Richard Harris, Ph.D.

Richard HarrisContact Information

Office: BH 424

Phone: 532-0610

E-mail: rjharris@ksu.edu

Research Interests

As part of the Cognitive Psychology program, Dr. Harris' research examines issues involving language and cognition, primarily in the areas of psycholinguistics and mass communication. While some of his research has a strong applied component, other work is clearly basic research. As he is currently in phased retirement, he is not accepting new grad students but continues active in some research. Although he has studied many specific problems in these areas over the years, currently active research includes the following:

Autobiographical memory for media experiences. This project assesses people's memory for their own experiences of consuming media, for example, watching a movie. It examines not only memory for the content of the film or program but also for the social experience of viewing, the emotions remembered as experienced while watching, and the consequences of viewing that are remembered. Past projects have looked at violent and romantic movies, sporting events,images of social minorities, and media messages about smoking. Currently, he is examining how and why people quote movies in social conversations and how people comprehend and remember emotion of characters from film.

Studies of bilingual language processing. Dr. Harris has done several studies of language comprehension and memory in bilinguals, particularly Spanish-English speakers. One recent project of Dr. Harris' studies the role of working memory capacity on comprehension of inferences from reading text written in one's second language. Another project looks at how we acquire information and emotion from various combinations of languages in the soundtrack and captions of subtitled films.

In addition to empirical research, Dr. Harris is the author of two textbooks in multiple editions and the editor of several books of readings. He also leads occasional community workshops on critical viewing, media literacy, and managing television in the home. He and his students have authored several book chapters on psychology and media.

Recent Representative Publications

Research Articles

Barlett, C.P., Branch, O., Rodeheffer, C., & Harris, R.J. (2009). How long do the short-term violent video game effects last? Aggressive Behavior, 35, 225-236.

View a copy

Barlett, C.P., & Harris, R.J. (2008). The impact of body emphasizing video games on body image concerns in men and women. Sex Roles, 59, 586-601.

View a copy

Barlett, C.P., Harris, R.J., & Baldassaro, R. (2007). The longer you play, the more hostile you feel: Examination of first person shooter video games and aggression during video game play. Aggressive Behavior, 33, 1-12.

View a copy

Barlett, C.P., Harris, R.J., & Bruey, C. (2008). The effect of the amount of blood in a violent video game on aggression, hostility, and arousal. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 44, 539-546.

Barlett, C.P., Smith, S.J., & Harris, R.J. (2006). The interference effect of men's handling of muscular action figures on a lexical decision task. Body Image, 3, 375-383.

Bonds-Raacke, J.M., Cady, E.T., Schlegel, R., Harris, R.J., & Firebaugh, L.C. (2007). Remembering gay/lesbian media characters: Can Ellen and Will improve attitudes toward homosexuals? Journal of Homosexuality, 53, (3), 19-34.

View a copy

Cady, E.T., Harris, R.J., & Knappenberger, J.B. (2008). Using music to cue autobiographical memories of different lifetime periods. Psychology of Music, 36 (2), 157-177.

View a copy

Friel, B.M., & Harris, R.J. (2004). Toward an empirical definition of cognateness: Translation elicitation in six languages. International Journal of Cognitive Technology, 9, 40-54.

Harris, R.J., Friel, B.M., & Mickelson, N.R. (2006). Attribution of discourse goals for using concrete- and abstract-tenor metaphors and similies with or without discourse context. Journal of Pragmatics, 38, 863-879.

View a copy

Harris, R.J., Sanborn, F.W., Scott, C.L., Dodds, L., & Brandenburg, J.D. (2004). Autobiographical memories for seeing romantic movies on a date: Romance is not just for women. Media Psychology, 6, 257-284.

View a copy

Harris, R.J., Hoekstra, S.J., Scott, C.L., Sanborn, F.W., Karafa, J.A., & Brandenburg, J.D. (2000). Young men's and women's different autobiographical memories of the experience of seeing frightening movies on a date. Media Psychology, 2, 245-268.

View a copy

Harris, R.J., Tebbe, M.R., Leka, G.E., Garcia, R.C., & Erramouspe, R. (1999). Monolingual and bilingual memory for English and Spanish metaphors and similes. Metaphor and Symbol, 14, 1-16.

View a copy

Harris, R.J., & Cook, L.G. (2011). How content and co-viewers elicit emotional discomfort in moviegoing experiences. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 25, 850-861.

View a copy

Harris, R.J., Werth, A.J., Bures, K.E., & Bartel, C.M. (2008). Social movie quoting: What, why, and how? Ciencias psicologicas, 2 (1), 35-45.

View a copy

Hinkin, M.P., Harris, R.J., & Miranda, A.T. (2014). Verbal redundancy aids memory for filmed entertainment dialogue. Journal of Psychology: Interdisciplinary and Applied, 148, 161-176.
View a copy

Rai, M.K., Loschky, L.C., Harris, R.J., Peck, N.R., & Cook, L.G. (2011). Effects of stress and working memory capacity on foreign language readers' inferential processing during comprehension. Language Learning, 61, 187-218.

View a copy

Wichman, A.L., Friel, B.M., & Harris, R.J. (2001). The effect of lexical, pragmatic, and morphological violations on reading time and deviance ratings of English and German sentences. Memory & Cognition, 29, 493-502.

View a copy

Review Chapters

Harris, R.J., & Barlett, C.P. (2009). Effects of sex in the media. In J. Bryant and M.B. Oliver (Eds.) Media Effects: Advances in theory and research. (3rd ed.) (pp. 304-324) New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis.

View a copy

Harris, R.J., Cady, E.T., & Tran, T.Q. (2006). Comprehension and memory. In J. Bryant and P. Vorderer (Eds.), Psychology of Entertainment. (pp. 71-84). Mahwah NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

View a copy

Harris, R.J., Cady, E.T., & Barlett, C.P. (2007). Media. In F. Durso, R.S. Nickerson, S.T. Dumais, S. Lewandowsky, and T.J. Perfect (Eds.), (pp. 659-682), Handbook of Applied Cognition (2nd ed.). Chichester UK: John Wiley & Sons.

View a copy

Textbooks

Harris, R.J. & Sanborn, F.W. (2014). A cognitive psychology of mass communication. (6th ed.). New York: Routledge.

Leahey, T.H., & Harris, R.J. (2001). Learning and cognition. (5th ed.). Upper Saddle River NJ: Prentice-Hall.

Student Involvement

Dr. Harris regularly has several graduate and undergraduate students working with him, either in one of the projects described above or in an independent project not part of his programmatic research. Students are typically initially integrated into an ongoing research project and are progressively encouraged to show increasing independence in research design and initiative. Students also often receive experience presenting research in a seminar and conference format and, for graduate students, the supervision of undergraduate assistants. Students regularly are co-authors on presentations and publications, and, if appropriate, first authors.

Dr. Harris' model of mentoring is to hold each student to high standards and expectations but to provide a highly supportive environment. The goal is to help every student succeed and complete the graduate program prepared to be an effective professor or researcher in their chosen career direction. The emphasis in Dr. Harris' laboratory is on collegiality, not competition. Although he gives frequent encouragement and reminders, he also expects graduate students to take much of their own initiative and set their own deadlines. Important note: Due to beginning a process of phased retirement in 2014, Dr. Harris is not accepting any new graduate students, though he continues to be available as a resource.

Some past doctoral students of Dr. Harris now work for the Federal Aviation Administration, Sprint Corporation, and Young and Rubicam Advertising. A majority are employed as college or university professors, at Park University, Delaware State University, University of Texas-Rio Grande Valley, Christian Brothers University, Kansas Wesleyan University, Fort Hays State University, Lady of the Lake University, Ferris State University, Michigan State University, University of Northern Iowa, Messiah College, D'Youville College, Whittier College, and North Carolina Wesleyan College, among others.

Current graduate students

  • Ryan Hinds
  • Elena Knyshev
  • Jorge Piocuda
  • John Smyers

Additional Information

Dr. Harris is married to Caprice Becker, a nurse at Medical Associates. They have three children, Clint (born 1989) and Natalie and Grady (twins born in 1991). Some of his hobbies are travel, reading, hiking, theater, genealogy, and stamp collecting. Also interested in cross-cultural issues, he has on past sabbaticals served as a Fulbright Visiting Professor in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, and Montevideo, Uruguay, as well as a term as a Visiting Scholar in New Zealand. Although born and raised in suburban Pittsburgh PA, Dr. Harris has come to love the smaller college-town life of Manhattan.