Nigel William Thomas Barber (born November 7, 1955) is an Irish-born American biopsychologist and author.
Biography
Barber emigrated from his native Ireland to the United States in 1982. He received his Ph.D. in biopsychology from Hunter College of the City University of New York in 1989, after which he taught at Bemidji State University as an instructor for one year, and then at Birmingham-Southern College as an assistant professor.
Research
Barber's research focuses on various subjects in the fields of biopsychology and evolutionary psychology. These include the evolution of altruism, the reasons that men grow facial hair, and the reasons people believe in religion, which he holds pertain to economic adversity.
Publications
Books
- (1998). Parenting: Roles, Styles and Outcomes. Nova Science Publisher, Inc.
- (2000). Why Parents Matter: Parental Investment and Child Outcomes. Bergin & Garvey
- (2002). The Science of Romance: Secrets of the Sexual Brain.
- (2002). Encyclopedia of Ethics in Science and Technology. Facts on File, Inc.
- (2004). Kindness in a Cruel World. Prometheus Books.
- (2008). The Myth of Culture. Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
- (2012). Why Atheism Will Replace Religion. Kindle (ebook)
- (2020). Evolution in the Here and Now. Prometheus Books.
- (2021). The Human Beast Volume II... Evolution and the Modern World.
- (2021). The Human Beast Volume I... Through the Lens of Evolution.
- (2022). The Restless Species: Causes and Environmental Costs of Human Adaptive Success.
- (2022). The Human Beast Volume III... Restless People on a Troubled Planet.
Selected articles
- Barber, N. (1991). "Play and Energy Regulation in Mammals." The Quarterly Review of Biology, 66(2), pages 129âÂÂ147.
- Barber, N. (1995). "The evolutionary psychology of physical attractiveness". Ethology and Sociobiology, 16, pages 395âÂÂ424.
- Barber, N. (1998). "The role of reproductive strategies in academic attainment". Sex Roles, 38, pages 313âÂÂ323.
- Barber N. (1998). "Secular changes in standards of bodily attractiveness in women: tests of a reproductive model". The International journal of eating disorders, 23(4), pages 449âÂÂ453.
- Barber, N. (1998). "Ecological and Psychosocial Correlates of Male Homosexuality". Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 29(3), pages 387âÂÂ401. https://www.deepdyve.com/lp/sage/ecological-and-psychosocial-correlates-of-male-homosexuality-gg0LYh9ZAl?key=sage
- Barber. (1998). "Sex differences in disposition towards kin, security of adult attachment, and sociosexuality as a function of parental divorce". Evolution and Human Behavior, 19(2), pages 125âÂÂ132.
- Barber, N. (1999). "Women's dress fashions as a function of reproductive strategy". Sex Roles, 40(5âÂÂ6), pages 459âÂÂ471.
- Barber, N. (2000). "The sex ratio as a predictor of cross-national variation in violent crime". Cross-Cultural Research, 34(3), pages 264âÂÂ282.
- Barber, N. (2001). "Mustache Fashion Covaries with a Good Marriage Market for Women". Journal of Nonverbal Behavior, 25, pages 261âÂÂ272.
- Barber, N. (2003). "Paternal investment prospects and cross-national differences in single parenthood". Cross-Cultural Research, 37(2), pages 163âÂÂ177.
- Barber, N. (2003). "Divorce and reduced economic and emotional interdependence: A cross-national study". Journal of Divorce and Remarriage, 39, pages 113âÂÂ124.
- Barber, N. (2004). "Single Parenthood as a Predictor of Cross-National Variation in Violent Crime". Cross-Cultural Research, 38(4), pages 343âÂÂ358.
- Barber, Nigel. (2005). "Evolutionary Explanations for Societal Differences in Single Parenthood". Evolutionary Psychology. 3.
- Barber, N. (2005). "Educational and ecological correlates of IQ: A cross-national investigation". Intelligence, 33(3), pages 273âÂÂ284.
- Barber, N. (2006). "Why is violent crime so common in the Americas?" Aggressive Behavior, 32(5), pages 442âÂÂ450.
- Barber, N. (2006). "Is the Effect of National Wealth on Academic Achievement Mediated by Mass Media and Computers?" Cross-Cultural Research, 40(2), pages 130âÂÂ151.
- Barber, N. (2007). "Evolutionary Explanations for Societal Differences and Historical Change in Violent Crime and Single Parenthood". Cross-Cultural Research, 41(2), pages 123âÂÂ148.
- Barber, N. (2008). "Explaining Cross-National Differences in Polygyny Intensity: Resource-Defense, Sex Ratio, and Infectious Diseases". Cross-Cultural Research, 42(2), pages 103âÂÂ117.
- Barber, N. (2008). "Cross-National Variation in the Motivation for Uncommitted Sex: The Role of Disease and Social Risks". Evolutionary Psychology.
- Barber, N. (2009). "Countries with fewer males have more violent crime: marriage markets and mating aggression". Aggressive behavior, 35(1), pages 49âÂÂ56.
- Barber, N. (2010). "Explaining cross-national differences in fertility: A comparative approach to the demographic shift". Cross-Cultural Research, 44, pages 3âÂÂ22.
- Barber, N. (2015). "Why behavior matches ecology: Adaptive variation as a novel solution". Cross-Cultural Research, 49(1), pages 57âÂÂ89.
- Barber, N. (2017). "Creative productivity and marriage markets: Mating effort and career striving as rival hypotheses". Journal of Genius and Eminence, 2, pages 32âÂÂ44.
- Barber, N. (2018). "Cross-national variation in attitudes to premarital sex: Economic development, disease risk, and marriage strength". Cross-Cultural Research, 52, pages 259âÂÂ273.
References
External links