Garvey’s presentations were co-authored with colleagues from Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New York.
One of Garvey’s projects was a paper, titled “Terror Management and Moral Inclusiveness: Death, Pain, and Saving the Family Dog,†which explored regional differences in resolving the ethical dilemma of saving a family member rather than five strangers on a railroad track.
In addition, Garvey presented the results of three different studies: “Regional Variation in Grooming;†“Exposure to Pathogens Predicts Increased Motivation to Coif, Environmental, Political, and Social Effects on Intellectual Creativity: Regional Differences in the MacArthur Genius Awards;†and “Beauty Pageants, Mating Effort, and Life History: De Facto Debutant Balls in Regions of the U.S. with Lower Life Expectancy.â€
All of these studies have the common theme of exploring the relative pressures of regional differences in environmental threat and how it might affect a variety of judgement and decision tasks.
Garvey earned a B.A. in philosophy, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Cognitive Neuropsychology. He has taught at ذكذكتسئµ since 2012.