functions. He was a staff member in four more summer schools. He was a member of the Executive Committee from 1972 to 1978, and its acting president for two years (1977-1978). He was editor of the European Journal of Social Psychology between 1973 and 1978, and editor of the European Monographs in Social Psychology (1980-1985). He also wrote a moving personal view of the history of the EAESP and the development of his own academic career (Jaspars, 1986). Beyond merely summing up these positions, functions and publications, it is instructive to look at the outstanding characteristics of Jos Jaspars’ research. His publications are lively, elegant and inquisitive. They speak to his broad intellectual background and his powerful critical-analytical approach. Many publications also demonstrate his exceptional skills at mathematics and statistics. Although Jos Jaspars studied a wide range of topics, three main themes recur throughout his entire career: social cognition, reflections on social psychology as a discipline, and applied social psychology (cf. Meertens, van der Kloot, & DeRidder, 1989). The first main theme started already with his Ph. D. thesis on social perception. In the Oxford years this theme was broadened to social cognition, especially attribution processes. Together with his co-workers Jos Jaspars replaced Kelley’s (1967) seminal theory by a more sophisticated model of inductive logic. According to this model, people do not perform a mental analysis of variance as Kelley suggested, but they perform an intuitive regression analysis. Other publications were devoted to the circumstances under which people reason like scientists, arriving at a universal explanation of an event, and those under which they test idiosyncratic but functional hypotheses of causal attributions. Jos Jaspars’ attention was also drawn to the neglected issue of the ‘social’ nature of attribution processes. He emphasized the cultural origins of explanations, their collective nature, and the impact of the social categorizations of actors and perceivers upon them. A second recurrent theme is the historical development and the interdisciplinary character of social psychology between psychology and sociology. In a number of publications Jos Jaspars emphasized the peculiar past and the development of the field. These publications contain profound historical analyses, and they demonstrate his optimistic view of the future. The third theme is the application of theoretical social psychology in order to solve practical problems in society. As noted before, Jos Jaspars’ very first publications concerned home economics education for girls. In Oxford he applied his extensive work on attribution theory to educational problems. An example is a study on the cognitive processes and explanations of classroom disorders given by pupils, parents and teachers. The second field in which Jos Jaspars applied fundamental social psychology was health care, especially communication processes between family physicians and patients. In the last year of his life he published a paper in which he stressed the need for a comparative social psychology, both for the development of theories and for proper applications. In his view the discipline needs a taxonomy of situations and ‘principia media’ between general laws and specific situations. Jos Jaspars’ sudden death in the summer of 1985, just shortly after his decision to accept a chair in theoretical psychology at Leiden Universty, caused widespread mourning among students and colleagues (e.g DeRidder, 1986). They remember his outstanding intellect, his warm and unselfish personality, and above all his everlasting inspiring vision on the partly already realised, partly potential scientific and societal significance of social psychology.
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