Donald A. Dewsbury
Selected Articles and Chapters
on Comparative Psychology

10. Dewsbury, D. A.  Comparative psychology and comparative psychologists:  An assessment.
Journal of Biological Psychology, 1968, 10(1), 35-38.

36. Dewsbury, D. A.  Comparative psychologists and their quest for uniformity.  Annals of the New
York Academy of Sciences, 1973, 223, 147-167.

43. Dewsbury, D. A. The use of muroid rodents in the psychology laboratory. Behavior Research Methods and Instrumentation, 1974, 6, 301-308.

88. Dewsbury, D. A. What is (was?) the "fixed action pattern?" Animal Behaviour, 1978, 26, 310-311.

93. Dewsbury, D. A. Animal Behavior. In M. E. Meyer (Ed.) Foundations of Contemporary Psychology. New York: Oxford University Press, 1979. Pp. 199-226.

159. Dewsbury, D. A. Muroid rodents as research animals, ILAR News, 1984, 28(1), 8-15.

188. Dewsbury, D. A. Comparative psychology, ethology, and animal behavior. Annual Review of Psychology, 40, 581-602.

200. Dewsbury, D. A. Comparative psychology: retrospect and prospect. In D. A. Dewsbury (Ed.). Contemporary issues in comparative psychology. Sunderland, MA: Sinauer, 1990, pp. 431-448.

217. Dewsbury, D. A. "Psychobiology." American Psychologist, 1991, 46, 198-205

227. Dewsbury, D. A. What comparative psychology is about. Teaching of Psychology, 1992, 19, 4-11.

228. Dewsbury, D. A. Comparative psychology and ethology: A reassessment. American Psychologist, 1992, 47, 208-215.

233. Dewsbury, D. A. Studies of rodent-human interactions in animal psychology. In H. Davis and D. Balfour (eds.) The Inevitable Bond: Examining scientist-animal interactions. pp. 23-43 Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

239. Dewsbury, D. A. Essay: On the problems studied in ethology. Ethology, 1992, 92, 89-107.

277. Dewsbury, D. A. Animal research: Getting in and getting out. The General Psychologist, 1995, 32(1), 19-25.

299. Dewsbury, D. A. Is the fox guarding the henhouse? A historical study of the dual role of the Committee on Research and Ethics. In L. A. Hart (Ed.) Responsible conduct of research in animal behavior (pp. 18-29). New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.

301. Dewsbury, D. A. Animal psychology in journals, 1911-1927: Another look at the snark. Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1998, 112,400-405.

302. Dewsbury, D. A. A note on the early editorial policies of the Journal of Comparative
Psychology.  Journal of Comparative Psychology, 1998, 112, 406-407.

308. Dewsbury, D. A. The proximate and the ultimate: Past, present, and future. Behavioural
Processes, 1999, 46, 189-199

309. Dewsbury, D. A. Bucknell, the Animal Behavior Society, and me. Animal Behavior Society
 Newsletter, 1999, 44(3), 5-7.

313.  Dewsbury, D. A.  Comparative psychology. In A. E. Kazdin (Ed.) Encyclopedia of
Psychology  v2, (pp. 224-227).  Washington, DC:  American Psychological
Association and Oxford University Press.

324. Dewsbury, D. A. Issues in comparative psychology at the dawn of the twentieth century.
American Psychologist, 2000, 55, 750-753.

334.  Dewsbury, D. A. (2003). Comparative psychology. In I. B. Weiner (Ed.) Handbook of
Psychology. Vol. 1: History of Psychology (vol. ed. D. K. Freedheim pp. 67-84). New York: Wiley.

335. Dewsbury, D. A. (2003). Charles Henry Turner, Scientist. In C. I. Abramson, L. D. Jackson,
& C. L. Fuller (Eds.) Selected papers and biography of Charles Henry Turner (1967-1923),pioneer of
comparative, animal behavior studies (pp. 1-17). Lewiston, NY: Edwin Mellen Press.

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