Home | Author Bio Index | Lloyd M. Dunn & Leota M. Dunn
Lloyd M. Dunn & Leota M. Dunn

Lloyd Dunn was one of the "scholars with a social
conscience" who founded the Kennedy Center in 1965. He was
director of Peabody's Mental
Retardation Research Training Program, the first
doctoral program in the nation for training researchers in
this field. He conceived of the Institute on Mental
Retardation and Intellectual Development, which came to be
known IMRID, and was its first director. The keystone
institute of the Center, IMRID was the longest continuously
funded program project and made major contributions to
behavioral research in mental retardation. Today, IMRID's
mission--basic research on the fundamental processes of
learning and memory--is carried out within the Center's
Institute for Developmental
Neuroscience and the Institute
on Genetics and Developmental Pharmacology. The Kennedy
Center continues to bring expertise in the biomedical and
behavioral sciences to bear in understanding and preventing
problems of development and learning.

Lloyd Dunn and his wife Leota collaborated on a number of
assessment and instructional devices first published by the
AGS Publishing in the 1950s and 60s: the Peabody
Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT), Peabody Individual
Achievement Test, Peabody Language Development Kits, and
Peabody Early Experience Kits.