Robert R. Provine is Professor of Psychology and Assistant Director
of the Neuroscience Program at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. He has
authored over 50 research papers concerning developmental neuroscience
and the neural mechanisms of behavior, conducting studies on over 30
species, using techniques ranging from electrophysiology and tissue
culture to field studies. He came to the study of laughter and human
ethology from a background in neuroembryology, having studied and published
with Nobel Prize and National Medal of Science winners. A scholar who
has lectured in North America and Europe in settings ranging from medical
school departments of neurology to NASA, NIST and grade schools, he
has received research grants from the National Institutes of Health.
His work has been featured in dozens of articles worldwide, including
the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Daily
Telegraph (London), Le Figaro, New Scientist, Discover,
Science et Avenir, Panorama (Italy), Focus (Germany),
The Los Angeles Times, and The Washington Post. His numerous
televisio appearances include "Good Morning America," "ABC
World News Tonight" "Eye to Eye" (CBS), and specials
on The Learning Channel ("Understanding Laughter" -- with
Bill Cosby), The Discover Channel ("Laughter"-- with Conan
O'Brien), and BBC Horizon ("Beyond the Joke"). His radio appearances
include "All Things Considered" (NPR), "Morning Edition"
(NPR), and "Talk of the Nation--Science Friday" (NPR). When
not doing science, Professor Provine enjoys stargazing, optics, and
martial arts, serving as advisor and instructor of the University Tae
Kwon Do Club. He is married to pianist and musicologist Helen Weems
and has two adult children.
Curriculum Vitae
ROBERT R. PROVINE
Department of Psychology
University of Maryland Baltimore County
Baltimore, MD 21250
Personal Data
Date of Birth: May 11, 1943
Place of Birth: Tulsa, Oklahoma U.S.A.
Education
B.S. 1965 Oklahoma State University, Psychology (Microbiology)
Ph.D. 1971 Washington University, Psychology (Neuroembryology)
Experience in Higher Education
Professor of Psychology (1983-present)
Associate Professor of Psychology (1976-83)
Assistant Professor of Psychology (1974-76)
University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD.
1971-1974
Research Assistant Professor of Psychology (1972-74) and Research Associate,
Departments of Biology (Laboratories of Profs. Viktor Hamburger and
Rita Levi-Montalcini, 1972-74), and Ophthalmology (Laboratory of Prof.
Jay Enoch, 1973-74), Washington University, St. Louis, MO. Visiting
Scientist (1971), Research Laboratory of Electronics/Communications
Biophysics, MIT, Cambridge, MA.
1965-1971
Graduate Student in Psychology, Washington University, St. Louis, MO.
Training in neuroembryology, neuropsychology, physiological, and comparative
psychology.
1961-1965
Undergraduate Student, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK.
B.S. in Psychology with requirements fulfilled in microbiology.
Publications (Books)
1999
Laughter. Little, Brown and Company (US and Canada), in preparation.
Laughter. Faber and Faber (UK), in preparation.
Laughter. Castoldi and Baldini (Italy), in preparation.
Publications (Research articles and book chapters)
1998
Epidemie de rire. R. R. Provine et Helen Weems. Sciences et Avenir
(Julliet/Aout), pp. 18- 19.
Le rire des singes. R. R. Provine et H. R. Weems. Sciences et Avenir
(Julliet/Aout), pp. 20- 23.
Laughter. R. R. Provine, In Encyclopedia of Neuroscience (2nd ed.).
Elsevier, Amsterdam.
Yawning. R. R. Provine, In Encyclopedia of Neuroscience (2nd ed.).
Elsevier, Amsterdam.
1996
Yawning. R. R. Provine. In Encyclopedia of Neuroscience. Elsevier,
Amsterdam. CD ROM
Laughing. R. R. Provine. In Encyclopedia of Neuroscience. Elsevier,
Amsterdam. CD ROM
Contagious yawning and laughter: Significance for sensory feature detection,
motor pattern generation, imitation, and the evolution of social behavior.
R. R. Provine. In C. M. Heyes and B. G. Galef, eds., Social learning
in animals: The roots of culture. Academic Press, New York pp. 179-208.
Yawns, laughs, smiles, tickles, and talking: Naturalistic and laboratory
studies of facial action and social communication. R. R. Provine. In
J. A. Russell, and J. M. Fernandez Dols Eds., New directions in the
study of facial expression. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge
pp. 158-175.
Laughter. R. R. Provine. American Scientist, 84, 38-45.
1994
Pre- and postnatal development of wing-flapping and flight in birds:
Embryological, comparative and evolutionary perspectives. R. R. Provine.
In M. O. Davies & P. Green , Eds., Perception and motor control in
birds: A unified approach. Springer-Verlag, Berlin pp. 135-159.
1993
Laughter punctuates speech: Linguistic, social, and gender contexts
of laughter. R. R. Provine. Ethology, 95, 291-298.
Prenatal behavior development: Ontogenetic adaptations and non-linear
processes. R. R. Provine. In G. J. P. Savelsbergh, Ed., The development
of coordination in infancy. Elsevier, Amsterdam. pp. 203-236.
Natural priorities for developmental study: Neuroembryological perspectives
of motor development. R. R. Provine. In A. Kalverboer, B. Hopkins, &
R. Geuze, Eds., Motor development in early and later childhood.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. pp. 51-73.
Yawning, R. R. Provine. In M. A. Carskadon, Ed., Encyclopedia of
sleep and dreaming. MacMillan, New York. pp. 651-654.
1992
Contagious laughter: Laughter is a sufficient stimulus for laughs and
smiles. R. R. Provine. Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society, 30,
1-4.
1991
Laughter: A stereotyped human vocalization. R. R. Provine and Y. L.
Yong. Ethology , 89, 115-124.
1989
Faces as releasers of contagious yawning: An approach to face detection
using normal human subjects. R. R. Provine. Bulletin of the Psychonomic
Society, 27, 211-214.
Laughing, smiling, and talking: Relation to sleeping and social context
in humans. R. R. Provine and K. R. Fischer. Ethology, 83, 295-305.
Yawning and simulation science. R. R. Provine. Simulation, 53,
193-194.
Contagious yawning and infant imitation. R. R. Provine. Bulletin
of the Psychonomic Society, 27, 125-126.
1988
On the uniqueness of embryos and the difference it makes. R. R. Provine.
In W. P. Smotherman and S. R. Robinson, Eds., Behavior of the fetus.
Telford Press, Caldwell, New Jersey. pp. 35-46.
1987
Yawning: Relation to sleeping and stretching in humans. R. R. Provine,
H. B. Hamernik, and B. C. Curchack. Ethology, 76, 152-160.
Yawning: No effect of 3-5% CO2, 100% O2, and exercise. R. R. Provine,
B. C. Tate, and L. L. Geldmacher. Behavioral and Neural Biology,
48, 382-392.
1986
Behavioral Neuroembryology: Motor Perspectives. R. R. Provine. In
W. Greenough and J. Juraska, Ed., Developmental NeuroPsychobiology.
Academic Press, New York. pp. 213-239.
Yawning as a stereotyped action pattern and releasing stimulus. R. R.
Provine. Ethology, 72, 109-122.
Yawning: Effects of stimulus interest. R. R. Provine and
H. B. Hamernik.
Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society,
24, 437-438.
1984
Comparative analysis of the development of wing-flapping and flight
in the fowl. R. R. Provine, C. L. Strawbridge, and B. J. Harrison. Developmental
Psychobiology, 17, 1-10.
Wing-flapping during development and evolution. R. R. Provine. American
Scientist, 72, 448-455.
1983
Chicken muscular dystrophy: An inherited disorder of flight. R. R.
Provine. Developmental Psychobiology,
16, 23-27.
Development of wing-flapping and flight: A review. R. R. Provine. Bird
Behaviour, 5, 16-21.
1982
Pre-flight development of bilateral wing coordination in the chick
(Gallus domesticus): Effects of induced
bilateral wing asymmetry. R. R. Provine. Developmental
Psychobiology, 15, 245-255.
1981
Development of wing-flapping and flight in normal and flap-deprived
chicks (Gallus domesticus). R. R. Provine.
Developmental Psychobiology, 14, 279-291.
Wing-flapping develops in chickens made flightless by feather mutations.
R. R. Provine. Developmental Psychobiology,
14, 481-486.
Embryonic and postembryonic development. R. R. Provine. In W. J. Bell
and K. G. Adiyodi, Ed., The American Cockroach,
Chapman and Hall, London. pp. 399-423.
1980
Development of between-limb movement synchronization in the chick
embryo. R. R. Provine. Developmental Psychobiology,
13, 151-163.
1979
Crossing the midline: Limits of early eye-hand behavior. R. R. Provine
and J. Westerman. Child Development,
50, 437-441.
"Wing-flapping" develops in wingless chicks. R. R. Provine. Behavioral
and Neural Biology, 27, 233-237.
1977
Behavioral development of the cockroach (Periplaneta
americana). R. R. Provine. Journal of
Insect Physiology, 23, 213-220.
Development of spinal cord bioelectric activity in spinal chick embryos
and its behavioral implications. R. R. Provine and L. Rogers. Journal
of Neurobiology, 8, 217-228.
1976
Eclosion and hatching in cockroach first instar larvae: A stereotyped
pattern of behavior. R. R. Provine. Journal
of Insect Physiology, 22, 127-131.
Formation of cockroach interganglionic connectives: An in
vitro analysis. R. R. Provine, K. R. Seshan and L. Aloe. Journal
of Comparative Neurology, 165, 17-30.
Development of function in nerve nets. R. R. Provine. In J. Fentress,
Ed., Simpler Networks and Behavior, Sinauer
Associates, Sunderland, Mass., pp. 203-220.
1975
On voluntary ocular accommodation. R. R. Provine and J. M. Enoch. Perception
and Psychophysics, 17, 209-212.
Reprinted in: T. Barber, L. DiCara, J. Kamiya, N. Miller, D. Shapiro
and J. Stoyva, Ed., 1975 Biofeedback and Self-Control
Annual, Aldine Publishing Co., Chicago (1976).
Shift in the peak of the photopic Stiles-Crawford function with marked
accommodation. K. Blank, R. R. Provine and J. M. Enoch.
Vision Research, 15, 499-507.
1974
Structural and electrophysiological properties of nymphal and adult
insect medial neurosecretory cells: An in vitro
analysis. K. R. Seshan, R. R. Provine and R. Levi-Montalcini.
Brain Research, 78, 359-376.
Emergence of geometric patterns in insect nerve nets: An in
vitro analysis. R. R. Provine, K. R. Seshan and L. Aloe. Brain
Research, 80, 328-334.
1973
Spontaneous bioelectric activity in long term cultures of the embryonic
insect central nervous system. R. R. Provine, L. Aloe, and K. R. Seshan.
Brain Research, 56, 364-370.
Neurophysiological aspects of behavior development in the chick embryo.
R. R. Provine. In G. Gottlieb, Ed., Behavioral
Embryology, Academic Press, New York, 77-102.
1972
Ontogeny of bioelectric activity in the spinal cord of the chick embryo
and its behavioral implications. R. R. Provine. Brain
Research, 41, 365-378.
The levels of the brain specific proteins S-100 and 14-3-2 in the developing
chick spinal cord. T. S. Cicero and R. R. Provine.
Brain Research, 44, 294-298.
Neural correlates of embryonic motility in the chick. K. L. Ripley and
R. R. Provine. Brain Research, 45, 127-134.
Hatching behavior of the chick (Gallus domesticus):
plasticity of the rotatory component. R. R. Provine. Psychonomic
Science, 29, 27-28.
1971
Embryonic spinal cord: Synchrony and spatial distribution of polyneuronal
burst discharges. R. R. Provine. Brain Research,
29, 155-158.
1970
Electrical activity in the spinal cord of the chick embryo in
situ. R. R. Provine, S. C. Sharma, T. T. Sandel, and V. Hamburger.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,
USA, 65, 508-515.
Unit activity of the isolated spinal cord of chick embryo
in situ. S. C. Sharma, R. R. Provine, V. Hamburger, and T. T.
Sandel. Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences, USA, 66, 40-47.
Robert R. Provine Curriculum Vitae