Alexander Maki, PhD                  Social Psychologist
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Welcome!


I'm a scientist and educator, investigating why people protect the natural environment, why they help one another, and why they take care of their health.

Currently, I'm an interdisciplinary postdoctoral researcher with the Vanderbilt Institute for Energy and Environment and the Climate Change Research Network.  My doctoral training was in social psychology, with an emphasis in quantitative methods, at the University of Minnesota.


Social science has a lot to offer the world. That's why I'm passionate about using innovative and rigorous theories of social behavior to understand and influence behavior change. How can we design behavior change "interventions" that help more people consistently engage in positive behaviors over time? And how can we turn these interventions into effective social policies?

Properly addressing pressing social issues, such as climate change or improving community health, often requires that many people engage in numerous, positive behaviors. For example, we need communities, not just individuals, to conserve energy, and we need people to both conserve energy and conserve water. Currently, many behavior change efforts target the single behavior of an individual (e.g., persuading an office employee to turn off their computer monitor when leaving work for the day). As a scholar concerned about changing behavior, I think we may be selling ourselves short.

Given the need to improve how we help groups of people change multiple behaviors, I investigate how and when behaviors spread from one individual to another within a group or community (e.g., Maki & Raimi, 2017). For example, who talks to their family members about saving energy at home, and which strategies do they use to influence their family members' behaviors? Additionally, I examine why people consistently engage in different types of behaviors ("behavior spillover"; e.g., Maki & Rothman, 2017). Why might someone recycle different consumer products, but fail to conserve energy at home?

I also explore the factors linked to why people succeed or fail at maintaining their behavior over time (e.g., Maki, Burns, Ha, & Rothman, 2016). Many environmental, prosocial (e.g., volunteering), and health behaviors need to be engaged in over time to produce desired outcomes. Although social science research often focuses on what leads to immediate change in behavior, it's vitally important that we also help people maintain their behavior over time.

Finally, I increasingly explore how people perceive social policies, and why statistical summarizing of research on behavior change interventions ("meta-analysis") is a promising route to improving social policies.


Latest updates:
April 2, 2018: I recapped the 2018 Sustainability Psychology Preconference at the annual Society for Personality and Social Psychology meeting.

February 27, 2018: You can view my materials for my talk on environmental moral exporting at the annual convention for the Society for Personality and Social Psychology.

February 27, 2018: You can view my materials for my data blitz talk on conservatives' views of private sector climate change policies at the Sustainability Psychology Preconference at the annual convention for the Society for Personality and Social Psychology.
Maki - CV.pdf
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About Me


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I'm a Minnesota native, where I grew up playing basketball, baseball, and tennis. I have always been a huge geek, and enjoy obsessing over Tolkien, Marvel, the Minnesota Timberwolves, and the catalogs of my favorite musicians. To offset that geekiness, I enjoy spending time outdoors, often looking for new places to hike, camp, and bike.

I also love traveling. I lived in Australia for six months, and have visited Fiji, Finland, France, Germany, Honduras, New Zealand, Spain, and Sweden. I'm always looking to add to the list.

Email: alexander.maki@vanderbilt.edu

Mailing address:
Alexander Maki
150 Buttrick Hall
PMB 407702
2301 Vanderbilt Place
Nashville, TN 37240

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