Jaan Valsiner is an Estonian-American developmental and cultural psychologist of Estonian origin, the recipient of Alexander von Humboldt Prize for his interdisciplinary work on human development and 2017 Hans-Kilian-Award winner, the Foreign Member of the Estonian Academy of Sciences and the former Niels Bohr Professor of Cultural Psychology, currently, a professor at Aalborg University, Denmark.
Life
Jaan Valsiner worked as a professor of psychology in Clark University in Worcester, Massachusetts from 1997. Between 2013 and 2018, Valsiner was a Niels Bohr Professor, since then a professor at Aalborg University in Denmark. His early studies were in the field of developmental psychology, specifically in the analysis of mother-child interaction patterns and ever since he identifies himself as "cultural psychologist with a consistently developmental axiomatic base". His later studies and research focus gradually shifted into Cultural psychology and cultural organization of human cognitive and affective processes throughout life-span. He has also considerably contributed to the fields of the History of Psychology as well as methodology of psychological research. His other major research interest is the intersection of and interconnections between Psychology and Semiotics. He has been a visiting professor in Brazil, Japan, Australia, Estonia. Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, United Kingdom, and the Netherlands. On February 22, 2008 he was announced an Honourable Doctor of the Tallinn University. Jaan Valsiner is the editor-in-chief of Culture and Psychology, Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Science, and of The Oxford Handbook of Culture and Psychology. He is also the editor of several book series, such as Advances in Cultural Psychology and Annals of Cultural Psychology' with Information Age Publishing, Charlotte, North Carolina, USA; History and Theory of Psychology with Transaction Publishers, USA ; Cultural Dynamics of Social Representation with Routledge in UK; and one of the founding editors of the IAP Yearbook of Idiographic Science