Activity | Date of Birth: 01/08/1933 Place of Birth: Nelson, Lancashire, UK
University Qualifications and Professional Training: BA Cantab, Natural Sciences Tripos, Part II, Psychology, 1957 PhD "Reading, Context and the Perception of Words", Reading University, 1961 Dept. of Scientific and Industrial Research (D.S.I.R.) studentship, Department of Psychology, Reading University 1957-1960
Professional Career: Member of Scientific Staff, MRC Applied Psychology Unit, Cambridge, 1960-1982 Director, MRC Cognitive Development Unit, London, 1982-1998 Honorary member, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, UCL, 1998-
Other positions (selected): Research Fellow, Center for Research in Language and Language Behaviour, University of Michigan, Feb-March 1967 Research Associate and Lecturer, Deaprtment of Psychology, Yale University, 1967-1968 Visiting Scientist, Laboratoire de Psychologie, Paris & Unite de Researches Neuropsycholiques et Neurolinguistiques, Hospital St.Anne, Paris, 1974-1975 Consultant, Max Planck Gesellscahft, Project Group for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, 1977-1980 Visiting Professor, Cornell University, 1980
Awards: Fellow BPS, 1974 BPS President's Award, 1988 Member, Academiae Europaeae, 1990 Honorary Fellow BPS, 1997 Order of the British Empire (OBE) HM Government, 1998 Honorary Fellow, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2000 Honorary Member, Experimental Society, 2001 Neuronal Plasticity Prize of La Fondation Ipsen, 2001 Fellow of the Royal Society, 2011 Fellow of the Association for Psychological Science, 2011
Involvement with BPS and other institutions: Committee Member, Section J., British Association for the Advancement of Science, 1972-1973 Member Editorial Board, "Cognition" 1972-1978 Member BPS Standing Press Committee 1972-1984; Chair 1984-1988 Committee Member, Experimental Psychology Society, 1973-1974 Associate Editor, "Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology", 1973-1977 Member BPS Conference Programme Committee, 1975-1979 Editorial Board, "Cognitive Psychology", 1976-1995 Associate Editor "Cognition", 1979- Chair, BPS Standing Press Committee, 1984-1988 Member BPS Council, 1984-1990 & 1997-1998 Scientific Committee, NATO Advanced Research Workshop, 1992 Chair of BPS Working Party on Recovered Memories, 1995-1997 Member BPS Council, Investigatory Panel, 1996- President, Experimental Psychology Society, 1998-2000 Member MRC committee on Gulf War Syndrome, 1996-1999 Member BPS Press Committee, 1999-2003.
Sources: J Morton's CV.
Compiled by Mike Maskill, BPS Archivist for the History of Psychology Centre. |
PublishedWorks | Selected publications:
2009 Fava, L., Morton, J. (2009). Causal modeling of panic disorder theories. Clinical Psychology Review 29, 623-637 Author URL 2008 Blair, K. S., Finger, E., Marsh, A. A., Morton, J., Mondillo, K., Buzas, B., Goldman, D., Drevets, W. C., Blair, R. J. R. (2008). The role of 5-HTTLPR in choosing the lesser of two evils, the better of two goods: examining the impact of 5-HTTLPR genotype and tryptophan depletion in object choice. Psychopharmacology 196, 29-38 Author URL 2007 Blair, K. S., Smith, B. W., Mitchell, D. G., V, M., J, V., M Pessoa, L., Fridberg, D., Zametkin, A., Nelson, E. E., Drevets, W. C., Pine, D. S., Martin, A. B., R, J. R. (2007). Modulation of emotion by cognition and cognition by emotion. Neuroimage 35, 430-440 Author URL 2006 Blair, K. S., Leonard, A., Morton, J., Blair, R. J. R. (2006). Differential stimulus-reward and stimulus-punishment learning in individuals with psychopathy. Personality and Individual Differences 41, 155-165 Blair, K. S., Marsh, A. A., Morton, J., Vythilingam, M., Jones, M. M., K, P., D C, D., W C, B. R. J. (2006). Choosing the lesser of two evils, the better of two goods: Specifying the roles of ventromedial prefrontal cortex and dorsal anterior cingulate in object choice. Journal of Neuroscience 26(44), 11379-11386 Author URL Blair, K. S., Morton, J., Leonard, A., Blair, R. J. R. (2006). Impaired decision-making on the basis of both reward and punishment information in individuals with psychopathy. Personality and Individual Differences 41(1), 155-165 Blair, K. S., Richell, R. A., Mitchell, D. G. V., Leonard, A., Morton, J., Blair, R. J. R. (2006). They know the words, but not the music: Affective and semantic priming in individuals with psychopathy. Biological Psychology 73(2), 114-123 Author URL 2005 Cappelletti, M., Morton, J., Kopelman, M., Butterworth, B. (2005). The progressive loss of numerical knowledge in a semantic dementia patient: a follow-up study. Cognitive Neuropsychology 22(7), pp.771-793 2004 Krol, N., Morton, J., De Bruyn, E. (2004). Theories of conduct disorder: a causal modelling analysis. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 45(4), pp.727-742 Morton, J. (2004). Understanding developmental disorders: a causal modeling approach. Oxford: Blackwell. Author URL 2002 Morton, J., Frith, U. (2002). Why we need cognition: cause and developmental. In Dupoux, E., Dehane, S., Cohen, L. (Eds.). Cognition: a critical look. Advances, questions and controversies ( pp.pp.263-278). Cambridge, USA: MIT Press. 2001 Bartrip, J., Morton, J., De Schonen, S. (2001). Responses to mother's face in 3-week to 5-month old infants. British Journal of Developmental Psychology 19(2), pp.219-232 Kopelman, M., Morton, J. (2001). Psychogenic amnesia - functional memory loss. In Davies, G., Dalgleish, T. (Eds.). Recovered Memories: Seeking the Middle Ground ( pp.pp.219-243). Chichester, UK: Wiley. Morton, J., Frith, U. (2001). Why we need cognition: cause and developmental disorder. In Dupoux, E. (Ed.). Language, Brain and Cognitive Development: Essays in Honor of Jacques Mehler ( pp.263-278). Cambridge: MIT Press. 2000 Abeles, P., Morton, J. (2000). Keeping track: the function of the current state buffer. Cognition 75(3), 179-208 doi:10.1016/S0010-0277(00)00061-5. Andrews, B., Brewin, C., Ochera, J., Morton, J., Bekerian, D., Davies, G., Mollon, P. (2000). The timing, triggers and qualities of recovered memories in therapy. British Journal of Clinical Psychology 39(1), pp.11-26 Author URL Beaman, C., Morton, J. (2000). The effects of rime on auditory recency and the suffix effect. European Journal of Cognitive Psychology 12(2), pp.223-242 doi:10.1080/095414400382136. Beaman, C., Morton, J. (2000). The separate but related origins of the recency effect and the modality effect in free recall. Cognition 77(3), B59-B65 doi:10.1016/S0010-0277(00)00107-4. Morton, J. (2000). . The architecture of event memory. Adelaide: Causal. 1999 Abeles, P., Morton, J. (1999). Avoiding misinformation: reinstating target modality. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology Section A: Human Experimental Psychology 52(3), 581-592 doi:10.1080/713755830. Andrews, B., Brewin, C., Ochera, J., Morton, J., Bekerian, D., Davies, G., Mollon, P. (1999). Characteristics, context and consequences of memory recovery among adults in therapy. The British Journal of Psychiatry 175(2), pp.141-146 Author URL Barreau, S., Morton, J. (1999). Pulling smarties out of a bag. A headed records analysis of children's recall of their own past beliefs. Cognition 73(1), 65-87 1998 Davies, G., Morton, J., Mollon, P., Robertson, N. (1998). Recovered memories in theory and practice. Psychology, Public Policy and Law 4(4), pp.1079-1090 Sims, K., Morton, J. (1998). Modelling the training effects of kinaesthetic acuity measurement in children. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 39(5), pp.731-746 doi:10.1111/1469-7610.00372. Smith, C., Morton, J., Oakley, D. (1998). An investigation of the state dependency of recall during hypnotic amnesia. Contemporary Hypnosis 15(2), pp.94-100 doi:10.1002/ch.120. Smith, C., Morton, J., Oakley, D. A. (1998). Hypnotic amnesia: Suggestions for episodic amnesia can attenuate the generation of primed responses during an implicit memory task. Contemporary Hypnosis. ( pp.252-253). |