1. Stanley Schachter was an American social psychologist best known for his development of the two factor theory of emotion in 1962 along with Jerome E Singer.

1. Stanley Schachter was an American social psychologist best known for his development of the two factor theory of emotion in 1962 along with Jerome E Singer.
Stanley Schachter was born in Flushing, New York, the son of Anna and Nathan Stanley Schachter.
Stanley Schachter's parents were both Romanian Jews, his father from Vasilau, a small village in Bukovina, and his mother from Radauti.
Stanley Schachter obtained his bachelor's degree in 1942, and went on to pursue his Master's in Psychology, at Yale, where he was influenced by Clark Hull.
Stanley Schachter worked at the Biophysics Division of the Aero-Medical Laboratory of Wright Field in Riverside, Ohio, studying the visual problems experienced by pilots in flight.
In 1946, after his term in the armed forces, Stanley Schachter went to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to work with the German social psychologist Kurt Lewin, in his Research Center for Group Dynamics, studying social issues.
That year, Stanley Schachter won the first of his several General Electric Foundation Awards, which he continued to win each year through 1962.
Stanley Schachter continued to obtain honors in the following two years, becoming a fellow of the Guggenheim Foundation in 1967 and winning the American Psychological Association Distinguished Scientific Contributions Award in 1968.
Stanley Schachter's research on this topic proved that nicotine was a highly addictive substance and produced withdrawal effects in those trying to quit a full fifteen years before the tobacco industry would publicly admit these things.
At the age of 70, Stanley Schachter decided it was time to end his 31-year career at Columbia University and retired in 1992 with an emeritus designation.
Five years later, Stanley Schachter died on June 7,1997, at his home in East Hampton, New York.
Stanley Schachter's papers are archived at the Bentley Historical Library of the University of Michigan.
Stanley Schachter recognized the importance of communication and rejection among a group and coordinated these variables along with the constructs of the experiment.
Results from Stanley Schachter's experiments are key components to studying interpersonal communication and group dynamics.
Stanley Schachter was interested in research involving the original ideas of Francis Galton on eminence and birth order.
Stanley Schachter's research concluded that this data is only a reflection because all previous research involves a college population as the experimental sample.
Stanley Schachter indicates that college samples for many reasons are overly-populated with family first-borns.
Stanley Schachter conducted many experiments that tested the internal and external cues of hunger with obese individuals.
Stanley Schachter concluded based on his findings that there are physiological responses that tell you not to eat when stressed.
Stanley Schachter conducted research on the regulation of nicotine intake among different types of smokers.
Stanley Schachter tested his hypothesis that smokers do indeed regulate their nicotine intake.
Stanley Schachter proposed that obese individuals are hypersensitive to external stimuli, both food-related and non-food related.
Stanley Schachter found that a number of factors lead to differences in responses between obese individuals and normal individuals.