Mike Raulin is a clinical associate professor
at the State University of New York at Buffalo, where he has
been a faculty member since 1978. He received his BS and
Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. At
Buffalo, he was the director of the Psychological Services
Center--the research and training clinic for the Ph.D.
program in clinical psychology--and also headed the Ph.D.
clinical psychology program for several years. He founded
and directed the department’s Anxiety Disorders Clinic and
maintained a small private practice for 20 years.
Dr. Raulin’s research has
always focused on psychopathology, with most of his work on
risk factors in schizophrenia. He has published 30 articles
or chapters and is author of an abnormal psychology text and
a research methods text (now going into the seventh
edition). He served on the editorial board of the Journal
of Consulting and Clinical Psychology and the Journal
of Abnormal Psychology and reviewed papers for nearly 20
different journals and grant applications for the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Social Sciences and
Humanities Research Council of Canada.
He has been active in
psychological affairs, locally, regionally, and nationally.
He was president of the Psychological Association of Western
New York, chaired the program committees for the Society for
Research in Psychopathology and the Eastern Psychological
Association, and was president of the National Association
of Directors of Psychology Training Clinics and secretary of
Society for Research in Psychopathology. He has an excellent
reputation for his teaching, with evaluations that
consistently place him among the top instructors at the
university. He has won awards for teaching and public
service and is listed in Who’s Who in Among Rising Young
Americans, Who’s Who Among Health Service Professionals,
Who’s Who in Science and Engineering, and Who’s Who in
Medicine and Health Care.