Richard E. Petty

Richard E. Petty is university professor of psychology at Ohio State University.[1]

He received his Ph.D. in social psychology from Ohio State in 1977. After graduation Richard E. Petty went on to start his academic career as the assistant professor of psychology at the University of Missouri, and in 1985 he was named the Frederick A. Middlebush Professor of Psychology. In 1987 he returned to Ohio State University for an appointment as a professor of psychology and director of the Social Psychology Doctoral Program and has been a distinguished university professor since 1998. He served as chair of the Psychology Department from 1998 to 2002 and again from 2008 to the present.

Petty’s research focuses on the situational and individual differences factors responsible for changes in beliefs, attitudes, judgments, decisions, and behaviors. More specifically, his current work examines the Elaboration Likelihood Model of persuasion. This model is used to understand prejudice, consumer choice, political and legal decisions, and health behaviors.

He has been a consultant and panelist for the National Academy of Sciences Committee on Dietary Guidelines Implementation to Improve the Health of Americans and the Committee for a Social Psychology of Aging, the National Institute on Drug Abuse panel on Using Persuasive Communication to Prevent Drug Abuse, and the National Science Foundation panel on the Human Dimensions of Global Change.

  1. ^ Leong, Frederick T. L. & Austin, Dr. James T. (ed.) The psychology research handbook, p. 513 (2005) (ISBN 978-0761930228)(bio paragraph)

Richard E. Petty

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