Literature DB >> 25194751

Edwin Grant Dexter: an early researcher in human behavioral biometeorology.

Alan E Stewart1.   

Abstract

Edwin Grant Dexter (1868-1938) was one of the first researchers to study empirically the effects of specific weather conditions on human behavior. Dexter (1904) published his findings in a book, Weather influences. The author's purposes in this article were to (1) describe briefly Dexter's professional life and examine the historical contexts and motivations that led Dexter to conduct some of the first empirical behavioral biometeorological studies of the time, (2) describe the methods Dexter used to examine weather-behavior relationships and briefly characterize the results that he reported in Weather influences, and (3) provide a historical analysis of Dexter's work and assess its significance for human behavioral biometeorology. Dexter's Weather influences, while demonstrating an exemplary approach to weather, health, and behavior relationships, came at the end of a long era of such studies, as health, social, and meteorological sciences were turning to different paradigms to advance their fields. For these reasons, Dexter's approach and contributions may not have been fully recognized at the time and are, consequently, worthy of consideration by contemporary biometeorologists.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25194751     DOI: 10.1007/s00484-014-0888-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Biometeorol        ISSN: 0020-7128            Impact factor:   3.787


  8 in total

1.  Psychology without p values. Data analysis at the turn of the 19th century.

Authors:  L D Smith; L A Best; V A Cylke; D A Stubbs
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  2000-02

2.  Violence is a curvilinear function of temperature in Dallas: a replication.

Authors:  J Rotton; E G Cohn
Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol       Date:  2000-06

3.  Weather and emotional state: a search for associations between weather and calls to telephone counseling services.

Authors:  Dennis M Driscoll; Daniel N Stillman
Journal:  Int J Biometeorol       Date:  2002-08-13       Impact factor: 3.787

Review 4.  Constructing knowledge. The role of graphs and tables in hard and soft psychology.

Authors:  Laurence D Smith; Lisa A Best; D Alan Stubbs; Andrea Bastiani Archibald; Roxann Roberson-Nay
Journal:  Am Psychol       Date:  2002-10

5.  Reimagining the natural frontier. [Review of: Valencius, CB. The health of the country: how American settlers understood themselves and their land. New York: Basic Books, 2002].

Authors:  Charles Montgomery
Journal:  Rev Am Hist       Date:  2003-06

6.  THE NEEDS OF METEOROLOGY.

Authors:  C Abbe
Journal:  Science       Date:  1895-02-15       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  A short history of human biometeorology.

Authors:  J J Bouma
Journal:  Experientia       Date:  1987-01-15

8.  Aspects of human biometeorology in past, present and future.

Authors:  P Höppe
Journal:  Int J Biometeorol       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 3.787

  8 in total

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