Christopher Peterson Gold Medal
The Christopher Peterson Gold Medal honors an IPPA member who exemplifies the best of positive psychology at the personal, professional, and academic levels. This award is named after Christopher Peterson, a beloved IPPA Fellow, professor, scholar and pioneer in the field of positive psychology. Peterson’s many scholarly contributions include his work on the character strengths and values classification and assessment with Martin Seligman. On a personal level, Peterson was known for his sincerity, humility, integrity, sense of humor and generosity.
Ed Diener
Ed Diener was the first president of the International Positive Psychology Association.
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Although the modern positive psychology movement was young, Ed’s presidency occurred decades into a well-established career. With approximately 400 publications and more than a quarter-million citations, Ed Diener was among the most highly cited scientists in history, across all disciplines. His pioneering research on subjective well-being helped lay the scientific foundations for positive psychology. It is hard to emphasize enough the courage it took for Ed, in the early 1980s, to study a topic that was widely dismissed as frivolous. Across four decades, Ed and his research collaborators explored a wide range of questions relating to happiness: its measurement, its effects on health, its relation to income, its cultural variations, its causes, and many other topics.
Ed was also a dedicated teacher, known equally for his love of data and his quirky sense of humor. Undergraduate students at the University of Illinois, where Ed taught from1974 to 2008, will recall him dressing as Mephistopheles in a skit in which he tried to coax professor Diener into taking “happiness shortcuts.” His students at the MAPP program at the University of Pennsylvania will remember how animated he became when he discussed tables and figures of data. His graduate students will remember him for his excellent mentorship and generosity with authorship. His family members will recall that he was not only a husband and father but also a frequent collaborator—having published 30 times with his wife and children.
Finally, Ed exemplified so many of the concepts that are at the heart of positive psychology. He was intellectually humble and he spoke to colleagues and laypeople with respect. He was generous, funny, creative, and hardworking.