Misplaced Pages

Neal E. Miller

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Neal Elgar Miller) American psychologist and academic (1909–2002) For those of a similar name, see Neil Miller (disambiguation).
Neal E. Miller
BornAugust 3, 1909
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S.
DiedMarch 23, 2002(2002-03-23) (aged 92)
Hamden, Connecticut, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Washington (BS)
Stanford University (MS)
Yale University (PhD)
Known forBiofeedback, Frustration–aggression hypothesis
AwardsNewcomb Cleveland Prize (1956)
APA Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award (1959)
National Medal of Science (1964)
APA Award for Lifetime Contributions to Psychology (1991)
Wilbur Cross Medal (1967)
Scientific career
FieldsPsychology
InstitutionsYale University
Rockefeller University
Cornell University Medical College

Neal Elgar Miller (August 3, 1909 – March 23, 2002) was an American experimental psychologist. Described as an energetic man with a variety of interests, including physics, biology and writing, Miller entered the field of psychology to pursue these. With a background training in the sciences, he was inspired by professors and leading psychologists at the time to work on various areas in behavioral psychology and physiological psychology, specifically, relating visceral responses to behavior.

Miller's career in psychology started with research on "fear as a learned drive and its role in conflict". Work in behavioral medicine led him to his most notable work on biofeedback. Over his lifetime he lectured at Yale University, Rockefeller University, and Cornell University Medical College and was one of the youngest members of Yale's Institute of Human Relations. His accomplishments led to the establishment of two awards: the New Investigator Award from the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research and an award for distinguished lectureship from the American Psychological Association. A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Miller as the eighth most cited psychologist of the 20th century.

Life and education

Miller was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1909. He grew up in the Pacific Northwest. His father, Irving Miller, worked at Western Washington University as chair of the Department of Education and Psychology. His father's position, in Neal Miller's words, "may have had something to do with" his interest in psychology. Originally having a curiosity for science, Miller entered the University of Washington (1931), where he studied biology and physics and also had an interest in writing. In his senior year, he decided that psychology would allow him to pursue his wide variety of interests. He graduated from the University of Washington with a B.S. and a piqued interest in behavioral psychology. After baccalaureate studies, he studied at Stanford University (1932), where he received his M.S. and an interest in psychology of personality. At Stanford, he accompanied his professor, Walter Miles, to the Institute of Human Relations at Yale University as a research assistant. There he was encouraged by another professor to further study psychoanalysis. He received his Ph.D. degree in psychology from Yale University in 1935, and that same year he became a social science research fellow at the Institute of Psychoanalysis in Vienna for one year before returning to Yale as a faculty member in 1936. He spent a total of 30 years at Yale University (1936–1966), and in 1950 he was appointed professor at Yale, a position he held until 1966. In 1966 he began teaching at Rockefeller University and afterwards spent the early 1970s teaching at Cornell University Medical College. In 1985 he returned to Yale as a research associate.

Career

Miller's early work focused on experimenting with Freudian ideas on behavior in real-life situations. His most notable topic was fear. Miller came to the conclusion that fear could be learned through conditioning. Miller then decided to extend his research to other autonomic drives, such as hunger, to see if they worked in the same way. His unique ideas and experimental techniques to study these autonomic drives resulted in findings that changed ideas about motivations and behavior.

Miller was also one of the founding fathers behind the idea of biofeedback. Today, many of his ideas have been expanded and added to, but Miller has been credited with coming up with most of the basic ideas behind biofeedback. Miller was doing experimentation on conditioning and rats when he discovered biofeedback.

Neal Miller, along with John Dollard and O. Hobart Mowrer, helped to integrate behavioral and psychoanalytic concepts. They were able to translate psychological analytic concepts into behavioral terms that would be more easily understood. Specifically, they focused on the stimulus-response theory. These three men also recognized Sigmund Freud's understanding of anxiety as a "signal of danger" and that some things in Freud's work could be altered to fix this. Miller, Dollard and Mowrer believed that a person who was relieved of high anxiety levels would experience what is called "anxiety relief". Together with fellow psychologist O. Hobart Mowrer, Miller gives his name to the "Miller-Mowrer Shuttlebox" apparatus.

Over the course of his career, Miller wrote eight books and 276 papers and articles. Neal Miller worked with John Dollard and together they wrote the book Personality and Psychotherapy (1950) concerning neurosis and psychological learning concepts.

Controversy

Miller's use of laboratory animals brought criticism from the animal rights movement but he defended the practice, arguing that if people had no right to use animals in research, then they had no right to kill them for food or clothing. He nevertheless acknowledged the complexity of the issue; "there is sacredness of all life. But where do we draw the line? That's the problem. Cats kill birds and mice. Dogs exploit other animals by killing and eating them. Humans have to draw the line somewhere in animal rights, or we're dead."

Honours

In 1958, Miller was elected to the United States National Academy of Sciences. Miller served as president of the American Psychological Association from 1960–61, and received the APA Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award in 1959 and the APA Citation for Outstanding Lifetime Contribution to Psychology in 1991. In 1964 he received the National Medal of Science from President Johnson, the first psychologist to receive this honor. Miller is a distinguished member of PSI CHI International Honor Society for Psychology. In 1967, he received the Wilbur Cross Medal. He was a member of both the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the American Philosophical Society.

He was also President of the Society for Neurosciences, the Biofeedback Society of America and the Academy of Behavioral Medicine Research.

Major works

Books

Selected articles

References

  1. "APA Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions". American Psychological Association. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  2. "Award for Lifetime Contributions to Psychology". American Psychological Association. Retrieved 26 August 2015.
  3. Weiner, Irving B.; Craighead, W. Edward, eds. (2010). "Miller, Neal E. (1909–2002)". The Corsini encyclopedia of psychology. Vol. 3 (4th ed.). Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons. pp. 997–999. doi:10.1002/9780470479216.corpsy0547. ISBN 9780470170243. OCLC 429227903.
  4. ^ Cohen, David (1977). "Neal Miller". Psychologists on psychology. New York: Taplinger. pp. 240–261. ISBN 978-0800865573. OCLC 2644614. Reprinted as: Cohen, David (2015). "Neal Miller". Psychologists on psychology: classic edition. Routledge classic editions. New York: Routledge. pp. 191–207. ISBN 9781138808492. OCLC 881146290.
  5. ^ Mook, Douglas G. (2004). "Neal Miller". Classic experiments in psychology. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 75–85. ISBN 978-0313318214. OCLC 56730032.
  6. Haggbloom, Steven J.; Warnick, Renee; Warnick, Jason E.; Jones, Vinessa K.; Yarbrough, Gary L.; Russell, Tenea M.; Borecky, Chris M.; McGahhey, Reagan; Powell III, John L.; Beavers, Jamie (June 2002). "The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century". Review of General Psychology. 6 (2): 139–152. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.586.1913. doi:10.1037/1089-2680.6.2.139. S2CID 145668721.
  7. "Eminent psychologists of the 20th century". APA Monitor on Psychology. 33 (7): 29. July 2002. Retrieved 2014-11-07.
  8. Fowler, Raymond (May 2002). "Running commentary: Neal Miller: a giant in American psychology". APA Monitor on Psychology. 33 (5): 9. Retrieved 2014-11-07.
  9. ^ "An Overview of Neal Miller's contributions". nealmiller.org. 23 July 2009. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
  10. Ewen, Robert B. (1998). "Behaviorism: controversies and emerging findings". Personality, a topical approach: theories, research, major controversies, and emerging findings. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. pp. 230–250. ISBN 978-0805820980. OCLC 36126540.
  11. Dember, William N.; Jenkins, James J. (1970). General psychology: modeling behavior and experience. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. p. 376. ISBN 978-0133508437. OCLC 66521.
  12. "APA PsycNet".
  13. Nagourney, Eric (2 April 2002). "Neal E. Miller is dead at 92; studied brain and behavior". The New York Times.
  14. "Neal E. Miller". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 2022-09-19.
  15. Chamberlin, J. (September 2007). "In Brief: Psychologist wins National Medal of Science". APA Monitor on Psychology. 38 (8): 10.
  16. "Neal Elgar Miller". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2022-09-19.
  17. "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved 2022-09-19.

Further reading

Presidents of the American Psychological Association
1892–1900
1901–1925
1926–1950
1951–1975
1976–2000
2001–present
Psychology
Basic
psychology
stylized letter psi
Applied
psychology
Methodologies
Concepts
Psychologists
  • Wilhelm Wundt
  • William James
  • Ivan Pavlov
  • Sigmund Freud
  • Edward Thorndike
  • Carl Jung
  • John B. Watson
  • Clark L. Hull
  • Kurt Lewin
  • Jean Piaget
  • Gordon Allport
  • J. P. Guilford
  • Carl Rogers
  • Erik Erikson
  • B. F. Skinner
  • Donald O. Hebb
  • Ernest Hilgard
  • Harry Harlow
  • Raymond Cattell
  • Abraham Maslow
  • Neal E. Miller
  • Jerome Bruner
  • Donald T. Campbell
  • Hans Eysenck
  • Herbert A. Simon
  • David McClelland
  • Leon Festinger
  • George A. Miller
  • Richard Lazarus
  • Stanley Schachter
  • Robert Zajonc
  • Albert Bandura
  • Roger Brown
  • Endel Tulving
  • Lawrence Kohlberg
  • Noam Chomsky
  • Ulric Neisser
  • Jerome Kagan
  • Walter Mischel
  • Elliot Aronson
  • Daniel Kahneman
  • Paul Ekman
  • Michael Posner
  • Amos Tversky
  • Bruce McEwen
  • Larry Squire
  • Richard E. Nisbett
  • Martin Seligman
  • Ed Diener
  • Shelley E. Taylor
  • John Anderson
  • Ronald C. Kessler
  • Joseph E. LeDoux
  • Richard Davidson
  • Susan Fiske
  • Roy Baumeister
  • Lists
    United States National Medal of Science laureates
    Behavioral and social science
    1960s
    1964
    Neal Elgar Miller
    1980s
    1986
    Herbert A. Simon
    1987
    Anne Anastasi
    George J. Stigler
    1988
    Milton Friedman
    1990s
    1990
    Leonid Hurwicz
    Patrick Suppes
    1991
    George A. Miller
    1992
    Eleanor J. Gibson
    1994
    Robert K. Merton
    1995
    Roger N. Shepard
    1996
    Paul Samuelson
    1997
    William K. Estes
    1998
    William Julius Wilson
    1999
    Robert M. Solow
    2000s
    2000
    Gary Becker
    2003
    R. Duncan Luce
    2004
    Kenneth Arrow
    2005
    Gordon H. Bower
    2008
    Michael I. Posner
    2009
    Mortimer Mishkin
    2010s
    2011
    Anne Treisman
    2014
    Robert Axelrod
    2015
    Albert Bandura
    Biological sciences
    1960s
    1963
    C. B. van Niel
    1964
    Theodosius Dobzhansky
    Marshall W. Nirenberg
    1965
    Francis P. Rous
    George G. Simpson
    Donald D. Van Slyke
    1966
    Edward F. Knipling
    Fritz Albert Lipmann
    William C. Rose
    Sewall Wright
    1967
    Kenneth S. Cole
    Harry F. Harlow
    Michael Heidelberger
    Alfred H. Sturtevant
    1968
    Horace Barker
    Bernard B. Brodie
    Detlev W. Bronk
    Jay Lush
    Burrhus Frederic Skinner
    1969
    Robert Huebner
    Ernst Mayr
    1970s
    1970
    Barbara McClintock
    Albert B. Sabin
    1973
    Daniel I. Arnon
    Earl W. Sutherland Jr.
    1974
    Britton Chance
    Erwin Chargaff
    James V. Neel
    James Augustine Shannon
    1975
    Hallowell Davis
    Paul Gyorgy
    Sterling B. Hendricks
    Orville Alvin Vogel
    1976
    Roger Guillemin
    Keith Roberts Porter
    Efraim Racker
    E. O. Wilson
    1979
    Robert H. Burris
    Elizabeth C. Crosby
    Arthur Kornberg
    Severo Ochoa
    Earl Reece Stadtman
    George Ledyard Stebbins
    Paul Alfred Weiss
    1980s
    1981
    Philip Handler
    1982
    Seymour Benzer
    Glenn W. Burton
    Mildred Cohn
    1983
    Howard L. Bachrach
    Paul Berg
    Wendell L. Roelofs
    Berta Scharrer
    1986
    Stanley Cohen
    Donald A. Henderson
    Vernon B. Mountcastle
    George Emil Palade
    Joan A. Steitz
    1987
    Michael E. DeBakey
    Theodor O. Diener
    Harry Eagle
    Har Gobind Khorana
    Rita Levi-Montalcini
    1988
    Michael S. Brown
    Stanley Norman Cohen
    Joseph L. Goldstein
    Maurice R. Hilleman
    Eric R. Kandel
    Rosalyn Sussman Yalow
    1989
    Katherine Esau
    Viktor Hamburger
    Philip Leder
    Joshua Lederberg
    Roger W. Sperry
    Harland G. Wood
    1990s
    1990
    Baruj Benacerraf
    Herbert W. Boyer
    Daniel E. Koshland Jr.
    Edward B. Lewis
    David G. Nathan
    E. Donnall Thomas
    1991
    Mary Ellen Avery
    G. Evelyn Hutchinson
    Elvin A. Kabat
    Robert W. Kates
    Salvador Luria
    Paul A. Marks
    Folke K. Skoog
    Paul C. Zamecnik
    1992
    Maxine Singer
    Howard Martin Temin
    1993
    Daniel Nathans
    Salome G. Waelsch
    1994
    Thomas Eisner
    Elizabeth F. Neufeld
    1995
    Alexander Rich
    1996
    Ruth Patrick
    1997
    James Watson
    Robert A. Weinberg
    1998
    Bruce Ames
    Janet Rowley
    1999
    David Baltimore
    Jared Diamond
    Lynn Margulis
    2000s
    2000
    Nancy C. Andreasen
    Peter H. Raven
    Carl Woese
    2001
    Francisco J. Ayala
    George F. Bass
    Mario R. Capecchi
    Ann Graybiel
    Gene E. Likens
    Victor A. McKusick
    Harold Varmus
    2002
    James E. Darnell
    Evelyn M. Witkin
    2003
    J. Michael Bishop
    Solomon H. Snyder
    Charles Yanofsky
    2004
    Norman E. Borlaug
    Phillip A. Sharp
    Thomas E. Starzl
    2005
    Anthony Fauci
    Torsten N. Wiesel
    2006
    Rita R. Colwell
    Nina Fedoroff
    Lubert Stryer
    2007
    Robert J. Lefkowitz
    Bert W. O'Malley
    2008
    Francis S. Collins
    Elaine Fuchs
    J. Craig Venter
    2009
    Susan L. Lindquist
    Stanley B. Prusiner
    2010s
    2010
    Ralph L. Brinster
    Rudolf Jaenisch
    2011
    Lucy Shapiro
    Leroy Hood
    Sallie Chisholm
    2012
    May Berenbaum
    Bruce Alberts
    2013
    Rakesh K. Jain
    2014
    Stanley Falkow
    Mary-Claire King
    Simon Levin
    Chemistry
    1960s
    1964
    Roger Adams
    1980s
    1982
    F. Albert Cotton
    Gilbert Stork
    1983
    Roald Hoffmann
    George C. Pimentel
    Richard N. Zare
    1986
    Harry B. Gray
    Yuan Tseh Lee
    Carl S. Marvel
    Frank H. Westheimer
    1987
    William S. Johnson
    Walter H. Stockmayer
    Max Tishler
    1988
    William O. Baker
    Konrad E. Bloch
    Elias J. Corey
    1989
    Richard B. Bernstein
    Melvin Calvin
    Rudolph A. Marcus
    Harden M. McConnell
    1990s
    1990
    Elkan Blout
    Karl Folkers
    John D. Roberts
    1991
    Ronald Breslow
    Gertrude B. Elion
    Dudley R. Herschbach
    Glenn T. Seaborg
    1992
    Howard E. Simmons Jr.
    1993
    Donald J. Cram
    Norman Hackerman
    1994
    George S. Hammond
    1995
    Thomas Cech
    Isabella L. Karle
    1996
    Norman Davidson
    1997
    Darleane C. Hoffman
    Harold S. Johnston
    1998
    John W. Cahn
    George M. Whitesides
    1999
    Stuart A. Rice
    John Ross
    Susan Solomon
    2000s
    2000
    John D. Baldeschwieler
    Ralph F. Hirschmann
    2001
    Ernest R. Davidson
    Gábor A. Somorjai
    2002
    John I. Brauman
    2004
    Stephen J. Lippard
    2005
    Tobin J. Marks
    2006
    Marvin H. Caruthers
    Peter B. Dervan
    2007
    Mostafa A. El-Sayed
    2008
    Joanna Fowler
    JoAnne Stubbe
    2009
    Stephen J. Benkovic
    Marye Anne Fox
    2010s
    2010
    Jacqueline K. Barton
    Peter J. Stang
    2011
    Allen J. Bard
    M. Frederick Hawthorne
    2012
    Judith P. Klinman
    Jerrold Meinwald
    2013
    Geraldine L. Richmond
    2014
    A. Paul Alivisatos
    Engineering sciences
    1960s
    1962
    Theodore von Kármán
    1963
    Vannevar Bush
    John Robinson Pierce
    1964
    Charles S. Draper
    Othmar H. Ammann
    1965
    Hugh L. Dryden
    Clarence L. Johnson
    Warren K. Lewis
    1966
    Claude E. Shannon
    1967
    Edwin H. Land
    Igor I. Sikorsky
    1968
    J. Presper Eckert
    Nathan M. Newmark
    1969
    Jack St. Clair Kilby
    1970s
    1970
    George E. Mueller
    1973
    Harold E. Edgerton
    Richard T. Whitcomb
    1974
    Rudolf Kompfner
    Ralph Brazelton Peck
    Abel Wolman
    1975
    Manson Benedict
    William Hayward Pickering
    Frederick E. Terman
    Wernher von Braun
    1976
    Morris Cohen
    Peter C. Goldmark
    Erwin Wilhelm Müller
    1979
    Emmett N. Leith
    Raymond D. Mindlin
    Robert N. Noyce
    Earl R. Parker
    Simon Ramo
    1980s
    1982
    Edward H. Heinemann
    Donald L. Katz
    1983
    Bill Hewlett
    George Low
    John G. Trump
    1986
    Hans Wolfgang Liepmann
    Tung-Yen Lin
    Bernard M. Oliver
    1987
    Robert Byron Bird
    H. Bolton Seed
    Ernst Weber
    1988
    Daniel C. Drucker
    Willis M. Hawkins
    George W. Housner
    1989
    Harry George Drickamer
    Herbert E. Grier
    1990s
    1990
    Mildred Dresselhaus
    Nick Holonyak Jr.
    1991
    George H. Heilmeier
    Luna B. Leopold
    H. Guyford Stever
    1992
    Calvin F. Quate
    John Roy Whinnery
    1993
    Alfred Y. Cho
    1994
    Ray W. Clough
    1995
    Hermann A. Haus
    1996
    James L. Flanagan
    C. Kumar N. Patel
    1998
    Eli Ruckenstein
    1999
    Kenneth N. Stevens
    2000s
    2000
    Yuan-Cheng B. Fung
    2001
    Andreas Acrivos
    2002
    Leo Beranek
    2003
    John M. Prausnitz
    2004
    Edwin N. Lightfoot
    2005
    Jan D. Achenbach
    2006
    Robert S. Langer
    2007
    David J. Wineland
    2008
    Rudolf E. Kálmán
    2009
    Amnon Yariv
    2010s
    2010
    Shu Chien
    2011
    John B. Goodenough
    2012
    Thomas Kailath
    Mathematical, statistical, and computer sciences
    1960s
    1963
    Norbert Wiener
    1964
    Solomon Lefschetz
    H. Marston Morse
    1965
    Oscar Zariski
    1966
    John Milnor
    1967
    Paul Cohen
    1968
    Jerzy Neyman
    1969
    William Feller
    1970s
    1970
    Richard Brauer
    1973
    John Tukey
    1974
    Kurt Gödel
    1975
    John W. Backus
    Shiing-Shen Chern
    George Dantzig
    1976
    Kurt Otto Friedrichs
    Hassler Whitney
    1979
    Joseph L. Doob
    Donald E. Knuth
    1980s
    1982
    Marshall H. Stone
    1983
    Herman Goldstine
    Isadore Singer
    1986
    Peter Lax
    Antoni Zygmund
    1987
    Raoul Bott
    Michael Freedman
    1988
    Ralph E. Gomory
    Joseph B. Keller
    1989
    Samuel Karlin
    Saunders Mac Lane
    Donald C. Spencer
    1990s
    1990
    George F. Carrier
    Stephen Cole Kleene
    John McCarthy
    1991
    Alberto Calderón
    1992
    Allen Newell
    1993
    Martin David Kruskal
    1994
    John Cocke
    1995
    Louis Nirenberg
    1996
    Richard Karp
    Stephen Smale
    1997
    Shing-Tung Yau
    1998
    Cathleen Synge Morawetz
    1999
    Felix Browder
    Ronald R. Coifman
    2000s
    2000
    John Griggs Thompson
    Karen Uhlenbeck
    2001
    Calyampudi R. Rao
    Elias M. Stein
    2002
    James G. Glimm
    2003
    Carl R. de Boor
    2004
    Dennis P. Sullivan
    2005
    Bradley Efron
    2006
    Hyman Bass
    2007
    Leonard Kleinrock
    Andrew J. Viterbi
    2009
    David B. Mumford
    2010s
    2010
    Richard A. Tapia
    S. R. Srinivasa Varadhan
    2011
    Solomon W. Golomb
    Barry Mazur
    2012
    Alexandre Chorin
    David Blackwell
    2013
    Michael Artin
    Physical sciences
    1960s
    1963
    Luis W. Alvarez
    1964
    Julian Schwinger
    Harold Urey
    Robert Burns Woodward
    1965
    John Bardeen
    Peter Debye
    Leon M. Lederman
    William Rubey
    1966
    Jacob Bjerknes
    Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar
    Henry Eyring
    John H. Van Vleck
    Vladimir K. Zworykin
    1967
    Jesse Beams
    Francis Birch
    Gregory Breit
    Louis Hammett
    George Kistiakowsky
    1968
    Paul Bartlett
    Herbert Friedman
    Lars Onsager
    Eugene Wigner
    1969
    Herbert C. Brown
    Wolfgang Panofsky
    1970s
    1970
    Robert H. Dicke
    Allan R. Sandage
    John C. Slater
    John A. Wheeler
    Saul Winstein
    1973
    Carl Djerassi
    Maurice Ewing
    Arie Jan Haagen-Smit
    Vladimir Haensel
    Frederick Seitz
    Robert Rathbun Wilson
    1974
    Nicolaas Bloembergen
    Paul Flory
    William Alfred Fowler
    Linus Carl Pauling
    Kenneth Sanborn Pitzer
    1975
    Hans A. Bethe
    Joseph O. Hirschfelder
    Lewis Sarett
    Edgar Bright Wilson
    Chien-Shiung Wu
    1976
    Samuel Goudsmit
    Herbert S. Gutowsky
    Frederick Rossini
    Verner Suomi
    Henry Taube
    George Uhlenbeck
    1979
    Richard P. Feynman
    Herman Mark
    Edward M. Purcell
    John Sinfelt
    Lyman Spitzer
    Victor F. Weisskopf
    1980s
    1982
    Philip W. Anderson
    Yoichiro Nambu
    Edward Teller
    Charles H. Townes
    1983
    E. Margaret Burbidge
    Maurice Goldhaber
    Helmut Landsberg
    Walter Munk
    Frederick Reines
    Bruno B. Rossi
    J. Robert Schrieffer
    1986
    Solomon J. Buchsbaum
    H. Richard Crane
    Herman Feshbach
    Robert Hofstadter
    Chen-Ning Yang
    1987
    Philip Abelson
    Walter Elsasser
    Paul C. Lauterbur
    George Pake
    James A. Van Allen
    1988
    D. Allan Bromley
    Paul Ching-Wu Chu
    Walter Kohn
    Norman Foster Ramsey Jr.
    Jack Steinberger
    1989
    Arnold O. Beckman
    Eugene Parker
    Robert Sharp
    Henry Stommel
    1990s
    1990
    Allan M. Cormack
    Edwin M. McMillan
    Robert Pound
    Roger Revelle
    1991
    Arthur L. Schawlow
    Ed Stone
    Steven Weinberg
    1992
    Eugene M. Shoemaker
    1993
    Val Fitch
    Vera Rubin
    1994
    Albert Overhauser
    Frank Press
    1995
    Hans Dehmelt
    Peter Goldreich
    1996
    Wallace S. Broecker
    1997
    Marshall Rosenbluth
    Martin Schwarzschild
    George Wetherill
    1998
    Don L. Anderson
    John N. Bahcall
    1999
    James Cronin
    Leo Kadanoff
    2000s
    2000
    Willis E. Lamb
    Jeremiah P. Ostriker
    Gilbert F. White
    2001
    Marvin L. Cohen
    Raymond Davis Jr.
    Charles Keeling
    2002
    Richard Garwin
    W. Jason Morgan
    Edward Witten
    2003
    G. Brent Dalrymple
    Riccardo Giacconi
    2004
    Robert N. Clayton
    2005
    Ralph A. Alpher
    Lonnie Thompson
    2006
    Daniel Kleppner
    2007
    Fay Ajzenberg-Selove
    Charles P. Slichter
    2008
    Berni Alder
    James E. Gunn
    2009
    Yakir Aharonov
    Esther M. Conwell
    Warren M. Washington
    2010s
    2011
    Sidney Drell
    Sandra Faber
    Sylvester James Gates
    2012
    Burton Richter
    Sean C. Solomon
    2014
    Shirley Ann Jackson
    Categories: