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Julie K. Norem is
an associate professor of psychology at Wellesley College. She started
at Wellesley in 1992, and teaches courses in personality psychology, research
methods, and gender, as well as a seminar on optimism and pessimism. Her
research focuses on the strategies people use to pursue their goals, with
an emphasis on the strategy of defensive pessimism; and on the ways self-knowledge
influences adaptation, performance, and social relationships, particularly
among those who feel like impostors.
Professor Norem received
her A.B. in Behavioral Sciences from the University of Chicago in 1982,
and her Ph.D. in Psychology from the University of Michigan in 1987. She
was a professor at Northeastern University before coming to Wellesley.
Dr. Norem has written
numerous book chapters and articles for scholarly journals, including
empirical papers based on her own research and theoretical review and
commentary, and has presented dozens of papers at scientific conferences
across the country and abroad. She has also been Associate Editor of both
the Journal of Research in Personality and the Personality and Social
Psychology Review. She sits on the editorial board of several scholarly
journals, and has held a variety of appointed and elected positions in
the Society of Personality and Social Psychology. She is currently a founding
member and on the Steering Committee of the Association for Research in
Personality.
With Blythe M. Clinchy,
she edited a book of readings entitled "The Gender and Psychology
Reader" (NY: NYU Press) that appeared in 1998. Her book on defensive
pessimism research, entitled "The Positive Power of Negative Thinking"
(NY: Basic Books). will be published September 4, 2001.
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