Donald P. Hayes (1927-2006) was a Professor of Sociology at Cornell University. This web page is meant to be a convenient access to his publications for interested scholars.
This page is maintained by Bruce P. Hayes, who may be contacted at bhayes ("at sign") humnet.ucla.edu.
Contents
- Copyright notice
- Publications
- Unpublished work
- Other links
Copyright notice
Abstracts, papers, chapters, and other documents are posted on this site as an efficient way to distribute reprints from a deceased author. The respective authors and publishers of these works retain all of the copyrights to this material. Anyone copying, downloading, bookmarking, or printing any of these materials agrees to comply with all of the copyright terms. Other than having an electronic or printed copy for fair personal use, none of these works may be reposted, reprinted, or redistributed without the explicit permission of the relevant copyright holders.
Publications (reverse chronological order)
- Hayes, Donald P. Loreen T. Wolfer, and Michael F. Wolfe (1996) Schoolbook simplification and its relation to the decline in SAT-Verbal scores. American Educational Research Journal 33: 489-508. [Preprint version]
- Hayes, Donald P. (1992) The growing inaccessibility of science. Nature 356:739-740. [Preprint version]
- Hayes, Donald P. and Margaret G. Ahrens (1988) Vocabulary simplification for children: a special case of ‘motherese’? Journal of Child Language 15:395-410.
- Hayes, Donald P. (1988) Speaking and writing: distinct patterns of word choice. Journal of memory and language 27:572-585.
- Hayes, Donald P. and Judith Grether, J. (1983). The school year and vacations: When do students learn? Cornell Journal of Social Relations 17: 56-71.
- Hayes, Donald P. and Loren Cobb (1979). Ultradian biorhythms in social interaction. In Siegman, A. & Feldstein, F. (eds) On Time and Speech. Hillsdale, New Jersey: Erlbaum, pp. 57-70. small file (502kb), large text-searchable file (6 mb)
- Donald P. Hayes and Leo Meltzer (1972) Interpersonal judgments based on talkativeness: fact or artifact? Sociometry 35: 538-561.
- Donald P. Hayes, Leo Meltzer, and Gerritt Wolf (1972) Substantive conclusions are dependent upon techniques of measurement. Behavioral Science 15:265-268.
- Donald P. Hayes (1969) The Cornell Datalogger. Administrative Science Quarterly 14:222-223.
- Donald P. Hayes; Leo Meltzer; Signe Lundberg (1968) Information Distribution, Interdependence, and Activity Levels. Sociometry, Vol. 31, No. 2. (June), pp. 162-179.
- Donald P. Hayes and Leo Meltzer (1967) Bone-conducting microphones. The American Journal of Psychology, 80: 619-624.
- Donald P. Hayes (1966) Review of Leaders, Groups and Influence by E. P. Hollander. Administrative Science Quarterly 11: 303-305.
- Donald P. Hayes (1966) Review of The Exercise of Influence in Small Groups by Terence K. Hopkins. Administrative Science Quarterly 11:160-163.
- Walter B. Watson, Ernest A. T. Barth and Donald P. Hayes (1965) Metropolitan decentralization through incorporation. Western Political Quarterly 18:198-206.
- Donald P. Hayes (1964) Review of Social Influence and Power in Two-Person Groups by Antti Eskola.
The American Journal of Sociology 69:681-682. - Donald P. Hayes (1964) Item order and Guttmann scales, The American Journal of Sociology 70: 51-58.
- Donald P. Hayes and Joan K. Jackson (1960) Teaching social science in the medical school: a case study in teamwork and practice. Journal of Health and Human Behavior 1:34-41.
- Erik Manniche and Donald P. Hayes (1957) Respondent anonymity and Data-Matching. Public Opinion Quarterly 21:384-388.
Unpublished work:
- Donald P. Hayes (ms., 2006) A Spectrum of Natural Texts: Measurements of their Lexical Demand Levels. Ms., Department of Sociology, Cornell University.
- Florence Hayes (ms., 2007) The Allocation Scale Project, memoir of a never-published research program.
Other links:
- brief biography of Donald P. Hayes
- Lexical Demand Levels of Schoolbooks: A Corpus - data web page at Cornell University
- downloadable papers from Donald P. Hayes' Cornell web site