Early Life and Educational Background
Allan Fenigstein was born on June 30, 1947, in Frankfurt, Germany. He and his Holocaust-surviving parents immigrated to Brooklyn, NY, in July, 1949. He completed his Bachelor of Science degree in psychology in 1969 at Brooklyn College of the CUNY and earned his Ph.D. in Personality/Social Psychology at the University of Texas-Austin in 1974 under the tutelage of Arnold Buss. His Ph.D. thesis involved the development of the Self-Consciousness Scale as a measure of relatively stable individual differences in private and public self-consciousness.
Professional Career
He began his professional career in 1974 as an assistant professor of psychology at Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, where he was tenured in 1980 and became full professor in 1989. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Virginia, the Pacific Medical Center, the University of Miami in Florida, the University of Kent at Canterbury, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the...
Selected Bibliography
Cooper, E., & Fenigstein, A. (2014). The faking orgasm scale for women: Psychometric properties. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 43(3) 423–435.
Fenigstein, A. (1979a). Self-consciousness, self-attention, and social interaction. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 37, 75–86.
Fenigstein, A. (1979b). Does aggression cause a preference for viewing media violence. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 37, 2158–2168.
Fenigstein, A. (1984). Self-consciousness and the overperception of self as a target. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 47, 860–870.
Fenigstein, A. (1987). On the nature of public and private self-consciousness. Journal of Personality, 55, 543–554.
Fenigstein, A. (1997). Paranoid thought and self-schematic processing. Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 16, 77–94.
Fenigstein, A. (1998). Were obedience pressures a factor in the Holocaust? Analyse and Kritik, 20, 1–20.
Fenigstein, A., & Abrams, D. (1993). Self-attention and the egocentric assumption of shared perspectives. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 29, 287–303.
Fenigstein, A., & Buss, A. H. (1974). Association and affect as determinants of displaced aggression. Journal of Experimental Research in Personality, 7, 306–313.
Fenigstein, A., & Levine, M. L. (1984). Self-attention, concept activation, and the causal self. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 20, 231–245.
Fenigstein, A., & Peltz, R. (2002). Distress over the infidelity of a child’s spouse: A crucial test of evolutionary and socialization hypotheses. Personal Relationships, 9, 301–312.
Fenigstein, A., & Preston, M. (2007). The desired number of sex partners as a function of gender, sexual risks, and the meaning of “ideal”. Journal of Sex Research, 44, 89–95.
Fenigstein, A., & Vanable, P. A. (1992). Paranoia and self-consciousness. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 62, 129–138.
Fenigstein, A., Scheier, M. F., & Buss, A. H. (1975). Public and private self-consciousness: Assessment and theory. Journal of Clinical and Consulting Psychology, 43, 522–527.
Scheier, M. F., Fenigstein, A., & Buss, A. H. (1974). Self-awareness and physical aggression. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 10, 264–273.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Section Editor information
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2019 Springer Nature Switzerland AG
About this entry
Cite this entry
Fenigstein, A. (2019). Fenigstein, Allan. In: Zeigler-Hill, V., Shackelford, T. (eds) Encyclopedia of Personality and Individual Differences. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28099-8_1529-1
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28099-8_1529-1
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-28099-8
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-28099-8
eBook Packages: Springer Reference Behavioral Science and PsychologyReference Module Humanities and Social SciencesReference Module Business, Economics and Social Sciences