James R. Pomerantz
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Yale University (Ph.D.)
Brown University (M.A. ad eundem)
James R. Pomerantz | |
|---|---|
| Born | James R. Pomerantz |
| Alma mater | University of Michigan (B.A.) Yale University (Ph.D.) Brown University (M.A. ad eundem) |
| Known for | Perceptual organization; Gestalt psychology; Visual attention |
| Spouse | Mary B. McIntire[1] |
| Children | Will Pomerantz |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | Cognitive psychology; Visual perception |
| Institutions | Rice University Brown University |
| Website | jamesrpomerantz |
James R. Pomerantz is an American cognitive psychologist specializing in human visual perception and attention. He is Professor Emeritus of Psychological Sciences at Rice University in Houston, Texas.
Pomerantz earned a Bachelor of Arts degree with distinction and high honors in psychology from the University of Michigan in 1968.[2] He went on to complete his Ph.D. in psychology at Yale University in 1974.[3] He later received an M.A. ad eundem from Brown University in 1996.
Career
Pomerantz began teaching at Yale in 1973 before joining Johns Hopkins University as an assistant professor of psychology in 1974. In 1977, he was appointed associate professor at the University at Buffalo, later becoming full professor.[4]
In 1988, Pomerantz joined Rice University as the Elma W. Schneider Professor of Psychology and Dean of Rice University School of Social Sciences.[5] In 1995, he was appointed Provost and Professor of Cognitive and Linguistic Sciences at Brown University, where he also served as Acting President from 1997[6] to 1998.[7] He returned to Rice University in 2000 as Professor of Psychological Sciences, where he also served as founding director of the Neuroscience Program (2000–2006).[8] He retired in 2021 and is now Professor Emeritus.[9]
Research work
Pomerantz’s research focuses on visual perception and cognitive psychology,[10] especially perceptual organization and Gestalt psychology.[11] He has published extensively on emergent features,[12] configural superiority effects,[13] motion perception,[14] attention, texture perception,[15] and visual imagery.[16]