Nicholas Christenfeld is a former professor of Psychology at the University of California, San Diego until his dismissal in 2019. He first joined the department in 1991 and was a full professor from 2003 to 2019. Among other research, he has promulgated the Theory of Deadly Initials and the theory that infants resemble their fathers more closely than they do their mothers.[1] More recently, he studied the tendency of people to choose purebred dogs which resembled them.[2]

Education edit

  • 1991 Ph.D. Columbia University. Thesis: Speech Disfluencies and the Effects of Mazes, Motives, and Metronomes.
  • 1989 M.Phil. Columbia University.
  • 1988 M.A. Columbia University. Thesis: Predicting Stock Market Predictions.
  • 1985 B.A. Harvard College, cum laude with Highest Honors in Psychology.

Title IX Investigations and Dismissal edit

Christenfeld was fired from his tenured professorship and stripped of emeritus status after a year-long investigation found he had violated Title IX by emailing a female student pornography in 2018. He had previously been the subject of five separate complaints, including substantiated allegations of sexual misconduct on university property and undisclosed romantic relationships with undergraduate students. However, the university determined none of the prior complaints warranted significant disciplinary action.[3][4]

References edit

  1. ^ Christenfeld, N., & Hill, E.A. (1995). Whose baby are you? Nature, 378, 669
  2. ^ Roy, M; N. Christenfeld (2004). "Do dogs resemble their owners?". Psychological Science. 15 (5): 361–363. doi:10.1111/j.0956-7976.2004.00684.x. PMID 15102149. S2CID 12531734.
  3. ^ Coston, Ethan (17 February 2021). "A UCSD Professor Sent a Student Porn. Here's Why it Took a Year to Fire Him". Voice of San Diego. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  4. ^ "Christenfeld v. Regents of the University of Cal. CA1/1, A162690 (Cal. Ct. App. 2022)". CourtListener. Retrieved 2023-03-31.