Beckman Connections Help Griffin Start Career

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Zenzi Griffin is a Professor of Psychology at Georgia Tech who maintains collaborations with Beckman researchers that began during her graduate school days.
By Steve McGaughey, Beckman Institute Writer

Zenzi Griffin spent many late nights at the Beckman Institute, poring over eye movement and speech data in Kay Bock's laboratory as part of a pioneering language production study. The experience proved more than academic.

“The Beckman at night has a very interesting atmosphere,” said Griffin, now a Professor of Psychology at Georgia Tech. “On the one hand, it is darker and emptier than during the day, but unlike most other academic buildings, you get the sense that there are many people hidden away working all the time. I discovered that the delivery people at Papa John’s Pizza knew the Beckman Institute very well.”

Griffin left the University of Illinois and the Beckman Institute in 1998 with a Ph.D. in Psychology, an impressive research resume to kick-start her professional academic career and, perhaps most importantly, meaningful connections that continue to this day.

Griffin’s research accomplishments include the first experiment to suggest a strong relationship between when people look at objects in a scene and when they prepare words for them. She was among the first researchers to use eye-tracking technology to explore issues surrounding planned speech production. All of the research was carried out at Beckman and contributed to a doctoral dissertation and a paper with Bock for Psychological Science in 2000.

After earning her undergraduate degree from Michigan State, Griffin was accepted for graduate school at MIT but instead chose Illinois, thanks to some lobbying from Bock and the opportunities offered at Beckman.

“I should probably mention that the Beckman Institute also played a role in Kay’s recruiting me to Illinois for grad school,” Griffin said. “I have to admit that Illinois was my first choice anyway, even after being accepted to MIT, but as I was leaving recruitment weekend, I told Kay that I would come to Illinois if I could do research in the Beckman Institute.”

Griffin made good use of the laboratory resources at Beckman, from the eye-tracking equipment in Art Kramer’s lab, to software developed by Neal Cohen’s lab to process the eye movement data from memory experiments with amnesics, to the monitoring expertise of eye-tracking pioneer George McConkie. Griffin also came away with some lasting professional and personal relationships, especially those with Cognitive Science group members Bock and Gary Dell.

“One of the most important things I learned from them is how to do collaborative research—that is, how to allow multiple people to contribute to a project and make sure everyone feels that their contribution is valued and properly acknowledged,” Griffin said. “Of course, they are both my role models for mentoring students and promoting their careers.”

The personal connections and professional collaborations Griffin formed at Beckman are ones she still maintains.

“I find myself consulting Gary Dell now and then,” Griffin said. “Most recently I was working on a review chapter and asked him to read a draft to make sure it was relatively comprehensive, accurate, and fair. Gary provides great feedback on writing, and with amazing speed. He is so generous with his time that I have to make an effort not to ask him for feedback too often. One of my goals is to be as supportive and responsive to my students (and former students) as Gary is.”

Her lab’s Web page at Georgia Tech describes the fun aspects of Griffin’s research. In addition to being a mentor, Griffin said that Bock makes research an enjoyable experience.

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