Rex A. Wright, Ph.D., earned his doctorate in social psychology at the University of Kansas, specializing
in social motivation, and his bachelor’s in psychology from the University of Texas
at Austin (UT). He received two years of postdoctoral training in health psychology
and psychophysiology — training first at the Graduate Center, City University of New
York, and then at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
Wright previously was a faculty member at the University of Alabama at Birmingham, aligned
with the medical psychology Ph.D. training program. He has held visiting faculty appointments
at UT, the University of Maryland at College Park and the University of Missouri and
has been a visiting scholar at various European institutions, including the Max Planck
Institut für Psychologische Forschung – Munich (Germany), Universität Bielefeld (Germany),
Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (Germany), Universitè de Genève (Switzerland) and Jagiellonian
University (Poland).
Wright’s research is motivational, with affective and physiological elements being part
and parcel of processes investigated. It is guided by a conceptual analysis that has
wide-ranging implications, including ones for chronotype, cognitive decline, cardiovascular
health, self-regulation, trauma, and behavior in education, family and work settings.
Very recent focuses have been on fatigue influence on impulse control and a new theory
of love that integrates many of the ideas on which Wright has worked throughout his career. Wright was a founding member of the Society for the Science of Motivation, is a past president
of the society, and is co-editor-in-chief of the society’s flagship journal, Motivation Science. Beyond his emeritus appointment at UNT, he is a faculty member in the Department
of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and a courtesy affiliate faculty member in the
Department of Business, Government and Society at the UT McCombs School of Business.