Research Experience

Dr. Warren D. Keller

Research Experience
Effects of Extended Father-Infant Contact During the Newborn Period
An investigation of father-infant attachment conducted through the cooperation of the Department of Obstetrics and the Department of Neonatology, Children’s Hospital, Buffalo, New York. The research, modeled after that conducted by Klaus and Kennell, investigated the effects of extended father-infant contact during the newborn period on attachment behavior at six weeks post-partum. 1/80-5/81

Infant Development Laboratory, Infant Social Development
Assisted Dr. Katherine Hildebrandt, Department of Psychology, SUNY at Buffalo, in research involving: the infant’s sucking response as a mechanism for the modulation of self-arousal; the development of attachment behaviors and stranger fear in infants; and the effects of infant physical attractiveness. 1/79-8/80

Effects of Unilateral Hearing Loss Upon Educational Achievement
8/77-8/79

Evaluation of the Impact of Deinstitutionalization on the Mentally Retarded, Their Families, and the Community
6/77-9/77

Infant Development Laboratory, Infant, Perceptual, and Cognitive Development
Assisted Dr. Robert S. Bundy, Department of Psychology, SUNY at Buffalo, in investigating the development of infant’s abilities to detect binaural intensity and arrival time differences. 9/76-6/78

Psychophysiological Research Assistant, Brecksville Veterans Administration Hospital
Brecksville, OH. 9/73-1/74

Research Assistant, National Institute of Mental Health
Bethesda, MD. Research assistant in the section on Twin and Sibling Studies, Adult Psychiatry Branch, NIMH. 9/72-1/73
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