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Daniel Stokols

UCI School of Social Ecology

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Publications

  • Stokols, D., & Barankevich, R. (2024).  Home environments in an age of precarity.  Journal of Environmental Psychology, 99.
  • Lejano, R.P. & Stokols, D. (2024).  Social ecological systems in flux.  Annual Review of Sociology, 50, 149-68.
  • Barankevich, R., & Stokols, D. (in press).  Research developments at the interface of environmental psychology and social ecology. In I. Walker (Ed.), Handbook of Environmental Psychology, Elgar Publishers.
  • Stokols, D. (2024).  Social ecology.  In Darbellay, F. (Ed.), Encyclopedia of interdisciplinarity and transdisciplinarity.  Elgar Publishers, 2024, 477-482. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781035317967.ch105
  • Barankevich, R., & Stokols, D. (2023). Environmental design for the physical-virtual
    continuum. Journal of Interior Design, 48 (1), 6-11.
  • Tomlinson, B., B. Nardi, D. Stokols, A. Raturi and A. W. Torrance (2022). Returning ecological wealth to nonhuman species through design: the case for ecosystemas. Ecology and Society 27 (2):34
  • Tomlinson, W.T., Nardi, B., Stokols, D., & Raturi, A. (2021).  Ecosystemas: Representing ecosystem impacts in design.  CHI Conference on human factors in computing systems, article no. 14, 1-10. https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3411763.3450382.
  • Stokols D. (2021) Social Ecology. In Maggino F. (Ed) Encyclopedia of Quality of Life and Well-Being Research. Springer Link. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-69909-7_2754-2
  • Stokols, D. (2020).  Toward an environmental psychology of planetary recovery and biospheric survival. Umweltpsychologie-German Journal of Environmental Psychology, 24(2), 12-33.
  • Stokols, D. (2020).  Our changing views of “home” in the Covid-19 Era.  Medium.
  • Stokols, D., Misra, S., & Lotrecchiano, G.R. (2020). Emerging directions in the science of team science: An interview with Professor Daniel Stokols.  In Lotrecchiano, G,, & Misra, S. (Eds.), Communication in transdisciplinary teams.  Santa Rosa, CA: Informing Science Press, pp. 309-327.
  • Fiore, S.M., Gabelica, C., Wiltshire, T.J., & Stokols, D. (2019).  Training to be a (team) scientist.  In Hall, K.L., Vogel, A.L., & Croyle, R.T. (Eds.), Strategies for team science success.  Basel, Switzerland: Springer Nature, pp. 421-444.
  • Stokols, D. (2019).  Directions of environmental design research in the Anthropocene.  In Beth, A., Wener, R., Yoon, B., Rae, R. A., & Morris, J. (Eds.) Proceedings from EDRA 50: Sustainable urban environments. Brooklyn, NY: Environmental Design Research Association. https://cuny.manifoldapp.org/projects/edra-50-proceedings.
  • Stokols, D. (2019).  Environmental psychology’s contributions to the study of people-environment relations in the Digital Age.  Japanese Journal of Environmental Psychology, 7(1), 12-16.
  • Stokols, D. (2019).  An interdisciplinary “six tools player”.  Issues in Interdisciplinary Studies, 37(2), pp. 13-16.
  • Stokols, D., Olson, J.S., Salazar, M., Olson, G.M (2019).  Strengthening the ecosystem for effective team science: A case study from the University of California, Irvine.  Integration and Implementation Insights, i2insights.org, February 19.
  • Stokols, D., Salazar, M., Olson, G.M., Olson, J.S. (2019). Idea tree: A tool for brainstorming ideas in cross-disciplinary teams. Integration and Implementation Insights, i2insights.org, March 12.
  • Stokols, D. (2018).  The changing morphology of indoor ecosystems in the Twenty-first Century driven by technological, climatic, and sociodemographic forces.  Human Ecology Review, 24(2).
  • Lejano, R.P. & Stokols, D. (2018).  Analytics for local knowledge: Exploring a community’s experience of risk.  Journal of Risk Research, DOI: 10.1080/13669877.2018.1476902.
  • Stokols, D. (2018).  Social ecology in the digital age: Solving complex problems in a globalized world.  London, UK:  Academic Press.
  • Gui X, Forbat J, Nardi B, Stokols D. (2016). Use of information and communication technology among street drifters in Los Angeles. First Monday, 21(9).
  • Misra, S., Stokols, D., & Cheng, L. (2015).  The Transdisciplinary Orientation Scale: Factor structure and relation to the integrative quality and scope of scientific publications.  Journal of Collaborative Healthcare and Translational Medicine, 3(2) 1042, 1-10.
  • Tomlinson, B., Nardi, B., Patterson, D., Raturi, A., Richardson, D., Saphores, J-D., Stokols, D. (2015). Toward Alternative Decentralized Infrastructures. Proceedings of the 6th Annual Symposium on Computing for Development (ACM DEV), December 2015.  London, UK.
  • Schneider, M., & Stokols, D. (2015).  Ecology and health.  In J.D. Wright (Ed.), International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, 2nd edition, Vol. 6.  Oxford, UK:  Elsevier, pp. 878-883.
  • Stokols, D. (2014).  Social ecology.  In A.C. Michalos (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Quality of Life Research.  Dordrecht: Springer.
  • Karlin, B., Davis, N., Sanguinetti, A., Gamble, K., Kirkby, D., & Stokols, D. (2014)  Dimensions of conservation:  Exploring differences among energy behaviors.  Environment and Behavior, 46(4), 423-452.
  • Stokols, D. (2014).  Training the next generation of transdisciplinarians.  In O’Rourke, M.O., Crowley, S., Eigenbrode, S.D., Wulfhorst, J.D. (Eds.), Enhancing communication & collaboration in interdisciplinary research.  Los Angeles, CA:  Sage Publications, 56-81
  • Stipelman, B.A., Hall, K.L., Zoss, A., Okamoto, J., Stokols, D., & Borner, K. (2014). Mapping the impact of transdisciplinary research:  A visual comparison of investigator-initiated and team-based tobacco use research publications.  Journal of Translational Medicine & Epidemiology, 2(2), 1033.
  • Vogel, A.L., Stipelman, B.A., Hall, K.L., Nebeling, L., Stokols, D., & Spruijt-Metz, D. (2014).  Pioneering the transdisciplinary team science approach:  Lessons learned from National Cancer Institute grantees.  Journal of Translational Medicine and Epidemiology, 2(2), 1027.
  • Stokols, D., Hall, K.L., & Vogel, A.L. (2013).  Transdisciplinary public health:  Core characteristics, definitions, and strategies for success.  In Haire-Joshu, D., & McBride, T.D. (Eds.), Transdisciplinary public health:  Research, methods, and practice.  San Francisco:  Jossey-Bass Publishers, 3-30.
  • Stokols, D., Lejano, R., & Hipp, J. (2013).  Enhancing the resilience of human-environment systems:  A social ecological perspective.  Ecol & Society, 18(1): 7.
  • Lejano, R., & Stokols, D. (2013).  Social ecology, sustainability, and economics.  Ecological Economics, 89, 1-6.
  • Misra, S., Stokols, D., & Heberger Marino, A. (2013). Descriptive, but not injunctive, normative appeals increase response rates in Web-based surveys.  Journal of MultiDisciplinary Evaluation, 9(21), 1-10.
  • Vogel, A.L., Hall, K.L., Fiore, S.M., Klein, J.T., Bennett, L.M., Gadlin, H., Stokols, D., Nebeling, L.C., Wuchty, S., Patrick, K., Spotts, E.L., Pohl, C., Riley, W.T., & Falk-Krzesinksi, H. (2013).  The team science toolkit:  Enhancing research collaboration through online knowledge sharing.  American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 45(6), 787-789.
  • Misra, S., & Stokols, D. (2012).  Psychological and health outcomes of perceived information overload. Environment & Behavior, 44(6), 737-759.
  • Misra, S., & Stokols, D. (2012).  A typology of people-environment relationships in the Digital Age.  Technology in Society, 34, 311-325.
  • Misra, S., Stokols, D., & Heberger-Marino, A. (2012).  Using norm-based appeals to increase response rates in evaluation research:  A field experiment. American Journal of Evaluation.
  • Hall, K., Stokols, D., Stipelman, B., Vogel, A., Feng, A., Masimore, B., Morgan, G., Moser, R.P., Marcus, S.E., & Berrigan, D. (2012).  Assessing the value of team science:  A study comparing center and investigator-initiated grants. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 42(2), 157-163.
  • Hall, K., Vogel, A., Stipelman, B., Stokols, D., Morgan, G., & Gehlert, S. (2012).  A four-phase model of transdisciplinary team-based research:  Goals, tteam processes, and strategies.  Translational Behavioral Medicine, doi: 10.1007/s13142-012-0167-y.
  • Vogel, A., Feng, A., Oh, A., Hall, K., Stipelman, B., Stokols, D., Okamoto, J., Perna, F., Moser, R., & Nebeling, L. (2012).  Influence of a National Cancer Institute transdisciplinary research and training initiative on trainees’ transdisciplinary research competencies and scholarly productivity.  Translational Behavioral Medicine, doi: 10.1007/s13142-012-0173-0.
  • Falk-Krzesinski, Contractor, N., Fiore, S.M., Hall, K.L., Kane, C., Keyton, J., Thompson Klein, J., Spring, B., Stokols, D., & Trochim, W. (2011).  Mapping a research agenda for the science of team science.  Research Evaluation, 20 (2), 145-158.
  • Stokols, D. (2011).  Transdisciplinary action research in landscape architecture and planning.  Landscape Journal, 30 (1), 1-5.
  • Trivedi, C., & Stokols, D. (2011).  Social enterprises and corporate enterprises:  Fundamental differences and defining features.  Journal of Entrepreneurship, 20 (1), 1-32.
  • Stokols, D., Hall, K.L., Moser, R.P., Feng, A., Misra, S., & Taylor, B.K.  (2010).  Cross-disciplinary team science initiatives:  Research, training, and translation. Frodeman, R., Klein, J.T., & Mitcham, C. (Eds.).  Oxford Handbook on Interdisciplinarity.  New York: Oxford University Press, 471-493.
  • Misra, S., Stokols, D., Hall, K.L., & Feng, A. (2011).  Transdisciplinary training in health research:  Distinctive features and future directions.  In M. Kirst, N. Schaefer-McDaniel, S. Hwang, & P. O’Campo (Eds.), Converging disciplines:  A transdisciplinary research approach to urban health problems.  New York: Springer, 133-147.
  • Misra, S., Hall, K.L., & Feng, A., Stipelman, B., & Stokols, D. (2011).  Collaborative processes in transdisciplinary research.  In M. Kirst, N. Schaefer-McDaniel, S. Hwang, & P. O’Campo (Eds.), Converging disciplines:  A transdisciplinary research approach to urban health problems.  New York: Springer. 97-110.
  • Lejano, R., & Stokols, D. (2010).  Understanding minority residents’ perceptions of neighborhood risks and environmental justice:  New modalities, findings, and policy implications.  Journal of Architectural and Planning Research, 27, 107-123.
  • Stokols, D., and Clitheroe, C. (2010).  Environmental psychology.  In H. Frumkin (Ed.), Environmental health:  From global to local, Second edition. San Francisco, CA:  Jossey-Bass Publishers, 137-171.
  • Borner, K., Contractor, N., Falk-Krzesinski, H., Fiore, S. M., Hall, K. L., Keyton, J., Spring, B., Stokols, D. S., Trochim, W., Uzzi, B. (2010). A mutli-level systems perspective for the science of team science. Science Translational Medicine, 2(49).
  • Stokols, D., Misra, S., Runnerstrom, M.G., & Hipp, J.A. (2009).  Psychology in an age of ecological crisis:  From personal angst to collective action.  American Psychologist, 64 (3), 181-193.
  • Misra, S., Harvey, R.H., Stokols, D., Pine, K.H., Fuqua, J., Shokair, S., & Whiteley, J. (2009).  Evaluating an interdisciplinary undergraduate training program in health promotion research.  American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 36 (4), 358-365.
  • Fuqua, J., Stokols, D., Harvey, R., Baghery, A., & Jamner, L. (2009). Transdisciplinary action research on teen smoking prevention.  In Freudenberg, N., Saegert, S., & Klitzman, S. (Eds.), Urban health and society:  Interdisciplinary approaches to research and practice.  San Francisco:  Jossey-Bass Publishers, 185-216.
  • Stokols, D., Hall, K.L., Taylor, B.K., & Moser, R.P. (2008). The science of team science: Overview of the field and introduction to the supplement. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 35 (2S),77-89.
  • Stokols, D., Misra, S., Moser, R.P., Hall, K.L., & Taylor, B.K. (2008). The ecology of team science. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 35 (2S), 96-115.
  • Hall, K.L., Stokols, D., Moser, R.P., Taylor, B.K., Thornquist, M., Nebeling, L., Ehret, C., Barnett, M., McTiernan, A., Berger, N.A., Goran, M., & Jeffery, R. (2008). The collaboration readiness of transdisciplinary research teams and centers: Findings from the National Cancer Institute TREC Year-One Evaluation Study. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 2008, 35 (2S), 161-172.
  • Mâsse, L.C., Moser, R.P., Stokols, D., Taylor, B.K., Marcus, S.E., Morgan, G.D., Hall, K. L., Croyle, R.T., & Trochim, W.M. (2008). Measuring collaboration and transdisciplinary integration in team science. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 35 (2S), 151-160.
  • Hall, K.L., Feng, A.X., Moser, R.P., Stokols, D., & Taylor, B.K. 2008). Moving the science of team science forward: Collaboration and creativity. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 35 (2S), 243-249.
  • Schneider, M., & Stokols, D. (2008). Multi-level theories of behavior change: A social ecological framework. In Shumaker, S.A., Ockene, J.K., & Riekert, K. (Eds.), Handbook of Health Behavior Change, Third edition. New York: Springer Publishing Company, 85-105.
  • Stokols, D. (2006). Toward a science of transdisciplinary action research. American Journal of Community Psychology, 38, 63-77.
  • Woods, V.D., Montgomery, S.B., Herring, P., Gardner, R.W., & Stokols, D. (2006). Social ecological predictors of prostate-specific antigen blood test and digital rectal examination in Black American men. Journal of the National Medical Association, 98, 492-504.
  • Stokols, D., Harvey, R., Gress, J., Fuqua, J., & Phillips, K. (2005). In Vivo studies of transdisciplinary scientific collaboration: Lessons learned and implications for active living research. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 28(2S2), 202-213.
  • Mitrany, M., & Stokols, D. (2005). Gauging the transdisciplinary qualities and outcomes of doctoral training programs. Journal of Planning Education and Research, 24, 437-449.
  • Fuqua, J., Stokols, D., Gress, J., Harvey, R., & Phillips, K. (2004). Transdisciplinary scientific collaboration as a basis for enhancing the science and prevention of substance use and abuse. Substance Use and Misuse, 39, 1457-1514.
  • Milden, S.P., & Stokols, D. (2004). Physicians’ attitudes and practices regarding complementary and alternative medicine. Behavioral Medicine, 30, 73-82.
  • Stokols, D., Fuqua, J., Gress, J., Harvey, R., Phillips, K., Baezconde-Garbanati, L., Unger, J., Palmer, P., Clark, M., Colby, S., Morgan, G., & Trochim, W. (2003). Evaluating transdisciplinary science. Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 5, S-1, S21-S39.
  • Stokols, D., Grzywacz,J.G., McMahan, S., Phillips, K. (2003). Increasing the health promotive capacity of human environments. American Journal of Health Promotion, 18, 4-13.
  • Stokols, D. (2003). The ecology of human strengths. In L.G. Aspinwall & U.M. Staudinger (Eds.), A psychology of human strengths: Fundamental questions and future directions for a positive psychology. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, 331-343.
  • Best, A., Stokols, D., Green, L.W., Leischow, S., Buchholz, K., & Holmes, B. (2003). An Integrative Framework for CommunityPartnering to Translate Theory Into Effective Health Promotion Strategy. American Journal of Health Promotion. 18, 168-176.
  • Stokols, D., & Montero, M. (2002). Toward an environmental psychology of the internet. In R. Bechtel & A. Churchman (Eds.), Handbook of Environmental Psychology (661-675). New York: John Wiley & Sons.
  • Stokols, D., Clitheroe, C., & Zmuidzinas, M. (2002). Qualities of work environments that promote perceived support for creativity. Creativity Research Journal, 14, 127-137.
  • King, A. C., Stokols, D., Talen, E., Brassington, G. S., & Killingsworth, R. E. (2002). Theoretical approaches to the promotion of physical activity: Forging a transdisciplinary paradigm. Amer. Journal of Preventive Medicine, 23(2S), 15-25.
  • Stokols, D., McMahan, S., & Phillips, K. (2001). Workplace health promotion in small businesses. In M. O’Donnell (Ed.), Health promotion in the workplace (pp.493-518). Third edition. Albany, NY: Delmar Publishers, Inc.
  • Stokols, D., McMahan, S., Clitheroe, C., & Wells, M. (2001). Enhancing corporate compliance with worksite safety and health legislation. Journal of Safety Research, 32, 441-463.
  • McMahan, S., Wells, M., Stokols, D., Phillips, K, Clitheroe, H.C. (2001).  Assessing health promotion programming in small businesses.  American Journal of Health Studies, 17, 3, 120-128.
  • Stokols, D. (2001). Ecology and health. In N.J. Smelser & P.B. Baltes (Eds). The International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. (6: 4030-4035). Oxford, England: Elsevier Science Publishers.
  • Stokols, D. (2000). Social ecology and behavioral medicine: Implications for training, practice, and policy. Behavioral Medicine, 26, 129-138.
  • Stokols, D. (2000). Environmental psychology. In A. Kazdin (Ed.), Encyclopedia of psychology, Volume 3. New York: Oxford University Press.
  • Stokols, D. (2000). The social ecological paradigm of wellness promotion. In M. Schneider Jamner & D. Stokols (Eds.), Promoting human wellness: New frontiers for research, practice and policy. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 21-37.
  • Jamner, M., & Stokols, D. (Eds.) (2000). Promoting human wellness: New frontiers for research, practice, and policy. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
  • Stokols, D. (1999). Human development in the age of the internet: Conceptual and methodological horizons. In S. L. Friedman & T. D. Wachs (Eds.), Measuring environment across the lifespan: Emerging methods and concepts. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association, 327-356.
  • Stokols, D. (1998). Environmental design and occupational health. In J. Stellman & C. Brabant (Eds.), ILO Encyclopedia of Occupational Health and Safety, 4th Edition. Section IV, Psychosocial and Organizational Factors (S. L. Sauter & L. Levi, Section Co-Editors). Geneva, Switzerland: International Labor Office, 34.19-34.22.
  • Stokols, D. (1998).  The future of interdisciplinarity in the School of Social Ecology.  Paper presented at the School of Social Ecology Annual Awards Event, May, 1998.
  • Clitheroe, C., Stokols, D., & Zmuidzinas, M. (1998). Conceptualizing the context of environment and behavior. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 18, 103-112.
  • Wells, M., Stokols, D., McMahan, S., & Clitheroe, C. (1997). Evaluation of a worksite injury and illness prevention program: Do the effects of the REACH OUT Training Program reach the employees? Journal of Occupational Health Psychol., 2, 25-34.
  • Stokols, D. (1996). Translating social ecological theory into guidelines for community health promotion. American Journal of Health Promotion, 10, 282-298.
  • Stokols, D. (1996). Bridging the theoretical and applied facets of environmental psychology. American Psychologist, 51, 1188-1189.
  • Stokols, D., Allen, J., Bellingham, R.L. (1996). The social ecology of health promotion: Implications for research and practice. American Journal of Health Promotion, 10, 247-251.
  • Stokols, D., Pelletier, K., & Fielding, J.E.  (1996).  The ecology of work and health–Research and policy directions for the promotion of employee health.  Health Education Quarterly, 23, 137-158.
  • Stokols, D. (1995). The paradox of environmental psychology. American Psychologist, 50, 821-837.
  • Stokols, D., Pelletier, K. R., & Fielding, J. E. (1995). Integration of medical care and worksite health promotion. Journal of the American Medical Association, 273, 1136-1142.
  • Holman, E.A., & Stokols, D. (1994). The environmental psychology of child sexual abuse. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 14, 237-252.
  • Witte, K., Stokols, D., Ituarte, P., & Schneider, M.  (1993).  Testing the health belief model in a field study to promote bicycle safety helmets. Communication Research, 20, 564-586.
  • Schneider, M., Ituarte, P., & Stokols, D. (1993). Evaluation of a community bicycle helmet promotion campaign: What works and why? American Journal of Health Promotion, 7(4), 281-287.
  • Stokols, D. (1992). Establishing and maintaining healthy environments: Toward a social ecology of health promotion. American Psychologist, 47, 6-22.
  • Stokols, D. (1992).  Conflict-prone and conflict-resistant organizations.  In H. S. Friedman (Ed.), Hostility, coping, and health.  Washington, DC:  American Psychological Association, 65-76.
  • Stokols, D. (1990). Instrumental and spiritual views of people-environment relations. American Psychologist, 45, 641-46.
  • Novaco, R. W., Stokols, D., & Milanesi, L. (1990). Objective and subjective dimensions of travel impedance as determinants of commuting stress. American Journal of Community Psychology, 18, 231-257.
  • Aldwin, C. and Stokols, D. (1988). The effects of environmental change on individuals and groups: Some neglected issues in stress research. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 8, 57-75.
  • Stokols, D. (1988). Transformational processes in people-environment relations. In J. E. McGrath (Ed.), The social psychology of time. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, 233-252.
  • Stokols, D. (1987). Conceptual strategies of environmental psychology. In D. Stokols and I. Altman (Eds.), Handbook of environmental psychology. New York: John Wiley & Sons, 41-70.
  • Stokols, D. (1986). The research psychologist as social change agent. American Journal of Community Psychology, 14, 595-599.
  • Stokols, D., & Jacobi, M.  (1984).  Traditional, present oriented, and futuristic modes of group-environment relations.  In K. Gergen & M. Gergen (Eds.), Historical social psychology.  Hillsdale, New Jersey:  Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 303-324.
  • Stokols, D. (1983). Theoretical directions of environment and behavior research. Environment and Behavior, 15, 259-272.
  • Stokols, D., Shumaker, S., & Martinez, J.  (1983).  Residential mobility and personal well-being.  Journal of Environmental Psychology, 3, 5-19.
  • Stokols, D., & Shumaker, S.  (1982).  The psychological context of residential mobility and well-being.  Journal of Social Issues, 38, 149-171.
  • Stokols, D. & Novaco, R. W. (1981). Transportation and well-being: An ecological perspective. In J. Wohlwill, P. Everett, and I. Altman (Eds.), Human behavior and environment: Advances in theory and research, Volume 5: Transportation environments. New York: Plenum, 85-130.
  • Stokols, D. & Shumaker, S. (1981). People in places: A transactional view of settings.  In J. Harvey (Ed.), Cognition, social behavior, and the environment. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 441-488.
  • Stokols, D.  (1981).  Group x place transactions:  Some neglected issues in psychological research on settings.  In D. Magnusson (Ed.), Toward a psychology of situations: An interactional perspective.  Hillsdale, N. J.:  Lawrence Erlbaum, 393-415.
  • Cohen, S., Evans, G. W., Krantz, D. S., Stokols, D., & Kelly S. (1981). Aircraft noise and children: Longitudinal and cross-sectional evidence on adaptation to noise and the effectiveness of noise abatement. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 40, 331-345.
  • Cohen, S., Krantz, D., Evans, G., & Stokols, D. (1981). Cardiovascular and behavioral effects of community noise. American Scientist, 69, 528-535.
  • Cohen, S., Evans, G. W., Krantz, D. S. and Stokols, D. (1980). Physiological, motivational, and cognitive effects of aircraft noise on children: Moving from the laboratory to the field. American Psychologist, 35, 231-243.
  • Stokols, D. (1979).  A congruence analysis of human stress.  In I.G. Sarason & C.D. Spielberger (Eds), Stress and anxiety, Vol. 6.  New York:  John Wiley, 35-64.
  • Novaco, R. W., Stokols, D., Campbell, J., and Stokols, J. (1979). Transportation, stress, and community psychology. American Journal of Community Psychology, 4, 361-380.
  • Stokols, D., Novaco, R. W., Stokols, J., and Campbell, J. (1978). Traffic congestion, Type-A behavior, and stress. Journal of Applied Psychology, 63, 467-480.
  • Stokols, D. (1978). Environmental psychology. In M. R. Rosenzweig and L. W. Porter, Eds., Annual Review of Psychology, 29, 253-295.
  • Stokols, D., Ohlig, W., and Resnick, S. (1978). Perception of residential crowding, classroom experiences, and student health. Human Ecology, 6, 233-252.
  • Stokols, D. (1976). The experience of crowding in primary and secondary environments. Environment and Behavior, 8, 49-86.
  • Stokols, D. 1975. Toward a psychological theory of alienation. Psychological Review, 82, 26-44.
  • Binder, A., Stokols, D., & Catalano, R. (1975).  Social Ecology: An emerging multidiscipline.  The Journal of Environmental Education, 7(2), 32-43.
  • Stokols, D., Smith, T., and Prostor, J. (1975). Partitioning and perceived crowding in a public space. American Behavioral Scientist, 18, 792-814.
  • Stokols, D. and Schopler, J. (1973). Reactions to victims under conditions of situational detachment: The effects of responsibility, severity, and expected future interaction. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 25, 199-209.
  • Stokols, D., Rall, M., Pinner, B., and Schopler, J. (1973). Physical, social and personal determinants of the perception of crowding. Environment and Behavior, 4, 87-115.
  • Stokols, D. (1972). On the distinction between density and crowding: Some implications for future research. Psychological Review, 79, 275-277.
  • Stokols, D. (1972).  A social psychological model of human crowding phenomena.  Journal of the American Planning Association, 38-72-83.

 

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Dan Stokols

Daniel Stokols

Urban Planning and Public Policy
Psychology and Social Behavior
School of Social Ecology
University of California Irvine
Irvine, CA 92697
dstokols@uci.edu
(949) 824-5294

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