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David A. Rosenbaum (born 1952) is a cognitive psychologist whose main interests are human perception and performance. He has helped marry cognitive psychology and motor control. He worked at Bell Laboratories (1977-1981), Hampshire College (1981-1987), and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst (1987-1994). He has taught at Pennsylvania State University since 1994.

Rosenbaum won the Guggenheim Fellowship for Social Sciences, US & Canada. This award gives grants to around 175 selected individuals each year.

Biography
Rosenbaum was born October 3, 1952 in Philadelphia, PA. He attended Central High School, Philadelphia, PA, and graduated June 1970.

Rosenbaum received his B.A. degree in Liberal Arts at Swarthmore College. He attended graduate school at Stanford University where he obtained his Ph.D in Psychology.

Outside of scholarly work, Rosenbaum has written many books and articles.

Books
Human Motor Control (1991)

MATLAB for Behavioral Scientists (2007)

MATLAB for Behavioral Scientists, Second Edition (2014)

It's a Jungle in There: How Competition and Cooperation in the Brain Shape the Mind (2014)

Knowing Hands: The Cognitive Psychology of Manual Control (2017)

MATLAB Blues: How Behavioral Scientists and Others Can Learn From Mistakes for Better, Happier Programming (2019)

Action, Mind, and Brain: An Introduction (2022)

Cognitive Control of Action: Selected Works of David A. Rosenbaum (2024)

Research
The major topic David A. Rosenbaum researched was human perception and performance.

Rosenbaum has aided in the fusion of motor control and cognitive psychology. Our knowledge of motor learning and control shapes our comprehension of how people develop from unskilled to proficient motor performance over the course of a lifetime.

David A. Rosenbaum made me book about his study of control of movement is a complicated process involving the mind, muscles, limbs, and frequently external objects. It is the foundation for motion, equilibrium, security, coordination, and our interactions with people and technology. This book offers a complete introduction to the subject of motor control, addressing a complicated topic in a straightforward manner, spanning mental in nature physiological, as well as computational methods related to motor control.

Representative publications
Rosenbaum DA: ''Central Control Of Movement Timing The Bell System Technical Journal. 62:1647-1657''

Rosenbaum DA:''Gordon AM, Stillings NA, Feinstein MH Stimulus-response compatibility in the programming of speech. Memory & Cognition''

Rosenbaum DA: ''On choosing between movement sequences: comments on Rose (1988) Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance.''

Rosenbaum DA: ''Jorgensen MJ. Planning macroscopic aspects of manual control Human Movement Science''

Rosenbaum DA: Choosing between models of choosing between sequences comments on Shidoji (1993) Perceptual and Motor Skills