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Robert Tryon

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Name
  
Robert Tryon


Education
  
University of California, Berkeley (1928)

Books
  
Cluster analysis, A Self-recording Maze with an Automatic Delivery Table

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Social Sciences, US & Canada


Similar
  
Mike Abrams (psychologist), Edmund Bergler, John William Atkinson

Born
  
4 September 1901 (age 66), Butte, Montana, United States

Died
  
27 September 1967(aged 66), Berkeley, California, United States

Robert Choate Tryon (September 4, 1901 – September 27, 1967) was an American behavioral psychologist, who pioneered the study of hereditary trait inheritance and learning in animals. His series of experiments with laboratory rats showed that animals can be selectively bred for greater aptitude at certain intelligence tests, but that this selective breeding does not increase the general intelligence of the animals.

Contents

Life

Tryon was born in Butte, Montana on September 4, 1901. He spent most of his life at the University of California Berkeley. He received his AB degree from the undergraduate school in 1924, and as a graduate student he earned his Ph.D. in 1928 with thesis titled Individual differences at successive stages of learning. After graduating from the school he spent two years as a National Research Council fellow. In 1931, he became a faculty member of the college’s Department of Psychology, of which he was a member for 31 years. During the War he served in Washington DC as the deputy chief of the planning staff for the Office of Strategic Services. Aside from that short period, he was always in Berkeley. On September 27, 1967 he died in Berkeley, California.

Work

In the 1940s, influenced by the studies of his former professor Edward C. Tolman, Tryon decided to test the theory that intelligence is an inherited trait. To do this, he tested the ability of laboratory rats to navigate a maze: rats who took fewer wrong turns to get through the maze and reach the food at the end were termed "maze-bright," while those who took many wrong turns were termed "maze-dull." Tryon then interbred the maze-bright rats with other maze-brights, and maze-dull rats with other maze-dulls. With each successive generation, the ability to navigate the maze increased in the brights and decreased in the dulls. Known as Tryon's Rat Experiment, this study was highly influential in the field of psychology for showing that specific behavioral traits may be hereditary.

Tryon was a trailblazer in employing cluster analysis for data examination. His 1939 monograph titled "Cluster Analysis" stood as one of the initial publications to present a method for cluster analysis. Throughout his career, he further refined and developed this analytical approach.

References

Robert Tryon Wikipedia


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