RESEARCH NEWS

Leonard honored with national award

By CATHY WILDE

Published August 20, 2015 This content is archived.

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Ken Leonard.

Kenneth Leonard

Kenneth Leonard, director of UB’s Research Institute on Addictions, has recognized for his outstanding scientific contributions with a national award from the American Psychological Association’s Society of Addiction Psychology (SoAP).

Leonard received the Distinguished Scientific Contributions award at the APA’s annual meeting held earlier this month in Toronto. The award recognizes a SoAP member who has made distinguished theoretical or empirical contributions to research in the addictions field.  

Kim Fromme, professor of clinical psychology at the University of Texas at Austin and former president of SoAP, nominated Leonard for the award.

“Dr. Leonard is richly deserving of this prestigious award,” Fromme says. “His sustained program of research has garnered international recognition and expanded our understanding of the processes through which substance abuse affects family relationships.”

Leonard joined RIA in 1986 as a research scientist and was named director in 2011. He also serves as a research professor in the Department of Psychiatry in the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. His research focuses on the effects of alcohol and substance abuse on marital and family processes, including intimate partner violence and interpersonal violence.

“We are delighted that Ken Leonard is receiving the recognition he so richly deserves for his past and ongoing research contributions to the addictions field,” says Venu Govindaraju, interim vice president for research and economic development at UB.

Steven L. Dubovsky, chair of UB’s Department of Psychiatry, calls Leonard “the quintessential scientist and academician.”

“Not only have his contributions to our understanding of the interaction of violence and substance use changed practice worldwide, but his research has extended to areas of knowledge ranging from treatment outcomes to diagnostic issues to metabolic changes in psychiatric illness,” Dubovsky says. “These outstanding accomplishments are matched only by his mentoring of generations of investigators and clinician-scientists in psychology and psychiatry.”

Leonard is a fellow of the APA and served as president of SoAP. He also is a fellow of APA’s Division of Psychopharmacology and Substance Abuse. Leonard holds memberships in the Research Society on Alcoholism, Association for the Advancement of Behavior Therapy, Society of Psychologists in Addictive Behavior and International Society for Research on Aggression.

He currently serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs and has held editorial positions for Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research and the Journal of Abnormal Psychology. His research findings have appeared in Addiction, Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, Journal of Clinical Child and Adult Psychology, Journal of Marriage and the Family, and Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, among numerous others.

Leonard has received more than $36 million in funding as a grant investigator or co-investigator from the National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, and National Institute on Drug Abuse for studies on alcohol and marital aggression, effects of alcohol on parenting and infant development, spouse involvement in alcohol treatment and bar violence.