Kenneth Spence
{{Infobox scientist
| name = Kenneth Wartinbee Spence
| image =
| caption = Kenneth Wartinbee Spence
| birth_date = {{birth date|1907|5|6|mf=y}}
| birth_place = Chicago, Illinois, United States
| death_date = {{death date and age|1967|1|12|1907|5|6|mf=y}}
| death_place =
| residence =
| field = Psychology
| work_institutions = University of Virginia
University of Iowa
University of Texas
| alma_mater = McGill University
Yale University
| doctoral_advisor = Robert M. Yerkes
| doctoral_students =
| known_for = Contiuous Account of Discrimination Learning
Hull-Spence Learning Theory
| prizes = 1929 Prince of Wales Gold Medal in Mental Sciences, McGill University
1930 Governor General's Medal for Research, McGill University
1953 Howard Crosby Warren Medal, Society of Experimental Psychology
1955 Yale University Silliman Lectures
1956 First Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award, American Psychological Association
| spouse = {{marriage|Janet Taylor Spence|1960}}
| children = {{flatlist|Bill}}
| signature =
| footnotes =
}}
Kenneth Wartinbee Spence (May 6, 1907 – January 12, 1967) was a prominent American psychologist known for both his theoretical and experimental contributions to learning theory and motivation. As one of the leading theorists of his time,{{cite journal|last1=Amsel|first1=Abram|author-link=Abram Amsel|title=Kenneth Wartinbee Spence|journal=Biographical Memoirs|date=1995|volume=66|pages=335–351}} Spence was the most cited psychologist in the 14 most influential psychology journals in the last six years of his life (1962 – 1967).{{cite journal|last1=Wagner|first1=Allan|title=Some observations and remembrances of Kenneth W. Spence|journal=Learning & Behavior|date=2008|volume=36|issue=3|pages=169–173|doi=10.3758/LB.36.3.169|doi-access=free|pmid=18683462 }} A Review of General Psychology survey, published in 2002, ranked Spence as the 62nd most cited psychologist of the 20th century.{{cite journal |last1=Haggbloom |first1=Steven J. |title=The 100 most eminent psychologists of the 20th century |journal=Review of General Psychology |volume=6 |issue=2 |year=2002 |pages=139–52 |doi=10.1037/1089-2680.6.2.139 |url=http://www.apa.org/monitor/julaug02/eminent.aspx |last2=Warnick |first2=Renee |last3=Warnick |first3=Jason E. |last4=Jones |first4=Vinessa K. |last5=Yarbrough |first5=Gary L. |last6=Russell |first6=Tenea M. |last7=Borecky |first7=Chris M. |last8=McGahhey |first8=Reagan |last9=Powell |first9=John L. III |last10=Beavers |first10=Jamie |last11=Monte |first11=Emmanuelle |citeseerx=10.1.1.586.1913 |s2cid=145668721 }}
Personal history
Spence was born in Chicago on May 6, 1907. In 1911, Spence's father, an electrical engineer, moved the family to Montreal, Quebec, Canada when transferred by his employer, Western Electric.{{cite journal|last1=Kendler|first1=Howard|title=Kenneth W. Spence (1907-1967): Obituary|journal=Psychological Review|date=1967|volume=74|issue=5|pages=335–341|doi=10.1037/h0024873|pmid=4864832}} Spence spent his youth and adolescence there, attending West Hill High School in Notre Dame de Grace. While in high school, Spence was involved in basketball, tennis and track.
Spence sustained a back injury during a track competition while attending McGill University. As part of his physical therapy, Spence moved to live with his grandmother in LaCrosse, Wisconsin. There, Spence attended LaCrosse Teacher's College and majored in Physical Education, and met his future wife Isabel Temte. He and Isabel had two children, Shirley Ann Spence Pumroy and William James Spence. Spence and Isabel later divorced, and Spence was remarried to Janet A. Taylor, his graduate student, in 1960.{{cite journal|last1=Hilgard|first1=Ernest|title=Kenneth Wartinbee Spence: 1907-1967|journal=The American Journal of Psychology|date=1967|volume=80 |issue=2|pages=314–318 |pmid=4861576}}
Spence eventually returned to McGill University and changed his major to psychology. He received his B.A. in 1929, and M.A. in 1930. After McGill, Spence attended Yale University as a research assistant to Robert M. Yerkes. Yerkes sponsored his dissertation, a study on the visual acuity of chimpanzees. Spence received his PhD from Yale in 1933.
While at Yale, Spence collaborated with Walter Shipley to test Clark L. Hull's blind alley maze learning in rats, a contribution which led to further publications while pursuing his PhD. Spence applied to a postdoctoral fellowship to study mathematics after the completion of his graduate training, but his application was rejected by a biologist on the grounds that psychology would never reach a level of precision to require sophisticated mathematical knowledge.
Professional contributions
=Discrimination learning=
After his PhD, Spence accepted a position as National Research Council at Yale Laboratories of Primate Biology in Orange Park, Florida from 1933 to 1937. There, Spence examined discrimination learning in chimpanzees. From this and further research, Spence developed the continuous learning account of two-choice discrimination learning in rats. As reported by Lashley (1929), rats in a two-choice discrimination task demonstrated an extended period of chance performance, followed by a sudden leap to a high percentage of accurate responding. Lashley explained this phenomenon by suggesting that the rat's essential learning emerged from testing and confirming the correct hypothesis "during the rapidly changing portion of the function, with the practice preceding and the errors following being irrelevant to the final solution."
In contrast, Spence proposed that essential learning was produced through increases in the excitatory tendencies of task-relevant characteristics of the display, and decreases in inhibitory tendencies of the non-relevant characteristics of the display – a continuous learning account not directly detected by the choice measure.
=Motivation=
Spence moved to the University of Iowa in 1938, and was appointed to the head of the psychology department in 1942. There, Spence established an eyelid-conditioning lab to study the influence of motivation on classical conditioning, and contributed to Clark Hull's seminal Principles of Behavior book. Like Hull, Spence believed learning was the result of the interaction between drive and incentive motivation. Unlike Hull, Spence's formulation summed drive (D) and incentive motivation (K) instead of multiplying them. This allowed Spence "to show that increasing motivational level will facilitate performance on tasks in which the correct, to-be-learned response is stronger than those of other response-tendencies elicited by a stimulus, but will deter performance on tasks in which the habit-strength of the correct response is initially weaker than those of competing response-tendencies. He showed also that the mathematical form of the curves obtained when probability of the conditioned response is plotted against successive presentations of the paired stimulus changes systematically with motivational level." Spence believed that differences in motivation were attributable to internal emotional responses created by an intraorganic brain mechanism.
Spence's contributions to Hull's Principles of Behavior are commemorated in the book's foreword, where Hull stated: "To Kenneth L. Spence I owe a debt of gratitude which cannot adequately be indicated in this place; from the time when the ideas here put forward were in the process of incubation in my graduate seminar and later when the present work was being planned, on through its many revisions, Dr. Spence has contributed generously and effectively with suggestions and criticisms, large numbers of which have been utilized without indication of their origin." The variable for incentive motivation (K) was said to have been chosen in honor of Kenneth Spence.
=Teaching=
Influential publications
=Discrimination learning=
- The Nature of Discrimination Learning in Animals, 1936.{{cite journal|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=The Nature of Discrimination Learning in Animals|journal=Psychological Review|date=1936|volume=43|issue=5|pages=427–449|doi=10.1037/h0056975}}
- The Differential Response in Animals to Stimuli Varying Within a Single Dimension, 1937.{{cite journal|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=The differential response in animals to stimuli varying within a single dimension.|journal=Psychological Review|date=1937|volume=44|issue=5|pages=430–444|doi=10.1037/h0062885}}
- Continuous Versus Non-continuous Interpretations of Discrimination Learning, 1940.{{cite journal|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=Continuous versus non-continuous interpretations of discrimination learning.|journal=Psychological Review|date=1940|volume=47|issue=4|pages=271–288|doi=10.1037/h0054336}}
=Theoretical=
- The Nature of Theory Construction in Contemporary Psychology, 1944.{{cite journal|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=The nature of theory construction in contemporary psychology.|journal=Psychological Review|date=1944|volume=51|pages=47–68|doi=10.1037/h0060940}}
- The Postulates and Methods of Behaviorism, 1948.{{cite journal|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=The postulates and methods of behaviorism.|journal=Psychological Review|date=1948|volume=55|issue=2|pages=67–69|doi=10.1037/h0063589|pmid=18910282}}
- Theoretical Interpretations of Learning, 1951.{{cite journal|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=Theoretical interpretations of learning.|journal=Handbook of Experimental Psychology|date=1951|pages=690–729}}
- Mathematical Formulations of Learning Phenomena, 1952.{{cite journal|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=Mathematical formulations of learning phenomena.|journal=Psychological Review|date=1952|volume=59|issue=2|pages=152–160|doi=10.1037/h0058010|pmid=14920650}}
- Behavior Theory and Conditioning, 1956.{{cite book|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=Behavior Theory and Conditioning|url=https://archive.org/details/behaviortheoryco00spen|url-access=registration|date=1956|publisher=Yale University Press|location=New Haven}}
=Eyelid conditioning=
- Anxiety and Strength of the UCS as Determiners of the Amount of Eyelid Conditioning, 1951.{{cite journal|last1=Taylor|first1=Janet|last2=Spence|first2=Kenneth|title=Anxiety and strength of the UCS as determiners of the amount of eyelid conditioning.|journal=Journal of Experimental Psychology|date=1951|volume=42|issue=3|pages=183–188|doi=10.1037/h0061580|pmid=14880670}}
- Cognitive and Drive Factors in the Extinction of the Conditioned Eyeblink in Human Subjects, 1966.{{cite journal|last1=Spence|first1=Kenneth|title=Cognitive and drive factors in the extinction of the conditioned eyeblink in human subjects.|journal=Psychological Review|date=1966|volume=73|issue=5|pages=445–449|doi=10.1037/h0023638|pmid=5976738}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- {{Find a Grave}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Spence, Kenneth Wartenbe}}
Category:20th-century American psychologists
Category:McGill University Faculty of Science alumni
Category:Yale University alumni