As of 2008, Greenberg is a life member of the American Psychological Association (APA) and secretary of the International Society of Comparative Psychology.[4] In 2015, he received the Clifford T. Morgan Distinguished Service to Div. 6 Award from the APA's division 6, the Society for Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative Psychology.[5]
On Psychiatry
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Greenberg, Gary (November 2010). "Comparative Psychology and Ethology". The Behavioral Neuroscientist and Comparative Psychologist. Society for Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative Psychology. Retrieved 2018-09-23.
^Greenberg, Gary (October 2008). "Psychology From the Standpoint of an Interbehaviorist: A Review of "Modern Perspectives on J. R. Kantor and Interbehaviorism". The Psychological Record. 58 (4): 665–676. doi:10.1007/bf03395643. ISSN0033-2933. S2CID149215316. Following my doctoral training at Kansas State University, he became associated with Ethel Tobach at the then influential Department of Animal Behavior at New York's American Museum of Natural History (Greenberg, Partridge, Weiss, & Pisula, 2004). The department was once headed by T. C. Schneirla, and he soon came under the influence of the approach to psychology that he espoused. The coincidence of his exposure to Kantorian and Schneirlerian (see Lazar, 1978) psychology has been brought to bear in his current intellectual involvement with developmental systems theory...
^Greenberg, Gary (November 2010). "Comparative Psychology and Ethology". The Behavioral Neuroscientist and Comparative Psychologist. Society for Behavioral Neuroscience and Comparative Psychology. Retrieved 2018-09-23.