Kenneth Kaye
Kenneth Kaye was an American psychologist and writer whose research, books, and articles connect the fields of human development, family relationships and conflict resolution.
Life
Although spanning several professional disciplines, the substantial body of Kaye's work is characterized by family systems theory and by a search for observable, reproducible processes rather than stopping at generalizations about formal properties, for example, of stages in mental or social development.Kaye was educated at Harvard University. Following a Visiting Fellowship at King's College, Cambridge, he taught at the University of Washington and the University of Chicago. From 1982 to 2007 he was an Adjunct Faculty member in the Department of Psychiatry, Northwestern University Medical School.
In later years, Kaye published six books of fiction under the name Ken Kaye.
Research and principal publications
Early human development
Beginning with his doctoral dissertation and continuing through the University of Chicago years, 22 of Kaye's published articles addressed the fundamental question, What gives Homo sapiens, uniquely among all other creatures, the ability to learn through imitation, language, and consciousness of a reflecting self? His principal mentors were the social-cognitive psychologist Jerome S. Bruner, British ethologist M.P.M. Richards, and pediatrician T. Berry Brazelton. Elaborated most fully in his book The Mental and Social Life of Babies: How Parents Create Persons, Kaye theorized and demonstrated that those distinguishing psychological powers, rather than developing intrinsically from innate capacities of the human infant biologically reorganizing themselves, are shaped gradually by interactions due to the co-evolution of infant behavior and human adult behavior.Specifically, he traced the development of turn-taking beginning with instinctive maternal responses to physiological/neurological bursts and pauses in neonatal activity, through transactions in which adults adjust to babies' perceived intentions, to true dialogue which makes symbolic language possible.
The Mental and Social Life of Babies appeared in Spanish, Italian, and Japanese editions. Kaye's innovative microanalytic studies of parent-infant interaction in the 1970s have been discussed continuously to the present in hundreds of scholarly papers and books on diverse psychological topics.