Papers Presented at Meetings

  • Individual Differences and Salience in Electronic Performance Monitoring. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychology Association, April 2010, Atlanta, GA. (with L. Stein)

  • Individual Differences in Social Facilitation. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychology Association, March 2009, Toronto. (with L. Stein)

  • No place like home: A case study in telework. Presented at the annual meeting of the Eastern Psychological Association, March 2008, Boston, MA. (with D. Chiu and J. Glushakow)

  • The permanent home office: a telework case study. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, August 2008, Boston, MA. (with D. Chiu and J. Glushakow)

  • The Detrimental Effect of Phone Interruptions on Complex Task Performance. Presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, August 2008, Boston, MA. (with J. Glushakow)

  • Team effectiveness. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco, CA, August, 2007.

  • For love of money: Mortality salience affects environmental decisions. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, LA, August, 2006. (with F. Cohen and J. Glushakow)

  • Applying organizational and information technology to restoring a community infrastructure: New Orleans post-Hurricana Katrina. APA invited cross-cutting panel presentation. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, LA, August, 2006

  • Leadership and communication after an environmental disaster: New Orleans Rebounds. APA Div. 34 Presidential Address. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, LA, August, 2006.

  • The sky is falling: The effects of mortality salience on environmental decisions. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, August, 2005. (with F. Cohen and J. Glushakow)

  • The effects of mortality salience on charity vs. materialism. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, August, 2005. (with F. Cohen, J. Grodkiewicz, and S. Solomon)

  • Testing self-regulatory theory: Effects of feedback on motivation. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, August, 2005. (with J. Grodkiewicz)

  • Effects of supervisor proximity and salience on stress and distraction. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Boston, April, 2005. (with A. Carton)

  • Electronic monitoring of complex task performance: Effects of procedural justice context. Meetings of the Academy of Management, New Orleans, Lousiana, August, 2004. (with D. Panina)

  • Effects of computer performance monitoring and task feedback on stress, motivation, and self efficacy. Meetings of the Academy of Management, New Orleans, Louisiana, August, 2004. (with J.P. Grodkiewicz)

  • Task performance and mood: Role of feedback, gender, and self-esteem. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Honolulu, Hawaii, July, 2004 (with J. Feinberg)

  • Leading in a diverse workplace: Lessons from diversity competent managers. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Honolulu, Hawaii, July, 2004 (with K. Iwata)

  • Effects of computer monitoring and feedback on motivation and stress. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Honolulu, Hawaii, July, 2004 (with J.P. Grodkiewicz)

  • Social facilitation: Role of spatial behavior, supervisory salience, and gender. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Honolulu, Hawaii, July, 2004 (with J. Feinberg)

  • Performance feedback moderators: Distance from the goal, velocity, and acceleration. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Honolulu, Hawaii, July, 2004 (with J. Feinberg)

  • Acceptance of electronic monitoring and its consequences in different cultural contexts: A conceptual model. 5th Annual International Business Research Forum. Information technology and international business theory and strategy development, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March, 2004 (with D. Panina)

  • Feedback sign, source, sequence, and velocity effects on performance, motivation, and mood. Poster presented at the 14th Annual American Psychological Society Convention, June 6-9, 2002, New Orleans, LA. (with J.Feinberg & V.S.Disposti)

  • Appraisal model of social facilitation. Poster presented at the 14th Annual American Psychological Society Convention, June 6-9, 2002, New Orleans, LA.(with J. Feinberg)

  • Implications of computer monitoring for organizations, supervisors, and employees. Poster presented at the 14th Annual American Psychological Society Convention, June 6-9, 2002, New Orleans, LA. (with V.S.Disposti)

  • Social facilitation: A critical test of competing theories. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco, 2001 (with J. Feinberg)

  • Feedback sign and pattern: Impact on performance, motivation, and affect. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco, 2001. (with J. Feinberg)

  • Workplace monitoring and surveillance: The role of contextual and procedural factors: Meetings of the Academy of Management, Washington, DC, 2001. (with E. Douthitt)

  • The impact of computer monitoring and negative affectivity on task performance and satisfaction. Meetings of the Academy of Management, Toronto, August, 2000 (with E. Douthitt)

  • The effects of computer monitoring on fairness perceptions, task satisfaction, and performance: The role of participation and control. Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology Conference, New Orleans, April, 2000 (with E. Douthitt)

  • Performance and stress under computer-based work monitoring. Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Atlanta, May, 1999.

  • Social facilitation: From coaction to electronic performance monitoring. The 6th Annual Conference on Small Groups, “One Hundered Years of Group Dynamics,” Meetings of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Lexington, KY, October, 1998.

  • The role of computer-based performance monitoring systems in effective telework programs. Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology Conference, St. Louis, April 1997.

  • Electronic performance monitoring. Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology Conference, St. Louis, April 1997.

  • Effects of feedback on performance and mood. Eastern Psychological Association, Washington, D.C. April 1997 (with C. Hardy)

  • From bad to worse: Residential crowding stress intensifies over time. Eastern Psychological Association, Washington, D.C., April 1997 (with I. Kalogiros & S. Barksdale)

  • Internet addiction and its personality correlates. Eastern Psychological Association, Washington, D.C., April, 1997 (with J. Loytsker)

  • Crowding stress. Eighth Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, San Francisco, 1996.

  • Electronic surveillance in the workplace. Eighth Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, San Francisco, 1996.

  • Big brother has arrived: Workplace surveillance, stress, and productivity. SPSSI 60th Anniversary Convention, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1996 (with K. Kolb)

  • Residential crowding stress: Social density, group formation, and gender effects. SPSSI 60th Anniversary Convention, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1996. (with I. Kalogiros and D. Haines)

  • Electronic performance monitoring, locus of control, and stress. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New York City, 1995. (with K. Kolb)

  • Privacy at work: The psychological impact of covert surveillance. Seventh Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, New York City, 1995. (with K. Kolb)

  • Residential crowding and group formation: Isolates are more vulnerable to stress. Seventh Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, New York City, 1995. (with A. Chomiak, N. Rao, & I. Kalogiros)

  • Social facilitation and electronic presence. Meetings of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Santa Barbara, 1993.

  • Electronic performance monitoring and stress: The role of feedback and goal setting. Fifth International Conference on Human-Computer Interaction, Orlando, FL, 1993. (with Y. Shao)

  • Differential effects of positive and negative feedback on goal setting and performance. Fifth Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, Chicago, 1993. (with Y. Shao)

  • Group participation and computer monitoring effects on productivity and experience. Eighth Annual Conference of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, San Francisco, 1993. (with K. Kolb)

  • Effects of climate, computer monitoring, and goal setting on performance. Eighth Annual Conference of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, San Francisco, 1993. (with Y. Shao)

  • The effects of supervisor verbal and nonverbal feedback on employees' nonverbal behaviors. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Arlington, VA, 1993. (with K. Kirkhoff)

  • Effects of computer monitoring and distraction on task performance. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Arlington, VA, 1993. (with A. A. Chomiak & K. Kolb)

  • The effects of computer monitoring in a multiple task environment. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Arlington, VA, 1993. (with K. Kolb)

  • Computer-based work monitoring: A risk factor for workplace stress. "Stress in the 90's: A changing workforce in a changing workplace." A conference presented by the American Psychological Association and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Washington, DC, 1992.

  • Computer monitoring and patterns of performance: Effects on performance ratings and personnel decisions. Seventh Annual Conference of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Montreal, 1992. (with A. S. DeNisi, M. Lund, A. A. Chomiak, and K. Kirkhoff)

  • Computerized performance monitoring: Effects of monitoring salience and level, task difficulty and climate, feedback, and goal setting. Seventh Annual Conference of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Montreal, 1992. (with Y. Shao)

  • The curvilinear effect of performance feedback on arousal. Seventh Annual Conference of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, Montreal, 1992. (with A. Kluger and S. Lewinsohn)

  • A test of mediating variables in socially facilitated individual task performance. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Boston, 1992. (with M. Stein)

  • The impact of computer monitoring on task performance. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Boston, 1992. (with A. A. Chomiak and K. Kolb)

  • Implications for team focused design of stress management training. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco, 1991. (with M. Sokol)

  • The effects of performance feedback on mood. Third Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC, 1991. (with K. Kirkhoff, H. Lin, and A. Kluger)

  • Effects of computer monitoring, goal setting, and task climate on work performance. Third Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC, 1991. (with Y. Shao)

  • The impact of feedback and individual/group computer monitoring on work effort. Third Annual Convention of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC, 1991. (with A. S. DeNisi, K. Kirkhoff, Y. Shao, M. A. Lund, and A. A. Chomiak)

  • Employee privacy protection and electronic surveillance. Sixth Annual Conference of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology, St. Louis, 1991.

  • Close relationships. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Philadelphia, 1990.

  • Social facilitation framework for studying computer-based work monitoring. Meetings of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Santa Monica, CA, 1989.

  • Keeping interpersonal relationships in their places. Meetings of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Madison, Wisconsin, 1988.

  • Spatial behavior of older and younger adults. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Atlanta, 1988. (with J. Sudol)

  • Perceived justification and reactions to interpersonal distance. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Atlanta, 1988. (with M. Loughney and J. Sudol)

  • Male and female managers: Effects of nonverbal communication style. Meetings of the Academy of Management, Anaheim, California, 1988. (with D. E. Thompson)

  • Attribution processes as a function of managerial communication style. Meetings of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Charlottesville, Virginia, 1987.

  • Role of spatial behavior in compensatory and reciprocal interaction. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New York City, 1987. (with M. Loughney, M. Bernstein, and J. Sudol)

  • Stress, support, and coping in community and environment: Here and abroad. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New York City, 1987.

  • Interviewees' use of space as a function of interviewer's sex and nonverbal style. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, D.C., 1986. (with M. Bernstein and M. Loughney)

  • Gain or loss of positive nonverbal regard: Influences on attraction. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, D.C., 1986. (with M. Loughney and M. Bernstein)

  • Reciprocity and perceived attitudinal similarity: Use of a behavioral measure of self-disclosure. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, New York City, 1986. (with M. Loughney)

  • Influence on nonverbal behavior: Gender, sex-role, and interaction context. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Los Angeles, 1985. (with M. Bernstein)

  • Crowding, stress, and the role of social support. Meetings of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, Showbird, UT, October, 1984.

  • Effects of interviewer's race, sex, and distance on visual and verbal interaction. Presented at the meetings of the American Psychological Association, Toronto, 1984. (with D. E. Thompson)

  • Women and management: Communication style and managerial effectiveness. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Toronto, 1984. (with D. E. Thompson)

  • Crowding stress: Impact of social support, group formation, and control. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Anaheim, August, 1983. (with J. Vautier and M. Bernstein)

  • Managerial style. Third International Conference on social processes in small groups, Nags Head Conference Center, Kill Devil Hills, NC, June, 1983.

  • Residential crowding stress as a function of social density and roommate relationship. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Philadelphia, April, 1983. (with J. Vautier)

  • Environmental Psychology: Past, present, and future. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, August, 1982.

  • Crowding stress and the buffering effect of social support. Second International Conference on social processes in small groups, Nags Head Conference Center, Kill Devil Hills, NC, June, 1982.

  • A stress perspective on teaching Environmental Psychology. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Baltimore, April, 1982.

  • Nonverbal communication. Meetings of the American Education Research Association, New York City, March, 1982.

  • Development of self-regulatory and social interaction behaviors in childhood: Communicative, social and cognitive perspectives. HCEEP/DEC Annual Conference, Washington, D.C., December, 1981.

  • Nonverbal behavior: Development in mentally retarded and nonretarded children and adolescents. Meetings of the Society for Research in Child Development, Boston, April, 1981. (with D. E. Thompson)

  • Equilibrium processes: When they fail. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Montreal, 1980.

  • An equilibrium model of interpersonal involvement. Meetings of the Eastern Communication Association, Ocean City, MD, April, 1980.

  • Environmental stress and cognitive mediation of helplessness. Presented at the Conference on Cognition, Social Behavior, and the Environment. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, 1979. (with A. Baum, R. Gatchel, and D. E. Thompson)

  • The symbiotic relationship of social psychology and environmental psychology: Implications from crowding, personal space, and intimacy regulation research. Presented at the Conference on Cognition, Social Behavior, and the Environment. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, 1979. (with D. E. Thompson and A. Baum)

  • A test of curvilinear comfort models. Paper presented at the meetings of the American Psychological Association, New York City, 1979. (with D. E. Thompson and Y. M. Epstein)

  • Interpersonal equilibrium: A study of convergent and predictive validity. Presented at the Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Philadelphia, 1979. (with B. D. Caudill)

  • Reactions to extended distances: Mediating effects of locus of control. Presented at the Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Toronto, 1978. (with D. T. DeRisi)

  • Toward successful community placement: Environmental assessment of residential settings for the mentally retarded. Presented at the Meetings of the Gatlinburg Conference on Mental Retardation, Gatlinburg, TN, 1978. (with D. T. DeRisi)

  • Nonverbal elements of social behavior and successful community adaptation of the mentally retarded. Presented at the Meetings of the Gatlinburg Conference on Mental Retardation, Gatlinburg, TN, 1978. (with D. T. DeRisi)

  • The application of environmental assessment techniques to living environments for the mentally retarded. Presented at the Meetings of the Environmental Design and Research Association, Tuscon, 1978. (with D. T. DeRisi)

  • Just how funny can crowding be? Humor as a distractor under high density conditions. Presented at the meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Washington, DC, 1978. (with D. T. DeRisi)

  • Arousal, intimacy, and interpersonal distance. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco, 1977.

  • Effects of increasing perceived control or providing distractors on the reaction to crowding. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, Boston, 1977. (with R. C. Teitelbaum and S. N. Katz)

  • Measuring personal space: Relationship between direct and indirect methodologies. Meetings of the Eastern Communication Association, Boston, 1977.

  • Relationship between observed interaction distance and projective measures. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, 1976. (with G. Nicosia)

  • An applied research perspective on crowding. Meetings of the Environmental Design and Research Association, Vancouver, B.C., 1976. (with R. A. Karlin and Y. M. Epstein)

  • Effects of bodily contact on reactions to crowding. Meetings of the Western Psychological Association, Los Angeles, 1976 (with D. Hyman, G. Nicosia, R. Karlin, and Y. Epstein)

  • The relationship between the sex of interactants and their nonverbal behaviors. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, New York City, 1976. (with S. J. Rohner)

  • Effects of episodic crowding: A developmental perspective. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, New York City, 1976.

  • Strategies for the investigation of crowding. Meetings of the Environmental Design and Research Association, Lawrence, KS, 1975. (with Y. M. Epstein and R. A. Karlin)

  • Effects of social density on proxemic behavior. Meetings of the Northeastern Anthropological Association, Potsdam, NY, 1975. (with K. D. Love)

  • A longitudinal field experiment on reactions to crowded dormitories. Meetings of the Western Psychological Association, Sacramento, 1975. (with Y. M. Epstein and R. A. Karlin)

  • Effects of topic intimacy on interaction behaviors. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, New York City, 1975. (with S. J. Rohner)

  • Field experimental research on human crowding. Meetings of the Eastern Psychological Association, New York City, 1975. (with Y. M. Epstein and R. A. Karlin)

  • Current status of theory and research in crowding. Meetings of the New England Social Psychological Association, Storrs, CT, October, 1975.

  • Development of personal space. Conference on Culture and Communication, Philadelphia, 1975.

  • Effects of crowding on electrodermal activity. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, 1974. (with Y. M. Epstein)

  • Methodological and conceptual issues in crowding. Meetings of the Western Psychological Association, San Francisco, 1974. (with Y. M. Epstein and R. A. Karlin).

  • Nonverbal aspects of interpersonal distancing. Bell Laboratories Working Conferences on Interpersonal Attraction and Communication, 1974.

  • The development of spatial interaction. Fourth Rutgers University Conference on Models and Methods in Geography, 1973.

  • Gaze direction during interaction. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Honolulu, 1972. (with R. E. Cooper)

  • Use of space as a function of social affect. Meetings of the American Psychological Association, Honolulu, 1972. (with R. E. Cooper)

  • The effects of physical distance, orientation, and sex on visual interaction. Meetings of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Cleveland, 1972.

  • The acquisition of proxemic norms of behavior: A study of lower-class blacks and middle-class white children at three grade levels. Meetings of the Speech Communication Association, San Francisco, 1971. (with S. E. Jones)